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Keychron keyboards on Linux + Bluetooth fixes

Here is the best setup (I think so :D) for K-series Keychron keyboards on Linux.

Note: many newer Keychron keyboards use QMK as firmware and most tips here do not apply to them. Maybe the ones related to Bluetooth can be useful, but everything related to Apple's keyboard module (hid_apple) on Linux, won't work. As far as I know, all QMK-based boards use the hid_generic module instead. Examples of QMK-based boards are: Q, Q-Pro, V, K-Pro, etc.

Most of these commands have been tested on Ubuntu 20.04 and should also work on most Debian-based distributions. If a command happens not to work for you, take a look in the comment section.

Make Fn + F-keys work (NOT FOR QMK-BASED BOARDS)

Older Keychron keyboards (those not based on QMK) use the hid_apple driver on Linux, even in the Windows/Android mode, both in Bluetooth and Wired modes. By default, this driver uses the F-keys as multimedia shortcuts and you have to press Fn + the key to get the usual F1 through F12 keys.

In order to change this, you need to change the fnmode parameter for the hid_apple kernel module. Here's some documentation on it, but a quick summary can be found below:

  • 0 = disabled: Disable the 'fn' key. Pressing 'fn'+'F8' will behave like you only press 'F8'
  • 1 = fkeyslast: Function keys are used as last key. Pressing 'F8' key will act as a special key. Pressing 'fn'+'F8' will behave like a F8.
  • 2 = fkeysfirst: Function keys are used as first key. Pressing 'F8' key will behave like a F8. Pressing 'fn'+'F8' will act as special key (play/pause).

You can temporarily set the value (for testing, for example) by doing:

# replace <value> below with 0, 1 or 2
# example: echo 2 | sudo tee /sys/module/hid_apple/parameters/fnmode
echo <value> | sudo tee /sys/module/hid_apple/parameters/fnmode

Test how the keyboard behaves after each value. Pick the one the works for you. Once you have found the value that works for you, you can make the change permanent:

  1. Create the file /etc/modprobe.d/hid_apple.conf
  2. Add this line to the file: options hid_apple fnmode=<value>, replacing <value> with the one that worked for you in the previous step (0, 1 or 2)
  3. Save the file
  4. Run sudo update-initramfs -u
  5. Reboot

Here's a script, for convenience:

# replace <value> below with the one that worked for you in the previous step (0, 1 or 2)
# example: echo "options hid_apple fnmode=2 | sudo tee /etc/modprobe.d/hid_apple.conf"
# this will erase any pre-existing contents from /etc/modprobe.d/hid_apple.conf
echo "options hid_apple fnmode=<value>" | sudo tee /etc/modprobe.d/hid_apple.conf
# the "-k all" part is not always needed, but it's better to do that for all kernels anyway
sudo update-initramfs -u -k all
sudo systemctl reboot

If get stuck with numpad mode: Double hit F6 or fn + F6.

Enable Bluetooth fast connect config:

If your keyboard takes too long to connect to your computer over Bluetooth (for example, when you press a key and wakes it up), you can enable the Bluetooth fast connect. This usually makes the keyboard connect in less than 1 second.

Some users have reported issues with Bluetooth headphones such as popping audio and general instability, but I haven't experienced anything like that.

  1. Edit the file /etc/bluetooth/main.conf
  2. Uncomment FastConnectable config and set it to true: FastConnectable = true
  3. Uncomment ReconnectAttempts=7 (set the value to whatever number that you want)
  4. Uncomment ReconnectIntervals=1, 2, 3

Disable Autosuspend for USB Bluetooth dongles:

If your keyboard just won't reconnect after sleep, it might be because your Bluetooth card or dongle was automatically suspended by the operating system. You can disable the auto suspend feature for USB Bluetooth dongles by changing the settings for the btusb module.

Note: you might need to target a different module if your Bluetooth controller is somehow using some other module. The options and values themselves might change as well. You need to check the documentation for the module your Bluetooth controller uses. Most USB Bluetooth dongles (and sometimes internal cards that are wired to the USB bus) use btusb. Please check if the btusb module is used by your controller first.

# Disable autosuspend for btusb to make the bluetooth keyboard work again
# this will erase any pre-existing contents from /etc/modprobe.d/btusb_disable_autosuspend.conf
echo "options btusb enable_autosuspend=n" | sudo tee /etc/modprobe.d/btusb_disable_autosuspend.conf
sudo update-initramfs -u

Now reboot your computer, or run:

sudo modprobe -r btusb
sudo systemctl restart bluetooth
sudo modprobe btusb

Enable Bluetooth after waking up from sleep:

When your computer wakes up from sleep mode, the Bluetooth controller might not turn on automatically. In order to force it to do so, we can create a script that will be executed every time the computer comes back from sleep mode.

Note: just like in the previous step, this script assumes your Bluetooth controller uses the btusb module.

# Unload the btusb module, restart the bluetooth service and reload the module again
# post = after the computer wakes up
sudo tee /lib/systemd/system-sleep/bt << EOT
#!/bin/sh
case $1 in
  post)
    modprobe -r btusb
    sleep 1
    service bluetooth restart
    sleep 1
    modprobe btusb
    ;;
esac
EOT
# Now let's make the script executable
sudo chmod +x /lib/systemd/system-sleep/bt

Other resources

If the steps above haven't done it for you, try checking kurgol/keychron. Currently, it only mentions K2 and K6 keyboards, but the tips should work for most Keychron boards.

@BitesizedLion
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UPDATE: It seems the blueman applet was doing something weird, after remove the device and pair it again using the CLI, now the keyboard reconnects immediately without any issue. What I did:

$ bluetoothctl
power off
power on
scan on
# press fn+[1,2,3] for 4 secs and wait until appears the K2 device
scan off
pair DC:2C:26:2C:EE:46
trust DC:2C:26:2C:EE:46
connect DC:2C:26:2C:EE:46

@szaffarano Thank you, I've had the exact same issue, it's super frustrating

@khaled4vokalz
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khaled4vokalz commented Sep 4, 2023

Does any one see issues with K1 SE having issues when connected via bluetooth to ubuntu? In my case:

  • intermittently the keyboard gets mad and starts typing by itself, sometimes just starts adding the last character I made an input for... for example something like exxxxxaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammmmplllllllllllleeeee etc. This is really weird and I've been facing this for a long time. This doesn't happen even once while connected via Cable...

@532910
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532910 commented Sep 6, 2023

@ttrueten
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Does any one see issues with K1 SE having issues when connected via bluetooth to ubuntu? In my case:

* intermittently the keyboard gets mad and starts typing by itself, sometimes just starts adding the last character I made an input for... for example something like `exxxxxaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammmmplllllllllllleeeee` etc. This is really weird and I've been facing this for a long time. This doesn't happen even once while connected via Cable...

Same here with K10. Very annoying.

@532910
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532910 commented Sep 11, 2023

k1 (not se) works fine for me on debian sid

@andrebrait
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Does any one see issues with K1 SE having issues when connected via bluetooth to ubuntu? In my case:

  • intermittently the keyboard gets mad and starts typing by itself, sometimes just starts adding the last character I made an input for... for example something like exxxxxaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammmmplllllllllllleeeee etc. This is really weird and I've been facing this for a long time. This doesn't happen even once while connected via Cable...

Yes, that's basically the reason why I gave up on Bluetooth keyboards. The firmware is usually poorly implemented, unless it's from some of the big guys like Logitech and whatnot.

Nowadays I run exclusively on wired mode, and I use exclusively QMK. I don't have the patience to deal with poor implementations of whatever feature I want, and QMK gives me the flexibility to do what I want with the board (since I know C, anyway).

I even caught some possible bugs in QMK's default debounce algorithm (which is already a lot better than the default firmware on non-QMK Keychron boards) and improved the OS detection feature so my keyboard now even switches automatically between Windows and Mac mode depending on what it connects to.

@khaled4vokalz
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Does any one see issues with K1 SE having issues when connected via bluetooth to ubuntu? In my case:

  • intermittently the keyboard gets mad and starts typing by itself, sometimes just starts adding the last character I made an input for... for example something like exxxxxaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammmmplllllllllllleeeee etc. This is really weird and I've been facing this for a long time. This doesn't happen even once while connected via Cable...

Yes, that's basically the reason why I gave up on Bluetooth keyboards. The firmware is usually poorly implemented, unless it's from some of the big guys like Logitech and whatnot.

Nowadays I run exclusively on wired mode, and I use exclusively QMK. I don't have the patience to deal with poor implementations of whatever feature I want, and QMK gives me the flexibility to do what I want with the board (since I know C, anyway).

I even caught some possible bugs in QMK's default debounce algorithm (which is already a lot better than the default firmware on non-QMK Keychron boards) and improved the OS detection feature so my keyboard now even switches automatically between Windows and Mac mode depending on what it connects to.

Sadly this issue does not occur when connected to a MAC... 🤔

@532910
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532910 commented Sep 19, 2023

The same as android!

@ipiepiepie
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Does any one see issues with K1 SE having issues when connected via bluetooth to ubuntu? In my case:

* intermittently the keyboard gets mad and starts typing by itself, sometimes just starts adding the last character I made an input for... for example something like `exxxxxaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammmmplllllllllllleeeee` etc. This is really weird and I've been facing this for a long time. This doesn't happen even once while connected via Cable...

Same on K6 and fedora

@patrislav1
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I got a new K8 Pro and Ubuntu 22.04; it uses the hid-generic driver (not hid_apple) so it can be used in the Windows/Android switch position out of the box, w/o any patches or workarounds.
Not sure if this is due to the recent hardware or the recent(ish) OS

[  +2,697336] usb 1-12: new full-speed USB device number 10 using xhci_hcd
[  +0,149526] usb 1-12: New USB device found, idVendor=3434, idProduct=0283, bcdDevice= 1.02
[  +0,000014] usb 1-12: New USB device strings: Mfr=1, Product=2, SerialNumber=0
[  +0,000007] usb 1-12: Product: Keychron K8 Pro
[  +0,000006] usb 1-12: Manufacturer: Keychron
[  +0,005350] input: Keychron Keychron K8 Pro as /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.0/usb1/1-12/1-12:1.0/0003:3434:0283.000C/input/input41
[  +0,059489] hid-generic 0003:3434:0283.000C: input,hidraw3: USB HID v1.11 Keyboard [Keychron Keychron K8 Pro] on usb-0000:00:14.0-12/input0
[  +0,002861] hid-generic 0003:3434:0283.000D: hiddev2,hidraw4: USB HID v1.11 Device [Keychron Keychron K8 Pro] on usb-0000:00:14.0-12/input1
[  +0,002764] input: Keychron Keychron K8 Pro System Control as /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.0/usb1/1-12/1-12:1.2/0003:3434:0283.000E/input/input42
[  +0,064351] input: Keychron Keychron K8 Pro Consumer Control as /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.0/usb1/1-12/1-12:1.2/0003:3434:0283.000E/input/input43
[  +0,000487] input: Keychron Keychron K8 Pro Keyboard as /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:14.0/usb1/1-12/1-12:1.2/0003:3434:0283.000E/input/input44
[  +0,000972] hid-generic 0003:3434:0283.000E: input,hidraw5: USB HID v1.11 Keyboard [Keychron Keychron K8 Pro] on usb-0000:00:14.0-12/input2

@andrebrait
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@patrislav1 K Pro series are a totally different base (both hardware and software) than the K series. They use QMK as firmware, instead of trying to impersonate an Apple keyboard.

QMK is open source, their version can already be customized with VIA, and if you're willing to checkout the source code and compile/flash it yourself, the sky is the limit.

I've even recently pushed a PR to upstream QMK allowing you to run custom code when the keyboard detects the OS it's plugged to, so you don't even need to switch layers on your own.

@patrislav1
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Oh wow, I didn't know they were that different under the hood. When I look at the QMK supported hardware platforms however, there are a lot of Keychron models, but none of the K Pro series. Not even on Keychron's fork. Does it maybe use one of the Q or V series variants?

@andrebrait
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andrebrait commented Nov 30, 2023

@patrislav1 it's because they're on the bluetooth_playground branch. You can find the K Pro and Q Pro lines there.

@JwanKhalaf
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JwanKhalaf commented Dec 10, 2023

I have the K15 Pro and even though I put the keyboard in Bluetooth (tried Apple and Windows) and held the fn and number 4 key for 4 seconds to put the keyboard into pairing mode. My bluetoothctl just doesn't find/list the keyboard.

Anyone any ideas?

@andrebrait
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andrebrait commented Dec 10, 2023

@JwanKhalaf
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Thanks @andrebrait. So, if the K15 Pro uses QMK as firmware, instead of trying to impersonate an Apple keyboard, does that mean I should have the switch on the keyboard pointing at Windows?

Also, my understanding is that VIA has more to do with customising the keyboard mappings. My issue is that the keyboard isn't being detected when searching for Bluetooth devices.

I suspect it might be related to my Asus ProArt X670E-Creator Wifi motherboard because on my ThinkPad T480s laptop (also running Arch), the laptop is detected and paired fine. I also tried it on my iPhone (iOS) and on there, it works fine too (it pairs and I can type on my iPhone using the K15 Pro).

@andrebrait
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Thanks @andrebrait. So, if the K15 Pro uses QMK as firmware, instead of trying to impersonate an Apple keyboard, does that mean I should have the switch on the keyboard pointing at Windows?
For Linux, yes, but that's only mapping, as yoh noted below as well. For pairing issues, I honestly have no clue. Maybe they have an update on their firmware repository? Probably worth looking at what I mention further down below instead, though.

Also, my understanding is that VIA has more to do with customising the keyboard mappings. My issue is that the keyboard isn't being detected when searching for Bluetooth devices.

I suspect it might be related to my Asus ProArt X670E-Creator Wifi motherboard because on my ThinkPad T480s laptop (also running Arch), the laptop is detected and paired fine. I also tried it on my iPhone (iOS) and on there, it works fine too (it pairs and I can type on my iPhone using the K15 Pro).

Depending on the Bluetooth controller it uses, it could be it. I'm assuming it's an Intel AX210, right? If so, that should work well and it's weird that you're having issues.

Maybe you can try to look up issues with the BT controller on Linux then.

@nmicht
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nmicht commented Jan 22, 2024

Does any one see issues with K1 SE having issues when connected via bluetooth to ubuntu? In my case:

* intermittently the keyboard gets mad and starts typing by itself, sometimes just starts adding the last character I made an input for... for example something like `exxxxxaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammmmplllllllllllleeeee` etc. This is really weird and I've been facing this for a long time. This doesn't happen even once while connected via Cable...

Same on K6 and fedora

@ipiepiepie I had the same issue in Ubuntu 22 and K7. It was resolved by enabling the Bluetooth fast connect. I hope this works for you.

@javierspn
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Does any one see issues with K1 SE having issues when connected via bluetooth to ubuntu? In my case:

* intermittently the keyboard gets mad and starts typing by itself, sometimes just starts adding the last character I made an input for... for example something like `exxxxxaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaammmmplllllllllllleeeee` etc. This is really weird and I've been facing this for a long time. This doesn't happen even once while connected via Cable...

Same on K6 and fedora

@ipiepiepie I had the same issue in Ubuntu 22 and K7. It was resolved by enabling the Bluetooth fast connect. I hope this works for you.

This is confirmed to solve a lot of issues.

@GERJanB
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GERJanB commented Mar 9, 2024

I currently face a Problem with my K8 Pro where I can use it in wired mode just fine but when I try to use it via Bluetooth, i can connect it just fine but I cannot do any input.

I get this error in journalctl -u bluetooth

profiles/input/device.c:ioctl_is_connected() Can't get HIDP connection info
profiles/input/device.c:hidp_add_connection() Rejected connection from !bonded device /org/bluez/hci0/dev_6C_93_08_62_55_AF

and this on systemctl status bluetooth

profiles/input/device.c:hidp_add_connection() Rejected connection from !bonded device /org/bluez/hci0/dev_6C_93_08_62_55_AF

@andrebrait
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andrebrait commented Mar 9, 2024

I currently face a Problem with my K8 Pro where I can use it in wired mode just fine but when I try to use it via Bluetooth, i can connect it just fine but I cannot do any input.

I get this error in journalctl -u bluetooth

profiles/input/device.c:ioctl_is_connected() Can't get HIDP connection info
profiles/input/device.c:hidp_add_connection() Rejected connection from !bonded device /org/bluez/hci0/dev_6C_93_08_62_55_AF

and this on systemctl status bluetooth

profiles/input/device.c:hidp_add_connection() Rejected connection from !bonded device /org/bluez/hci0/dev_6C_93_08_62_55_AF

The K Pro line is QMK-based and thus an entirely different beast. Some of the tips here, however, might help in general. Have you tried enabling fast connect?

@GERJanB
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GERJanB commented Mar 9, 2024

Yes I have enabled that. Also made sure that hid-generic module is loaded. The board connects fine. It shows up in blueman and Bluetooth to as connected. But no input is made when I press a key

@parkerlreed
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parkerlreed commented Mar 18, 2024

Enable Bluetooth fast connect config:

Holy crap thank you. My K10 was taking 10+ seconds for the reconnect.

@rafakwolf
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Hey folks, anyone was able to show the battery percentage?

@parkerlreed
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parkerlreed commented Mar 19, 2024

Hey folks, anyone was able to show the battery percentage?

That should already be reported via upower and your Desktop environment.

upower -e to list

and upower -i <keyboardpath> to get the info

@rafakwolf
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rafakwolf commented Mar 19, 2024

Thanks @parkerlreed , what's "upower" ? It looks like the battery percentage is not shared by the keyboard. So my DE is not able to show it up.
For instance, I also have a Logitech Bluetooth mouse, and I can see the battery percentage

@parkerlreed
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Thanks @parkerlreed , what's "upower" ? It looks like the battery percentage is not shared by the keyboard. So my DE is not able to show it up. For instance, I also have a Logitech Bluetooth mouse, and I can see the battery percentage

I added some more info. You can check the command line to see if it shows up.

@parkerlreed
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Keep in mind, this would only work for Bluetooth.

@rafakwolf
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@parkerlreed Thank you so much for the help, but, unfortunately, my keyboard does not even appear on the list when I run upower -e

@mchlschlz
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On Debian Sid running 6.7.9 my K2 Pro Wireless (using a wired connection) is being picked up by hid-generic instead of hid-apple. Thus, function keys are not working. Only the mute, volup and voldown do.
I have tried forcing the device into hid-apple with a udev rule but was not successful.

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