
- #CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT INSTALL#
- #CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT UPDATE#
- #CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT DRIVER#
- #CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT CODE#
- #CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT TRIAL#
Now, let configure the tablet with xsetwacom.įor this, we can load xsetwacom command.
#CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT DRIVER#
After that, the tablet should appear in the configuration tool xsetwacom: xsetwacom -listĬongratulation! You're done with the driver part. Ĭall your text-editor in admin mode: sudo xed /usr/share/X11//nf We will add a X11 custom rule to make the Digimend driver use the Wacom driver command line tool to setup our non-named. We need a way to now configure the tablet, the buttons. Icing on the cake, you can now remove the USB cable (used to charge the tablet), connect the wireless USB dongle, and use the tablet in wireless. The digimend driver should be listed among other modules after typing: dkms status The tablet should now start to work better, smoother and being listed as "TABLET Pen Tablet Pen stylus" when entering this command in a terminal: xinput -list
#CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT CODE#
Then we will put the source code inside a specific directory with the structure /usr/src/-, then build it using this time / : sudo git clone /usr/src/digimend-6
#CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT INSTALL#
To install via DKMS, you'll need Git, and DKMS. After research, I learned the joy of DKMS. The README.md file of the project doesn't explain how. The only option is to install the DKMS way. It's prohibited (but the error message wasn't very obvious about it). After many research, it appear all Ubuntu-based 16.04 can't compile custom module this way.

I had to search a long time how I could do. Impossible to do the make/make install, 'deb' package not working.
#CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT TRIAL#
Unfortunately, I had to make many test and trial to compile the source of the project. I wanted to be sure to get the latest source code compiled for the Digimend project, in case more could work with more recent development. That was encouraging.Īfter unboxing Install Digimend driver via DKMS: So, even if the model is unlisted on the official documentation, the basics work. The kernel 4.4.0-79-generic I'm using has the module of the Digimend project included, and the tablet is probably compatible with a part of the driver: if you type lsusb in a terminal, the tablet : is 256c:006e, and 256c in the Digimend project source-code probably triggers a default/generic Huion driver. And even when turning a screen off with xrandr, bad raw proportion for the classic 1920x1080. But no button, no way to map the tablet to a single screen of my dual screen. On a Linux Mint Cinnamon 18.1, it was a surprise when I first connected the tablet: the coordinate, pressure, all main feature worked out-of-the-box (USB cable only, not wireless). :-) Not everything work perfectly, I'll end the article with a review of pros/cons and limitations of this model under a free/libre O.S. Now it's done and I'm sharing the result to ease the path to other GNU/Linux artists around wanting a low-cost large tablet. So it's not a good sign of health for all the non Wacom, but I decided to take the risk of getting something non-functional and tweak-it as a hobby until I get it working. No official GNU/Linux driver or tweak for this model, and a almost dead Digimend project: the leader decided to leave the project for good reasons after a decade of hard work on it, but now the project is orphan and is looking for a new maintainer. I liked the design of the WH1409 (no big padding around active area), the spec (maybe the largest active zone on a tablet right now on the market, 35x22cm / 13,8x8,6inch) and the low price (160€, the third of the price of a similar model made by Wacom). For once and after 15 years of Wacom, I also studied another brand: Huion. I have a long experience with tablets, I owned so many models over the last 15 years that I even maintain for the fun a tablet history log about it.

Anyway easy install! I'll put it back to the closet because I'm still not fan of the pressure curve of the stylus and I'll keep using my other Wacom tablet.Īfter the buglary of my house, I had to purchase a new tablet. It just require to install the Digimend driver (deb) version 10, reboot, and then all works if you connect it via the wireless USB dongle (the cable connection will only charge the battery of the tablet and doesn't work).Īlso, good to notice: the KDE system setting panel for tablets works fine except (calibration/setting monitor area/proportion/stylus buttons) but no tablet buttons are listed, it probably require a bit more tweaking.

I took it from my closet for a sunday evening test and was surprised how simplier is it to get it work two years after this article.
#CARA INSTAL DRIVER WIFI DI LINUX MINT UPDATE#
If you want to know what changed, read the comments of this article, I'll update the article later.Ģ020-11 Update: it works on Kubuntu 20.04. Also, this article was designed for Linux Mint 18 and Ubuntu 16.04: it will not work with the same command line for later versions. Disclaimer: I'm not sponsored by Huion for this article and I purchased this tablet myself, it's not a commercial gift.
