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Bluetooth Behavior

Summary

The bluetooth behavior allows management of various settings and states related to the bluetooth connection(s) between the keyboard and the host. By default, ZMK supports five "profiles" for selecting which bonded host computer/laptop/keyboard should receive the keyboard input; many of the commands here operate on those profiles.

Connection Management

When pairing to a host device ZMK saves bond information to the selected profile. It will not replace this when you initiate pairing with another device. To pair with a new device select an unused profile with BT_SEL, BT_NXT or BT_PRV bindings, or by clearing an existing profile using BT_CLR.

A ZMK device may show as "connected" on multiple hosts at the same time. This is working as intended, and only the host associated with the active profile will receive keystrokes.

Bluetooth Command Defines

Bluetooth command defines are provided through the dt-bindings/zmk/bt.h header, which is added at the top of the keymap file:

#include <dt-bindings/zmk/bt.h>

This will allow you to reference the actions defined in this header such as BT_CLR.

Here is a table describing the command for each define:

DefineAction
BT_CLRClear bond information between the keyboard and host for the selected profile.
BT_NXTSwitch to the next profile, cycling through to the first one when the end is reached.
BT_PRVSwitch to the previous profile, cycling through to the last one when the beginning is reached.
BT_SELSelect the 0-indexed profile by number. Please note: this definition must include a number as an argument in the keymap to work correctly. eg. BT_SEL 0

Bluetooth Behavior

The bluetooth behavior completes an bluetooth action given on press.

Behavior Binding

  • Reference: &bt
  • Parameter #1: The bluetooth command define, e.g. BT_CLR
  • Parameter #2: Only applies to BT_SEL and is the 0-indexed profile by number

Examples

  1. Behavior binding to clear the paired host for the selected profile:

    &bt BT_CLR
  2. Behavior binding to select the next profile:

    &bt BT_NXT
  3. Behavior binding to select the previous profile:

    &bt BT_PRV
  4. Behavior binding to select the 2nd profile (passed parameters are zero based):

    &bt BT_SEL 1

Bluetooth Pairing and Profiles

ZMK support bluetooth “profiles” which allows connection to multiple devices (5 by default). Each profile stores the bluetooth MAC address of a peer, which can be empty if a profile has not been paired with a device yet. Upon switching to a profile, ZMK does the following:

  • If a profile has not been paired with a peer yet, ZMK automatically advertises itself as connectable. You can discover your keyboard from bluetooth scanning on your laptop / tablet. If you try to connect, it will trigger the pairing procedure. After pairing, the bluetooth MAC address of the peer device will be stored in the current profile. Pairing also negotiates a random key for secure communication between the device and the keyboard.
  • If a profile has been paired but the peer is not connected yet, ZMK will also advertise itself as connectable. In the future, the behavior might change to direct advertising which only target the peer with the stored bluetooth MAC address. In this state, if the peer is powered on and moved within the distance of bluetooth signal coverage, it should automatically connect to the keyboard.
  • If a profile has been paired and is currently connected, ZMK will not advertise it as connectable.

The bluetooth MAC address and negotiated keys during pairing are stored in the permanent storage on your chip and can be reused even after reflashing the firmware. If for some reason you want to delete the stored information, you can bind the BT_CLR behavior described above to a key and use it to clear the current profile.

Number of Profiles

Please note there are five available Bluetooth profiles by default. If you need to adjust the number of available profiles, set CONFIG_BT_MAX_CONN and CONFIG_BT_MAX_PAIRED to the desired number of profiles, n, or n+1 for split keyboards, in your zmk-config .conf file.

note

If you clear bond of a paired profile, make sure you do the same thing on the peer device as well (typically achieved by removing or forgetting the bluetooth connection). Otherwise the peer will try to connect to your keyboard whenever it discovers it. But while the MAC address of both devices could remain the same, the security key no longer match: the peer device still possess the old key negotiated in the previous pairing procedure, but our keyboard firmware has deleted that key. So the connection will fail. If you enabled USB logging, you might see a lot of failed connection attempts due to the reason of “Security failed”.