libinput 1.11 is just around the corner and one of the new features added are the libinput-record and libinput-replay tools. These are largely independent of libinput itself (libinput-replay is a python script) and replace the evemu-record and evemu-replay tools. The functionality is roughly the same with a few handy new features. Note that this is a debugging tool, if you're "just" a user, you may never have to use either tool. But for any bug report expect me to ask for a libinput-record output, same as I currently ask everyone for an evemu recording.
So what does libinput-record do? Simple - it opens an fd to a kernel device node and reads events from it. These events are converted to YAML and printed to stdout (or the provided output file). The output is a combination of machine-readable information and human-readable comments. Included in the output are the various capabilities of the device but also some limited system information like the kernel version and the dmi modalias. The YAML file can be passed to libinput-replay, allowing me to re-create the event device on my test machines and hopefully reproduce the bug. That's about it. evemu did exactly the same thing and it has done wonders for how efficiently we could reproduce and fix bugs.
Alas, evemu isn't perfect. It's becoming 8 years old now and its API is a bit crufty. Originally two separate tools generated two separate files (machine-readable only), two different tools for creating the device and playing events. Over the years it got more useful. Now we only have one tool each to record or replay events and the file includes human-readable comments. But we're hitting limits, its file format is very inflexible and the API is the same. So we'd have to add a new file format and the required parsing, break the API, deal with angry users, etc. Not worth it.
Thus libinput-record is the replacement for evemu. The main features that libinput-record adds are a more standardised file format that can be expanded and parsed easily, the ability to record and replay multiple devices at once and the interleaving of evdev events with libinput events to check what's happening. And it's more secure by default, all alphanumeric keys are (by default) printed as KEY_A so there's no risk of a password leaking into a file attached to Bugzilla. evemu required python bindings, for libinput-record's output format we don't need those since you can just access YAML as array in Python. And finally - it's part of libinput which means it's going to be easier to install (because distributions won't just ignore libinput) and it's going to be more up-to-date (because if you update libinput, you get the new libinput-record).
It's new code so it will take a while to iron out any leftover bugs but after that it'll be the glorious future ;)
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