I've never actually needed to modify the mouse scroll wheel speed until recently, when I got a new mouse and I wanted to change the scroll wheel settings. That's when I noticed there's no such option in Unity / GNOME Control Center.





I searched for ways to change this under Linux and the easiest to use seems to be "imwheel", a command line tool that can be used to tweak the mouse wheel behavior and which, among others, can change the scroll speed of the mouse wheel, and I decided to share the information with you.

Here's what you need to do to change the scroll speed of the mouse wheel if your desktop environment doesn't have an option for this:

1. Install imwheel. Since the app is available in the official Ubuntu repositories, you can install using Synaptic, Ubuntu Software Center, etc. or use the following command to install it:

sudo apt-get install imwheel

2. Next, create a file called ".imwheelrc" in your home directory - I'll use Gedit in the command below to open this file:

gedit ~/.imwheelrc

".*" None, Up, Button4, 3 None, Down, Button5, 3 Control_L, Up, Control_L|Button4 Control_L, Down, Control_L|Button5 Shift_L, Up, Shift_L|Button4 Shift_L, Down, Shift_L|Button5

"3" at the end of lines two and three represent the number of lines to scroll ("3" should be default) - modify this number to suit your needs. Once you're done, save the file.





The first (".*") line from the code used above represents is used to specify in which applications to use those settings. ".*" means everywhere, but you can also apply application-specific settings by changing ".*" to the window name (and add multiple application-dependent settings). Run "man imwheel" for more information.



And finally, the last 4 lines in the code above are there to allow Ctrl / Shift with mouse scroll wheel up / down to work (for instance, to allow zooming in on a webpage in the web browser, etc.), which is the default behaviour.

3. Start imwheel (type "imwheel --kill" in a terminal). "--kill" is used to make sure other running instances are terminated, so they don't interfere. This is important for a proper setup (another way to make sure imwheel is not running is to just use "killalll imwheel").





Also, if you have back / forward navigation buttons on your mouse, they will stop working using the configuration we've used above. In such cases, you should launch imwheel like this:

imwheel --kill --buttons "4 5"

4. Since these settings are only applied when imwheel is running, you should add imwheel to startup (if you use Unity, to do this, open Startup Applications, click "Add" and under both "Name" and "Command" fields, add "imwheel --kill"). Also, like I mentioned above, if you have back / forward mouse navigation buttons, use the following command instead of simply running "imwheel --kill" or else those buttons won't work: imwheel --kill --buttons "4 5"

It's important to mention that imwheel applies the settings available in ~/.imwheelrc when the application starts and it doesn't update when changing the configuration file. So if you modify the configuration file, you'll need to close imwheel and start it again to apply / test the changes (you can close/kill it using the following command: "killall imwheel" or run new instances with "--kill").





Notes:

this will most probably not fix issues such as very fast scrolling, if you encounter such an issue, you can try unplugging and then plugging the mouse back (from what I've read, that seems to solve the issue in most cases);

if you only want to change the scroll wheel speed in Firefox and Chrome, you can do this from within the app or using an extension: Firefox | Chrome, etc.

via AskUbuntu; image via Wikipedia.

And in this file, paste the following:... and the back / forward buttons should work (thanks to biohazara for the tip!).