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Think twice about Wayland. It breaks everything!

Think twice before abandoning Xorg. Wayland breaks everything!

Hence, if you are interested in existing applications to "just work" without the need for adjustments, then you may be better off avoiding Wayland.

Wayland solves no issues I have but breaks almost everything I need. Even the most basic, most simple things (like xkill) - in this case with no obvious replacement. And usually it stays broken, because the Wayland folks mostly seem to care about Automotive, Gnome, maybe KDE - and alienating everyone else (e.g., people using just an X11 window manager or something like GNUstep) in the process.


As 2024 is winding down:

For the record, even in the latest Raspberry Pi OS you still can't drag a file from inside a zip file onto the desktop for it to be extracted. So drag-and-drop is still broken for me.

And Qt move() on a window still doesn't work like it does on all other desktop platforms (and the Wayland folks think that is good).

And global menus still don't work (outside of not universally implemented things like qt_extended_surface set_generic_property).


The Wayland project seems to operate like they were starting a greenfield project, whereas at the same time they try to position Wayland as "the X11 successor", which would clearly require a lot of thought about not breaking, or at least providing a smooth upgrade path for, existing software.

In fact, it is merely an incompatible alternative, and not even one that has (nor wants to have) feature parity (missing features). And unlike X11 (the X Window System), Wayland protocol designers actively avoid the concept of "windows" (making up incomprehensible words like "xdg_toplevel" instead).

DO NOT USE A WAYLAND SESSION! Let Wayland not destroy everything and then have other people fix the damage it caused. Or force more Red Hat/Gnome components (glib, Portals, Pipewire) on everyone!

Please add more examples to the list.

Wayland seems to be made by people who do not care for existing software. They assume everyone is happy to either rewrite everything or to just use Gnome on Linux (rather than, say, twm with ROX Filer on NetBSD).

Edit: When I wrote the above, I didn't really realize what Wayland even was, I just noticed that some distributions (like Fedora) started pushing it onto me and things didn't work properly there. Today I realize that you can't "install Wayland", because unlike Xorg, there is not one "Wayland display server" but actually every desktop envrironment has its own. And maybe "the Wayland folks" don't "only care about Gnome", but then, any fix that is done in Gnome's Wayland implementation isn't automatically going to benefit all users of Wayland-based software, and possibly isn't even the implementation "the Wayland folks" would necessarily recommend.

Edit 12/2023: If something wants to replace X11 for desktop computers (such as professional Unix workstations), then it better support all needed features (and key concepts, like windows) for that use case. That people also have displays on their fridge doesn't matter the least bit in that context of discussion. Let's propose the missing Wayland protocols for full X11 feature parity.

Edit 08/2024: "Does Wayland becoming the defacto standard display server for Linux serve to marginalize BSD?" https://fossforce.com/2024/07/the-unintended-consequences-linuxs-wayland-adoption-will-have-on-bsd/

Wayland is broken by design

  • A crash in the window manager takes down all running applications
  • You cannot run applications as root
  • You cannot do a lot of things that you can do in Xorg by design
  • There is not one /usr/bin/wayland display server application that is desktop environment agnostic and is used by everyone (unlike with Xorg)
  • It offloads a lot of work to each and every window manager. As a result, the same basic features get implemented differently in different window managers, with different behaviors and bugs - so what works on desktop environment A does not necessarily work in desktop environment B (e.g., often you hear that something "works in Wayland", even though it only really works on Gnome and KDE, not in all Wayland implementations). This summarizes it very well: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland/-/issues/233

Apparently the Wayland project doesn't even want to be "X.org 2.0", and doesn't want to provide a commonly used implementation of a compositor that could be used by everyone: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland/-/issues/233. Yet this would imho be required if they want to make it into a worthwile "successor" that would have any chance of ever fixing the many Wayland issues at the core.

Wayland breaks screen recording applications

  • MaartenBaert/ssr#431 ❌ broken since 24 Jan 2016, no resolution ("I guess they use a non-standard GNOME interface for this")
  • https://github.com/mhsabbagh/green-recorder ❌ ("I am no longer interested in working with things like ffmpeg/wayland/GNOME's screencaster or solving the issues related to them or why they don't work")
  • vkohaupt/vokoscreenNG#51 ❌ broken since at least 7 Mar 2020. ("I have now decided that there will be no Wayland support for the time being. Reason, there is no budget for it. Let's see how it looks in a year or two.") - This is the key problem. Wayland breaks everything and then expects others to fix the wreckage it caused on their own expense.
  • obsproject/obs-studio#2471 ❌ broken since at least 7 Mar 2020. ("Wayland is unsupported at this time", "There isn't really something that can just be easily changed. Wayland provides no capture APIs")
  • There is a workaround for OBS Studio that requires a obs-xdg-portal plugin (which is known to be Red Hat/Flatpak-centric, GNOME-centric, "perhaps" works with other desktops)
  • phw/peek#1191 ❌ broken since 14 Jan 2023. Peek, a screen recording tool, has been abandoned by its developerdue to a number of technical challenges, mostly with Gtk and Wayland ("Many of these have to do with how Wayland changed the way applications are being handled")

As of February 2024, screen recording is still broken utterly on Wayland with the vast majority of tools. Proof

Workaround: Find a Wayland compositor that supports the wlr-screencopy-unstable-v1 protocol and use wf-recorder -a. The default compositor in Raspberry Pi OS (Wayfire) does, but the default compositor in Ubuntu doesn't. (That's the worst part of Wayland: Unlike with Xorg, it always depends on the particular Wayand compositor what works and what is broken. Is there even one that supports everything?)

Wayland breaks screen sharing applications

  • jitsi/jitsi-meet#2350 ❌ broken since 3 Jan 2018
  • jitsi/jitsi-meet#6389 ❌ broken since 24 Jan 2016 ("Closing since there is nothing we can do from the Jitsi Meet side.") See? Wayland breaks stuff and leaves application developers helpless and unable to fix the breakage, even if they wanted.

NOTE: As of November 2023, screen sharing in Chromium using Jitsi Meet is still utterly broken, both in Raspberry Pi OS Desktop, and in a KDE Plasma installation, albeit with different behavior. Note that Pipewire, Portals and whatnot are installed, and even with them it does not work.

Wayland breaks automation software

sudo pkg install py37-autokey

This is an X11 application, and as such will not function 100% on 
distributions that default to using Wayland instead of Xorg.

Wayland breaks Gnome-Global-AppMenu (global menus for Gnome)

Wayland broke global menus with KDE platformplugin

Good news: According to this report global menus now work with KDE platformplugin as of 4/2022

Wayland breaks global menus with non-KDE Qt platformplugins

Wayland breaks AppImages that don't ship a special Wayland Qt plugin

  • https://blog.martin-graesslin.com/blog/2018/03/unsetting-qt_qpa_platform-environment-variable-by-default/ ❌ broke AppImages that don't ship a special Wayland Qt plugin. "This affects proprietary applications, FLOSS applications bundled as appimages, FLOSS applications bundled as flatpaks and not distributed by KDE and even the Qt installer itself. In my opinion this is a showstopper for running a Wayland session." However, there is a workaround: "AppImages which ship just the XCB plugin will automatically fallback to running in xwayland mode" (see below).

Wayland breaks Redshift

Update 2023: Some Wayland compositors (such as Wayfire) now support wlr_gamma_control_unstable_v1, see https://github.com/WayfireWM/wayfire/wiki/Tutorial#configuring-wayfire and jonls/redshift#663. Does it work in all Wayland compositors though?

Wayland breaks global hotkeys

Wayland does not work for Xfce?

See below.

Wayland does not work properly on NVidia hardware?

Apparently Wayland relies on nouveau drivers for NVidia hardware. The nouveau driver has been giving unsatisfactory performance since its inception. Even clicking on the application starter icon in Gnome results in a stuttery animation. Only the proprietary NVidia driver results in full performance.

See below.

Update 2024: The situation might slowly be improving. It remains to be seen whether this will work well also for all existing old Nvidia hardware (that works well in Xorg).

Wayland does not work properly on Intel hardware

Wayland prevents GUI applications from running as root

  • https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1274451 ❌ broken since 22 Oct 2015 ("No this will only fix sudo for X11 applications. Running GUI code as root is still a bad idea." I absolutely detest it when software tries to prevent me from doing what some developer thinks is "a bad idea" but did not consider my use case, e.g., running truss for debugging on FreeBSD needs to run the application as root. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1323302 suggests it is not possible: "These sorts of security considerations are very much the way that "the Linux desktop" is going these days".)

Suggested solution

Wayland is biased toward Linux and breaks BSD

  • https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/wayland_on_netbsd_trials_and ❌ broken since 28 Sep 2020 ("Wayland is written with the assumption of Linux to the extent that every client application tends to #include <linux/input.h> because Wayland's designers didn't see the need to define a OS-neutral way to get mouse button IDs. (...) In general, Wayland is moving away from the modularity, portability, and standardization of the X server. (...) I've decided to take a break from this, since it's a fairly huge undertaking and uphill battle. Right now, X11 combined with a compositor like picom or xcompmgr is the more mature option."

Wayland complicates server-side window decorations

  • https://blog.martin-graesslin.com/blog/2018/01/server-side-decorations-and-wayland/ ❌ FUD since at least 27 January 2018 ("I heard that GNOME is currently trying to lobby for all applications implementing client-side decorations. One of the arguments seems to be that CSD is a must on Wayland. " ... "I’m burnt from it and are not interested in it any more.") Server-side window decorations are what make the title bar and buttons of all windows on a system consistent. They are a must have_ for a consistent system, so that applications written e.g., Gtk will not look entirely alien on e.g., a Qt based desktop, and to enforce that developers cannot place random controls into window titles where they do not belong. Client-side decorations, on the other hand, are destroying uniformity and consistency, put additional burden on application and toolkit developers, and allow e.g., GNOME developers to put random controls (that do not belong there) into window titles (like buttons), hence making it more difficult to achieve a uniform look and feel for all applications regardless of the toolkit being used.

Red Hat employee Matthias Clasen ("I work at the Red Hat Desktop team... I am actually a manager there... the people who do the actual work work for me") expicitly stated "Client-side everything" as a principle, even though the protocol doesn't enforce it: "Fonts, Rendering, Nested Windows, Decorations. "It also gives the design more freedom to use the titlebar space, which is something our designers appreciate" (sic). Source

Wayland breaks windows rasing/activating themselves

Wayland breaks RescueTime

Wayland breaks window managers

Apparently Wayland (at least as implemented in KWin) does not respect EWMH protocols, and breaks other command line tools like wmctrl, xrandr, xprop, etc. Please see the discussion below for details.

Wayland requires JWM, TWM, XDM, IceWM,... to reimplement Xorg-like functionality

  • Screen recording and casting
  • Querying of the mouse position, keyboard LED state, active window position or name, moving windows (xdotool, wmctrl)
  • Global shortcuts
  • System tray
  • Input Method support/editor (IME)
  • Graphical settings management (i.e. tools like xranrd)
  • Fast user switching/multiple graphical sessions
  • Session configuration including but not limited to 1) input devices 2) monitors configuration including refresh rate / resolution / scaling / rotation and power saving 3) global shortcuts
  • HDR/deep color support
  • VRR (variable refresh rate)
  • Disabling input devices (xinput alternative)

As it currently stands minor WMs and DEs do not even intend to support Wayland given the sheer complexity of writing all the code required to support the above features. You do not expect JWM, TWM, XDM or even IceWM developers to implement all the featured outlined in ^1.

Wayland breaks _NET_WM_STATE_SKIP_TASKBAR protocol

  • https://git.521000.bestelectron/electron#33226 ("skipTaskbar has no effect on Wayland. Currently Electron uses _NET_WM_STATE_SKIP_TASKBAR to tell the WM to hide an app from the taskbar, and this works fine on X11 but there's no equivalent mechanism in Wayland." Workarounds are only available for some desktops including GNOME and KDE Plasma.) ❌ broken since March 10, 2022

Wayland breaks NoMachine NX

Wayland breaks xclip

xclip is a command line utility that is designed to run on any system with an X11 implementation. It provides an interface to X selections ("the clipboard"). Apparently Wayland isn't compatible to the X11 clipboard either.

This is another example that the Wayland requires everyone to change components and take on additional work just because Wayland is incompatible to what we had working for all those years.

Wayland breaks SUDO_ASKPASS

Wayland breaks X11 atoms

X11 atoms can be used to store information on windows. For example, a file manager might store the path that the window represents in an X11 atom, so that it (and other applications) can know for which paths there are open file manager windows. Wayland is not compatible to X11 atoms, resulting in all software that relies on them to be broken until specifically ported to Wayland (which, in the case of legacy software, may well be never).

Possible workaround (to be verified): Use the (Qt proprietary?) Extended Surface Wayland protocol casually mentioned in https://blog.broulik.de/2016/10/global-menus-returning/ "which allows you to set (and read?) arbitrary properties on a window". Is it the set_generic_property from https://github.com/qt/qtwayland/blob/dev/src/extensions/surface-extension.xml?

Wayland breaks games

Games are developed for X11. And if you run a game on Wayland, performance is subpar due to things like forced vsync. Only recently, some Wayland implementations (like KDE KWin) let you disable that.

Wayland breaks xdotool

(Details to be added; apparently no 1:1 drop-in replacement available?)

Wayland breaks xkill

xkill (which I use on a regular basis) does not work with Wayland applications.

What is the equivalent for Wayland applications?

Wayland breaks screensavers

Is it true that Wayland also breaks screensavers? https://www.jwz.org/blog/2023/09/wayland-and-screen-savers/

Wayland breaks setting the window position

Other platforms (Windows, Mac, other destop environments) can set the window position on the screen, so all cross-platform toolkits and applications expect to do the same on Wayland, but Wayland can't (doesn't want to) do it.

  • PCSX2/pcsx2#10179 PCX2 (Playstation 2 Emulator) ❌ broken since 2023-10-25 ("Disables Wayland, it's super broken/buggy in basically every scenario. KDE isn't too buggy, GNOME is a complete disaster.")

Wayland breaks color mangement

Apparently color management as of 2023 (well over a decade of Wayland development) is still in the early "thinking" stage, all the while Wayland is already being pushed on people as if it was a "X11 successor".

https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pq/color-and-hdr/-/blob/main/doc/color-management-model.md

Wayland breaks DRM leasing

According to Valve, "DRM leasing is the process which allows SteamVR to take control of your VR headset's display in order to present low-latency VR content".

Wayland breaks In-home Streaming

Wayland breaks NetWM

Extended Window Manager Hints, a.k.a. NetWM, is an X Window System standard for the communication between window managers and applications

Wayland breaks window icons

Update 6/2024: Looks like this will get unbroken thanks to xdg_toplevel_icon_manager_v1, so that QWindow::setIcon will work again. If, and that's a big if, all compositors will support it. At least KDE is on it.

Wayland breaks drag and drop

Wayland breaks ./windowmanager --replace

  • Many window managers have a --replace argument, but Wayland compositors break this convention.

Wayland breaks Xpra

Xpra is an open-source multi-platform persistent remote display server and client for forwarding applications and desktop screens.

  • Under Xpra a context menu cannot be used: it opens and closes automatically before you can even move the mouse on it. "It's not just GDK, it's the Wayland itself. They decided to break existing applications and expect them to change how they work." (Xpra-org/xpra#4246) ❌ broken since 2024-06-01

Xwayland breaks window resizing

Workarounds

  • Users: Refuse to use Wayland sessions. Uninstall desktop environments/Linux distributions that only ship Wayland sessions. Avoid Wayland-only applications (such as PreSonus Studio One) (potential workaround: run in https://github.com/cage-kiosk/cage)
  • Application developers: Enforce running applications on X11/XWayland (like LibrePCB does as of 11/2023)

Examples of Wayland being forced on users

This is exactly the kind of behavior this gist seeks to prevent.

History

  • 2008: Wayland was started by krh (while at Red Hat)
  • End of 2012: Wayland 1.0
  • Early 2013: GNOME begins Wayland porting

Source: "Where's Wayland?" by Matthias Clasen - Flock 2014

A decade later... Red Hat wants to force Wayland upon everyone, removing support for Xorg

References

@lranixonl
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@lranixonl

@phrxmd

Not at all, they just need to support community standards. That will give support to everyone. If they want to force their proprietary corporate shit on everyone, I don't feel sorry for them at all if they have to do it for different compositors separately.

I'm gonna be the devil's advocate for a while. But why should they comply with community standards when even Wayland doesn't? Wayland is designed for the benefit of the big players to dictate their terms to the disadvantage of the community: users and developers too. Otherwise Wayland would be a unified graphical server, or at least a framework (libraries) that implemented all the features in one centralized place that everyone would use. There is no third option. Either to act in the interests of the users/developers, or as it is now.

Everybody decided to use GBM, AMD, Intel, all wayland compositor developers, all of them. But Nvidia wanted to use EGLStreams. This is only a Nvidia fault. Nobody agreed with Nvidia and continued using GBM. Only Gnome worked voluntarily in EGLStreams to make their DE working in Nvidia. If Nvidia used GBM, this problem would never have existed.

Just like no one agreed that graphical server features should be done every time in every DE from scratch, just like no one agreed on mandatory use of Pipewire + DBus + portals, etc, etc... Except for the beneficiaries. See the difference? Neither do I.

I'm was talking about that particular case (GBM vs EGLStreams), I never said that Wayland was perfect or they always made the perfects decisions. I'm still critical of Wayland. What happened with Nvidia is what happens when you work outside of the consensus, they are alone and they have to do everything by themselves. Neither Intel nor AMD have to do anything special, outside implementing GBM in their drivers, to make GBM compositors work. There is no "special compositor for AMD", "special compositor for Intel", "special compositor for Raspberry Pi GPU", nobody needed to for their own compositors to support any GPU except for Nvidia.

Nvidia didn't need to " support a dozen incompatible graphical servers", they only had to support GBM. It's the same as Nvidia and DRI3 in Xorg. Or when everybody used RandR to manage multiple monitors, but with Nvidia you had to use TwinView.

Nvidia supports GBM since 495.44 driver.

If you don't want to use Wayland, you can use X11 and you will use what an xorg server and xorg WM/DE expect you to use. If you don't want to use the xorg implementation of X11, you will be in your own like OpenBSD with Xenocara. If you go to Wayland, you will have to use what Wayland expect you to use, like GBM, portals, etc. If you go outside of it, you are in your own.

In the same way that you can't force Nvidia to use GBM, Nvidia can't force every other to use EGLStreams.

@Monsterovich
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Monsterovich commented Nov 12, 2023

@probonopd

Apparently, the rationale is...

Thing is, application developers and end users should have all the power. Not some self-appointed middlemen.

I guess a Wayland supporter would write something like this:

<wayland_cultism>
That's why Wayland was invented, so that DE developers could write features themselves and not depend on Xorg developers.
</wayland_cultism>

Which is false.

In fact, some kind of aggregation is necessary to prevent one-two player(s) from becoming a monopoly/oligopoly in the competition. That's the good thing about Xorg, it implements the basic mechanisms, plus protects users and developers from this situation that Wayland has created. The result is less work on DEs and applications, interchangeability and other benefits for both users and developers.

@bodqhrohro
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@phrxmd

Machine learning is a different topic as that's a pretty specific use case not many desktop users are engaged in

I wouldn't say so. There's definitely a growing interest for running image generating AIs at home. As well as for mining light cryptos, which lasts for many years already.

we'd be in a better world if the big ML libraries hadn't built their whole shit on top of proprietary code

Yeah, so ditch exclusive and expensive hardware as well as exclusive possibilities it brings just because it's not compatible with FOSS. That's where bigotry definitely comes to the scene.

so it can render its GUI on pretty much anything else you want

If it has an integrated or a second GPU, yay.

@probonopd

Why can't Wayland be binary-compatible enough to Xorg

For a similar reason why it's futile to simulate WebGL over bare HTML/CSS/JS. It technically may work, but in a totally inefficient way. Device drivers are totally not a place for thick compatibility layers.

If I wanted to make a minimalistic Qt and wlroots based Wayland compositor and window manager, which book/documentation would tell me how to do this?

Oh no, we're losing probo! Traitor! Γ—D

@probonopd
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probonopd commented Nov 12, 2023

If I wanted to make

Just would like to know how well documented (in practical terms, a.k.a. "howto") this all really is.

@Monsterovich
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Monsterovich commented Nov 12, 2023

@probonopd

I always knew what Wayland was when it first came out. I knew it wasn't going to work well because of the bad design. But the fact that it started to be promoted so heavily (like 2-3 years ago or so) was a big surprise. It's truly insane. πŸ˜‚

Apparently in the modern world you can promote any garbage and there will be a lot of people who will prove that this is a brilliant idea.

@bodqhrohro

Oh no, we're losing probo! Traitor! Γ—D

"Know Your Enemy" (C)

Or maybe just wondering how this "sandboxing feature for Xorg" works . πŸ˜„

@bodqhrohro
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By the way, I've always seen i3 as something marginal and overly simplistic (up to being too simple to be usable) among tiling WMs, while the majority of the tiling world was represented by dwm, Awesome and Xmonad. And in fact, those were among the first to be ported to Wayland, in pre-wlroots era, but their clones quickly went to oblivion generally.

How did it happen that now there are so many i3 users who just migrated to Sway and are completely happy with it?

Could I get a false impression because dwm/Awesome/Xmonad users tend to polish their environments a lot, and brag with their custom configurations and screenshots, while i3 users make a silent majority who just use a default or nearly a default, and thus don't have anything to show? Same with default GNOME/KDE actually, which are just used as workhorses and not polished in any way.

@bodqhrohro
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Or that could be something specific for the Russian-speaking segment. Like with toons: in the rest of the world, a stereotypical Linux user is also an anime lover, but in ex-USSR, they're rather bronies, because anime was historically frowned upon there.

Same with the popularity of tiling WMs, regional abnormality.

No surprise then that so many Wayland haters now are Russian-speaking or in other way related to post-socialist and Marxist thinking.

@IverCoder
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This Gist reeks of laziness. Nobody seems to want to talk about maintaining X.org and the X11 ecosystem in general here. You all are relying on other people to maintain it and when they no longer want to do so, your privileged asses cry off thinking they're contractually obligated to maintain X.org for you.

@bodqhrohro
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Compiz is maintained by devoted users too, and? Have you seen it shipped in any modern distribution in a status more than something available for installation from repositories? Why do you suppose it would work for X.Org? I highlight again it's more an administrative problem, not a technical one. That's why this gist is a call in the plane of decisions, not of technical actions.

@Monsterovich
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@IverCoder

This Gist reeks of laziness. Nobody seems to want to talk about maintaining X.org and the X11 ecosystem in general here. You all are relying on other people to maintain it and when they no longer want to do so, your privileged asses cry off thinking they're contractually obligated to maintain X.org for you.

Wayland doesn't even need to be maintained, you just write specs and that's it. You can't do that with Xorg. It takes people and resources to develop. Even for Wayland compositor development. And guess what, infamous GNOME gets a 1 million Euro grant, and potential Xorg developers get absolutely nothing just like developers of other open-source projects. Do you rely the development to be purely enthusiastic (especially in difficult projects)? In that case, stop whining that Xorg is underdeveloped.

@fredvs
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fredvs commented Nov 12, 2023

This Gist reeks of laziness. Nobody seems to want to talk about maintaining X.org and the X11 ecosystem in general here. You all are relying on other people to maintain it and when they no longer want to do so, your privileged asses cry off thinking they're contractually obligated to maintain X.org for you.

X11 is still maintained: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg

And please compare all the test and docs provided by Wayland vs X11:
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland

@IverCoder
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IverCoder commented Nov 12, 2023

@Monsterovich

infamous GNOME gets a 1 million Euro grant

Because Germany (or EU or whatever, I'm an ASEAN guy idk how things in Europe works) decided that GNOME deserves the rewards best. After all, GNOME is FOSS and there's nobody preventing others from copying their improved code.

stop whining that Xorg is underdeveloped.

I'm not whining. X.org is underdeveloped in a way that most of our furnitures are finished, we can sit on it, and there's nothing to construct upon the furniture more. However it is rotting away and will soon "break" in a metamorphical sense if you guys don't create something like a WaylandX compatibility layer.

In fact, I'm happy that X.org is being underdeveloped. Those developers should rather devote their time to wlroots instead.

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ghost commented Nov 12, 2023

If I wanted to make a minimalistic Qt and wlroots based Wayland compositor and window manager, which book/documentation would tell me how to do this?

the wlroots tinywl example project. Heavily documented code and easy to use and understand.

@probonopd
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probonopd commented Nov 12, 2023

And guess what, infamous GNOME gets a 1 million Euro grant

...from German taxpayers. Seems to pay to have a "Professional Shaman" as the head.

@flypenguin
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I am still ... a bit weirded out. About 99% of the users just want stuff to work. Literally nobody cares about any OS's GUI API, at all, ever. Two exceptions: Authors of Qt / GNOME / ..., and – to some extent – GUI app devs. Yet the latter ones just want a stable, working, long-lived API, which does what they need (and not what other people think they should need).

The fact that Wayland manages to keep the discussion at a level only 1% of all Linux users are actually interested in shows how flawed it must be. I'm explicitly not saying X is/was better, I'm saying it appears to me the solution is not yet "here". (Imagine what a Windows or Mac user would say if he/she heard "Hey, that app, that's not working cause you run the wrong UI API on your machine". The only possible reaction is "what now?!")

TL;DR – if whatever Wayland is or wants to be would work well enough, this thread (and most probably X) would be long dead now. I guess it can be made to work, possibly, maybe, I don't know. I will try again a while further down the road. Last time was nowhere near to what I need. Fun fact: GNOME 2 actually was, and that was > 20 years ago. We have not progressed.

@IverCoder
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IverCoder commented Nov 12, 2023

And guess what, infamous GNOME gets a 1 million Euro grant

...from German taxpayers. Seems to pay to have a "Professional Shaman" as the head.

I'm not from Europe or Germany, but I would prefer that my taxpayer money go to nonprofit projects like GNOME instead of going to an overpriced Barangay-funded basketball tournament to fool rural voters who are conditioned to be contented with useless cosmetic projects. voters. Every. Goddamn. Election.

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ghost commented Nov 12, 2023

By the way, I've always seen i3 as something marginal and overly simplistic (up to being too simple to be usable) among tiling WMs, while the majority of the tiling world was represented by dwm, Awesome and Xmonad. And in fact, those were among the first to be ported to Wayland, in pre-wlroots era, but their clones quickly went to oblivion generally.

How did it happen that now there are so many i3 users who just migrated to Sway and are completely happy with it?

Could I get a false impression because dwm/Awesome/Xmonad users tend to polish their environments a lot, and brag with their custom configurations and screenshots, while i3 users make a silent majority who just use a default or nearly a default, and thus don't have anything to show? Same with default GNOME/KDE actually, which are just used as workhorses and not polished in any way.

dwm users will live and die by using Suckmore's fragile software to look better than others, and Suckmore hates Wayland because it means they actually have to put any effort into development.

@IverCoder
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And guess what, infamous GNOME gets a 1 million Euro grant

...from German taxpayers. Seems to pay to have a "Professional Shaman" as the head.

I would prefer to have someone who knows about actual health rather than some 15-year old tranny who thinks that everyone should get puberty blockers and that men who write code are racist. Their CoC was already trannified, thank God their director is someone who actually knows about health 🀣 Better that the one in charge of outreach is someone with a clean record and not some troon whose speeches would boil down to "we're dedicated to removing transphobia from software". :)

Ah yes, the classic "woke bad 🀬" statement. Did you know that this statement can get you heavily fined in my region? Too bad you don't live here.

@IverCoder
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Germans here are so riled up about a small FOSS development grant lol. They don't know how lucky they are to have a government where budgeted projects are actually for the benefit of the people instead of the politicians' own agenda.

@Monsterovich
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Monsterovich commented Nov 12, 2023

@binex-dsk

I would prefer to have someone who knows about actual health rather than some 15-year old tranny who thinks that everyone should get puberty blockers and that men who write code are racist.

I think we need to be reminded what happened to the country that was governed by a bus driver. Something similar could happen to the IT company headed by professional shaman. Not like GNOME was any better before that, lol.

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ghost commented Nov 12, 2023

This Gist reeks of laziness. Nobody seems to want to talk about maintaining X.org and the X11 ecosystem in general here. You all are relying on other people to maintain it and when they no longer want to do so, your privileged asses cry off thinking they're contractually obligated to maintain X.org for you.

noone here is obligated to maintain XORG, people are allowed to talk about waylands problem regardless of maintaning XORG, what is with you constantly saying we shouldn't be allowed to talk about waylands problems because "UH, this, UH that..."

Ah yes, the classic "woke bad 🀬" statement. Did you know that this statement can get you heavily fined in my region? Too bad you don't live here.

Aaand he goes off-topic again... Remember how this gist was called?

In fact, I'm happy that X.org is being underdeveloped. Those developers should rather devote their time to wlroots instead.

wayland is not a succesor, dont treat it like one.
you seem to think wayland is the furure and XORG should rot, but the problem is
wayland sucks by design so you can devote all the time and effort in the world into
wlroots, and guess what? that still wont make wayland suck any less.

I'll refresh why this gist exists:

Projects like waydroid are wayland-only
in name and function they only do wayland.
This is a problem, because remember, wayland is NOT a replacement
its an equally flawed alternative, just happens so that some people dont care about XORG's, and some less about waylands flaws.

the main problem this is that this gist are targeting is,
some people see wayland as a successor, its not.

@ssokolow
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ssokolow commented Nov 12, 2023

Ah yes, the classic "woke bad 🀬" statement. Did you know that this statement can get you heavily fined in my region? Too bad you don't live here.

Aaand he goes off-topic again... Remember how this gist was called?

I wouldn't say the problem is "woke bad 🀬". I'd say it's a drift to attacking people, groups, and stereotypes rather than arguing the merits of ideas, decisions, and their effects on the people who've come to depend on the software they affect.

@probonopd
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probonopd commented Nov 13, 2023

GNOME is not run by a shaman

The GNOME Foundation is run by a "professional shaman" indeed, and it is not even a joke.

image

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ghost commented Nov 13, 2023

I've had to repeat my self several times... she is a PR person. She has no say in any company decisions. There's nothing wrong with shamanism. Someone who is more spiritually connected to themselves is a far better candidate for a spokesperson than some random kid nobody's heard of.

@AndreiSva
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AndreiSva commented Nov 13, 2023

This thread is such a fucking joke. Think X.org is good software? Great, go ahead and maintain it yourself. The rest of the world will move on. Deal with it.

@Monsterovich
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Monsterovich commented Nov 13, 2023

@AndreiSva

This thread is such a fucking joke. Think X.org is good software? Great, go ahead and maintain it yourself. The rest of the world will move on. Deal with it.

I don't want to give the wrong impression, but the average Wayland user is this. ^^^^^

Typical bigot behavior, don't be surprised that Wayland is being boycotted.

@IverCoder
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IverCoder commented Nov 13, 2023

@Monsterovich

@AndreiSva

This thread is such a fucking joke. Think X.org is good software? Great, go ahead and maintain it yourself. The rest of the world will move on. Deal with it.

I don't want to give the wrong impression, but the average Wayland user is this. ^^^^^

Typical bigot behavior, don't be surprised that Wayland is being boycotted.

Of course. Wayland is evil! Wayland will destroy the Linux desktop! We will all be forced back to Windows! AAAAAHHHH! Everybody who contributes to Wyaland and is dropping unnecessary X11 baggage is the antichrist! RAAAAAAGGGGGHHH!

@bodqhrohro
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We will all be forced back to Windows!

Back to Android.

@Monsterovich
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Monsterovich commented Nov 13, 2023

@binex-dsk

The fact that you used the word bigot unironically is reason enough for me to use Wayland.

"I'll be using Wayland, not because it's "better", but to spite Xorg supporters!" πŸ˜„ πŸ˜„ πŸ˜„

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ghost commented Nov 13, 2023

Yes.

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