A response to the "Boycott Wayland" article

Link to article: gist.github.com/…/9feb7c20257af5dd915e3a9f2d1f227…

This OUTDATED article gets posted all the time. The full story is the guy is a massive FreeBSD fan so he is trying to convince more people to keep on using Xorg because he wants to make sure it isn’t abandoned. Reason for that being that Wayland is built with Linux in mind and would not work under FreeBSD without a lot of effort bwing put in as it uses some Linux-specific components or libraries.

Let’s go through the article point by point:

Wayland is broken by design:
  • A crash in the window manager takes down all running applications: Yes, because the compositor IS the server, window manager AND compositor at the same time.
  • You cannot do a lot of things: What, like allowing Windows to see your keystrokes, which makes developing a keylogger absolutely trivial?
  • There is not /usr/bin/wayland: Yes, because Wayland is a set of protocols, which a bunch of projects can implement as few or as many of, as they see fit, thus avoiding the issue of “unmaintainable mess” that has plagued Xorg for years.
  • It offloads work to the window manager: Again, yes, that’s a part of its structure: do the protocols, then let the compositor implement them. That way, you have multiple implementations running simultaneously that are well integrated with their window managers and thus more efficient and performant. It also means that when a compositor suffers from too much cruft, we can just make a new one, while application developers wouldn’t really have anything to change because if their application works on Wayland, then it works on different compositors (unless it is made specifically for GNOME, or specifically for wlroots, like wlr-randr)

so what works on DE 1, doesn’t necessarily work on DE 2: True, because oftentimes, it doesn’t need to. Not implementing features can lead to a more lean and streamlined software solution. However, sometimes features are necessary and only implemented in some compositors. This usually happens because the universal solution is not ready. KDE are often known to do this with Plasma and KWin.

  • Wayland breaks screen recording applications: Correction: The following screen recording applications were not built to support Wayland (because Wayland is new to them or they just decided not to, or they were either too busy or too irresponsible enough to realise Wayland is coming, and has been for over 10 years. In defence of the devs, they probably wanted to make sure Wayland will become stable enough, but it has been the default even on Debian for many years now, so…

In terms of the applications, I’m not aware of many of them, and for this sort of application, I’m sire alot of work is required to change the graphical backend, so I understood that some smaller projects gave up, but OBS has been working on Wayland for quite a while. Is it perfect? I don’t think so, but back when Brodie Robertson was using Hyprland, he was recording his videos using OBS. This article is quite outdated.

  • Wayland breaks screen sharing applications:

As the update shows, Jitsi now does work on Wayland.

Zoom only seemed to work on gnome, BUT if you open up the Link to the zoom issue and read through the comments, there is clearly a person that clearly states that they changed /etc/os-release from PureOS to debian and it worked for them, all because of some pointless limitations enforced by the Zoom developers. As the person posting the issue states “Currently, the zoom application has put an arbirtrary restriction on screensharing so it ONLY works on GNOME, when the api being used works on all wayland desktops.” Read that again. It’s a pointless restriction put there by the Zoom team because they couldn’t be bothered to test anything non-GNOME.

And the last issue is a problem with the article writer’s own appimage. I don’t know about that one.

  • Wayland breaks automation software

As stated IN YOUR FACE, it is an application that works on X11 only. Yes, Wayland is not made to use such applications, but it doesn’t mean they can’t exist. Every heard of ydotool (remember that name)? Now you have.

Next up, we have 3 issues about GNOME and KDE global menus (1 for GNOME, 2 for KDE). From the little I know about global menus and using these projects, as well as considering that they are both incredibly stable on Wayland and Fedora KDE will be dropping Xorg completely, I think it’s safe to assume these issues have probably been fixed. Please correct me if I’m wrong.

  • Wayland breaks AppImages that don’t ship a special QT plugin: Great! Just ship the plugins then! Problem solved! Also, quote from the article: “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: Once again, a program built for Xorg doesn’t always work on Wayland. Especially if it works with the compositor, like a colour temperature control application, or a wallpaper setter. The article quotes that “Redshift does not support Wayland since it offers no way to adjust the color temperature” which is not true, as proven by Redshift alternatives like Gammastep.
  • Wayland breaks global hotkeys: I present to you: Hyprland (where you can get global hotkeys). Now, it is normally not allowed by design, as a security measure, but Hyprland has not allowed that to stop them from implementing a solution where you can choose keys that will be passed on to the application. Boom, problem solved. Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem to be implemented anywhere else, as far as I know.
  • Wayland does not work for XFCE: Come back to me in late 2024 after XFCE 4.20, which will introduce Wayland support, has been released. Also, wiki.xfce.org/releng/wayland_roadmap
  • Wayland does not work properly on Nvidia Hardware: It keeps on getting closer but is not there yet, or so I’ve heard. Apparently, the issue is with the proprietary drivers, as noveau works well. But I use AMD, so I’m only working off rumours and opinions here.
  • Wayland does not work properly on Intel hardware: Again, I’m using AMD, so I can’t confirm or deny this, but considering the Intel drivers are open source, and I’ve heard about many, many improvements made on the Intel side of things, I think it would be reasonable to assume it has been fixed.

Edit: As multiple Intel users have pointed out in the comments, there seem to be no issues on Wayland with Intel hardware.

  • Wayland prevents GUI applications from running as root: This one has been crossed out as the article writer admits there is a solution
  • Wayland is biased towards Linux and breaks BSD: Arguments seem valid, and I’m guessing, are correct. This one is likely true and will remain so for the foreseeable future.

Edit: And yet, it seems that there are Wayland compositors for FreeBSD, so the above might only be true for OpenBSD and others.

  • Wayland complicates server side decorations: From what I’ve heard, this is true, mainly something to do with some GNOME agenda, as the article states. I think that one is true.
  • Wayland breaks windows raising/activating themselves: The linked issue is closed and seems to be resolved. There is a mention of a WIP protocol at the time (2019) that woukd fix this. I had difficulty following the discussion, but I think this has been fixed.
  • Wayland breaks RescueTime: Because RescueTime depends on X11-only tools like xprop.
  • Wayland breaks window manager: What you’re describing is Wayland breaking X11-only tools for doing various tasks in a window manager. They are X11 tools, so of course they don’t work on Wayland. I’m not sure if there are alternatives, but I’d guess there probably are. I know for a fact that Xrandr has alternatives like wlr-randr and kanshi for wlroots.
  • Wayland requires {instert WM here} to implement Xorg-like functionality:Yes, it does.

Quote from article: "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. "

DEs: GNOME, KDE, MATE, XFCE, Cinnamon, Budgie, Enlightenment, and recently even Pantheon have either announced to start work on, have started work on, or already support Wayland.

Window managers: Qtile is doing it. Xmonad wants to hire a dev to do it. Dwm has a spiritual successor called dwl. i3 has a drop-in replacement called sway. Openbox has 2 spiritual successors called labwc and waybox. Now you might notice one of the biggest WMs is missing on here: AwesomeWM, which is such a shame. The Awesome devs have said they would be okay with someone taking on that challenge (which has already been attempted, as evidenced by the existence of way-cooler), but it seems that they wouldn’t do it themselves.

As for the projects mentioned in the article, (JWM, TWM, XDM, IceWM) they are too small and obscure, and will likely fade away with Xorg.

  • Wayland breaks _NET_WM_STATE_SKIP_TASKBAR protocol I don’t know about that one, ao I’ll assume it is still the case. Edit: Ignoring the fact that the link is broken, it basically just links to a docs change where skipTaskbar is marked as unsupported on Linux. Link: github.com/electron/electron/pull/33226
  • Wayland breaks NoMachine NX The link points to a page that has this marked as “SOLVED, Released in version 8” so I’m guessing it has been solved.
  • Wayland breaks Xclip: As you said it yourself, Xclip is an X11 application, so it doesn’t work on Wayland. Of course it wouldn’t work on Wayland. With Wayland, we’re trying to prevent what happened with Xorg from happening again, or am I wrong?

Edit: As pointed out by some people in the comments, there are also alternatives to xclip like wl-clipboard.

  • Wayland breaks SUDO_ASKPASS: That link seems to point to the way this issue has been resolved so I don’t see your point.
  • Wayland breaks X11 atoms: I lack knowledge on the topic so will assume this to be a valid argument
  • Wayland break games: I’m 99% sure you can disable Vsync??? But I’m not a gamer. Also, WINE on Wayland is getting better and better. Soon enough, I hope the subpar performance will become better performance (when compared to Xorg)
  • Wayland breaks xdotool: Well, yes. There is ydotool, but you’re looking for a 1-to-1 replacement and I’m not sure if ydotool fits the bill for that.
  • Wayland breaks xkill: Well, yes. Again. It is an X application, so of course it does. Though for some reason I remember it working once on wayland. Must have been an xwayland app, or maybe I’m just misremembering this.
  • Wayland breaks screensavers: Yeah, that seems to be the case.
  • Wayland breaks setting the window position: That is a WIP for Plasma, not sure about any other projects, so assume true for anything else.
  • Wayland breaks color management: Not anymore. That is being actively worked on.
  • Wayland breaks DRM leasing: While not rhat familiar with the issue, my understanding of the topic is the article is correct: not all compositors support it.
  • Wayland breaks in-home streaming: Not familiar with this, so will assume true.
  • Wayland breaks NetWM/EWMH: Yeah, that seems to be the case.
  • Wayland breaks window icons: Yeah, that seems to be the case, as said in the article, when no .desktop files are used.

And that concludes my response to this article based on my fairly limited knowledge on the topic. If I got anything wrong, please, please let me know. As you can see my knowledge is quite limited, and as such, any corrections (preferably backed up with evidence) would be appreciated

qwesx,
@qwesx@kbin.social avatar

A crash in the window manager takes down all running applications: Yes, because the compositor IS the server, window manager AND compositor at the same time.

Maybe not anymore in the future: https://blog.davidedmundson.co.uk/blog/qt6_wayland_robustness/

Wayland is biased towards Linux and breaks BSD

FreeBSD already has working Wayland compositors by the way.

theshatterstone54,

Oh yeah, I forgot about the work on Plasma and QT6.

I didn’t know that about FreeBSD. Will add it.

sir_reginald, (edited )
@sir_reginald@lemmy.world avatar

FreeBSD’s Wayland support is through a Linux compatibility library. The major Wayland implementations are Linux only and there’s no way around it other than implementing Linux libraries like FreeBSD did.

qwesx, (edited )
@qwesx@kbin.social avatar

That something entirely different than the protocol being biased towards Linux. It's like complaining that TCP/IP is biased towards Linux because the Linux kernel's networking module can't be used in BSD kernels.

LeFantome, (edited )

Clearly biased towards BSD as both MacOS and Windows started off with the BSD TCP/IP stack.

Many operating systems use the WiFi from BSD as well.

gayhitler420,

I didn’t read any of that but Wayland doesn’t work with xscreensaver so I’m not gonna switch to it.

MiddledAgedGuy,

Just :s/x/w/g on every bit of source code and recompile wscreensaver.

gayhitler420,

Lol at how controversial that comment was.

be_excellent_to_each_other,
@be_excellent_to_each_other@kbin.social avatar

Wayland does not work properly on Intel hardware: Again, I’m using AMD, so I can’t confirm or deny this, but considering the Intel drivers are open source, and I’ve heard about many, many improvements made on the Intel side of things, I think it would be reasonable to assume it has been fixed.

Posting this from Plasma Wayland on Intel right now. If something is broken, it's something not apparent to me.

theshatterstone54,

Good to know

loutr,
@loutr@sh.itjust.works avatar

No problem with GNOME and hyprland here, on 2 different laptops.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Dual monitor? Wayland on my intel works fine for single screen, but as soon as I plug in a 4k monitor, it gets black cube shadow like artifacts in KDE Plasma 5. A couple of kernel command line options for the module has not helped, either.

be_excellent_to_each_other,
@be_excellent_to_each_other@kbin.social avatar

I'm fairly sure I have run this system dual-monitor though I don't do it routinely. I'll check sometime this weekend and let you know, if you are interested for comparison's sake.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I most certainly am. :)

be_excellent_to_each_other, (edited )
@be_excellent_to_each_other@kbin.social avatar

Worked with no drama, for me at least. Hooked it to my TV because that was most convenient. USB-C to HDMI adapter, I just had to tell it where they were in relation to each other and set scaling on the TV. Fonts look a little screwy on that dialogue box, but only in the screenshot - and when composing this post I realized even there they look OK if I don't view that part of the screenshot on the 4K display.

Edit: No, untrue. I think I had the wrong glasses on. The fonts on the 1080p display are fine in reality, but the screenshot is distorting everything on that panel a bit. Again, screenshot only though. All good otherwise. I can't see any other problem after using it a bit like this though.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I would love to see your kernel options line from grub, assuming it doesn’t have any secrets in it. Please.

be_excellent_to_each_other,
@be_excellent_to_each_other@kbin.social avatar

No problem, I've done no magic of any kind there. This is what the manjaro installer created only.

cat /proc/cmdline

BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-6.1-x86_64 root=UUID=99ed8aec-cdfc-44d6-8217-c85d3db09036 rw quiet cryptdevice=UUID=9bca8872-3f01-472a-b196-ef19cde6b5f8:luks-9bca8872-3f01-472a-b196-ef19cde6b5f8 root=/dev/mapper/luks-9bca8872-3f01-472a-b196-ef19cde6b5f8 udev.log_priority=3

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Thank you. I figured there be some modeset style options, but nah, you have none. I consider you quite lucky and admit to being a little jealous. :)

be_excellent_to_each_other,
@be_excellent_to_each_other@kbin.social avatar

No problem, if there's anything else that could help you to troubleshoot on your end let me know.

Devorlon, (edited )

I’ve just finished watching Generation Kill on a Thinkpad T480s (i7-8650u). It was plugged into the TV, and it plus the laptops screen worked fine.

Running arch, gnome, waylandVideoSnapshot_20231118_062333

Imagepipe_0

shrugal,

XKCD#1172 is very relevant here.

LeFantome,

Very

weketi6945,

hurr durr its le x11 only application

Then why is this piece of shit called x11’s successor or even x12? Why do you want to force adoption of this 2 decade long unfinished beta software when it can’t even run most applications?

weketi6945,

Also, the red hat moderators have banned my previous account as expected. They are literally moderating many forums like reddit’s linux subreddit and this place, and enforce censorship. They banned my account for posting the github gist posted in the OP. I didn’t even break any rules, they indiscriminately banned me just because i posted one post portraying wayland in a negative light.

theshatterstone54,

Because it is the replacement for Xorg and X11 as a whole. This is like expecting all Unix applications to work on Linux. No, some things need to be ported or rewritten. I don’t want to force adoption of Wayland. Heck, I’m on Xorg because Qtile’s Wayland session is missing a thing or two I need (they’re in development but not there yet). I’m just tired of people pretending this article is accurate and up to date so I wanted to set some things clear. Granted, I didn’t do it that well, but I tried.

Also, whoever calls Wayland X12 is lying to themselves and everyone else. The only way in which such naming would make sense is if you consider the fact that the X11 maintainers (pretty much all of them RedHat employees) were sick and tired of maintaining it, so they started Wayland to replace X11 (NOT as a drop in replacement, mind you). So the only way such naming wpuld make sense is if you consoder the fact that Wayland developers and maintainers were the same people that were maintaining Xorg until they just gave up.

lukas, (edited )
@lukas@lemmy.haigner.me avatar

Some people including myself call Wayland X12 because Wayland is a subset of the X12 protocol made by the X11 maintainers, and as such is as close to an X11 successor as you can get.

bluGill,

Because the people who developed X11 (that is Xorg) haven declared that. Maybe they should have named it X12, but they didn't for whatever reason. However the people doing the work have already given up on working on X11 they gave up on X11 beyond the bare minimum almost 10 years ago because some real issues with X11 as a protocol are not fixable.

There were other attempts to a successor to X11, but they never got the support of people doing the work on X11 (in part because they didn't understand the problem with X11 and so kept many bad things while 'fixing' things that were not broken)

Which is to say: you have two choices: get involved with continuing X11 development, or jump to Wayland. Throw a couple million $$$ per year at X11 (either pay developers, or convince a dozen developers to maintain X11) and I'll retract my statement, until then X11 is dead. If you cannot do that then Wayland is your only option.

legend_sandworm,

My main issue with Wayland is the fragmentation. Abstract protocol which could be implemented by particular DE/WM means nothing to a user which now doesn’t have a guarantee that their tools will work under all environments. For example, some screengrab utility could work under Gnome, but will not work under wl-roots based WM just because the relevant protocol is not supported there. That’s a major drawback to me, we lose flexibility and kinda forced to use mainstream DEs where they have enough devcapacity to support most of the features from Wayland protocols. Contrary to X.Org where most of the functionality is implemented by server itself and protocol exposed to the clients is way simpler.

waspentalive, (edited )
@waspentalive@lemmy.one avatar

Does Wayland allow for the running of a program on a big powerful server (where many users live) and display on a smaller desktop machine that is only providing a screen and keyboard? If not, are they working on that? If it does not and they are not working on it, is it even possible under the way that Wayland works?

ShittyKopper,
FooBarrington,

Beautiful! Makes much more sense to implement this separately.

joyjoy,

I believe they explicitly don’t support network transparency. The suggested alternative is to use a VNC client to connect remotely to the desktop.

Communist,
@Communist@lemmy.ml avatar

no, it’s waypipe.

loutr,
@loutr@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yes, with waypipe.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Waypipe is not Wayland. Wayland does not natively support this workflow, which is why Waypipe was created. Please don’t confuse the two as being one thing.

theshatterstone54,

Xrandr is not Xorg. Xorg does not support an easy way to set screen resolutions. That’s why Xrandr was created.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

And we don’t run around calling Xrandr Xorg, do we? No. So we seem to agree.

smpl,
@smpl@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

You are giving me the impression that Waypipe is an extension to Wayland like XRANDR is to the X11 protocol. I didn’t get that impression from the blogpost. I’m not trying to place value on them being an extension or a separate tool. I’m just trying to figure out if it was a shortheaded response or if Waypipe is an extension to the Wayland protocol.

waspentalive,
@waspentalive@lemmy.one avatar

This may be “moving the goal posts”, if so I apologize in advance. With Waypipe can I have local windows and remote windows on my laptop? Will Waypipe work over a VPN (Tailscale is a VPN right?)

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Yes.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

No. Wayland does not. That’s why Waypipe was made to address that shortcoming.

waspentalive,
@waspentalive@lemmy.one avatar

Waypipe - Thanks I will look into that. Thanks to the others who also added their opinions promoting waypipe.

PseudoSpock,
@PseudoSpock@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

I’m pretty sure any distro setting up Wayland will be including Waypipe for you so your experience should be transparent.

hellvolution,
@hellvolution@lemmygrad.ml avatar

Don’t spread lies; Wayland is not the default on Debian; nor on Stable, Testing, Sid or experimental

Scyther,

Debian GNOME uses Wayland by default

dramaticcat,

deleted_by_author

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  • TheGrandNagus,

    Been on it since 2016. No issues.

    Cope and seethe.

    malgredecanard,

    Yeah, people are trying to make Wayland work so hard… Thanks to the open source community behind it but let’s be honest: Wayland is badly designed and coded.

    After 10 years I can still not share my screen easily, always need to switch to X11.

    Wayland are for little hobbyist kids who want to have fun with Linux, not people who need to do actual stuff.

    If Wayland was doing half of the work it should be doing then we would adopt it. But it’s just bad software and brining all of Linux down with it.

    Communist,
    @Communist@lemmy.ml avatar

    Wayland is not poorly designed or coded, screensharing works perfectly as long as the apps properly support wayland.

    That’s not a problem with waylands design or code, that’s a problem with apps design or code, the thing you may want to take issue with is the notion that we could change things like this while still being poorly supported generally.

    flying_sheep,
    @flying_sheep@lemmy.ml avatar

    Wayland isn’t coded at all, it’s a protocol, so clearly you know nothing.

    Dekkia,
    @Dekkia@this.doesnotcut.it avatar

    Wayland break games

    The Steam Deck uses wayland so I guess that’s not true (anymore?)

    arthur,

    Valve created gamescope, that’s a microcompositor just for games. Other Wayland compositors may still break games.

    flying_sheep,
    @flying_sheep@lemmy.ml avatar

    I was very sad when KDE reintroduced the concept of “primary screen”.

    It used to just be the current screen, which meant that when I wanted to game or watch something on my projector, I just dragged steam or the folder with movies to the projector screen, then launched whatever I wanted, and it appeared on the screen I wanted it on.

    Now I have to jerryrig kwin and a custom steam-in-gamescope Launcher to have games launch there. As a side effect, steam thinks my PC is a steam deck and therefore can’t be exited from inside of it, I have to right click the tray icon.

    Horribly kludgy compared to “click launch game button on screen x, game opens on screen x”

    andrew0,
    @andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    What a stupid article. It’s like saying “stop using electric vehicles because you can’t use gas stations”. I don’t understand why he’s so adamant about this? It’s not like Wayland had about 20 years of extra time to develop like X11. People keep working on it, and it takes time to polish things.

    michaelmrose,

    The article is 3 years old and some things are only presently being fixed NOW and due to filter down to stable distros in 2024. Furthermore wayland proponents have been claiming its totally ready for prime time and not broken at all since 2015 while promoting AMD GPUs that at that point in time still sucked hairy balls.

    Holzkohlen,

    I now have perfect wayland setup with a Nvidia GPU. I just use my AMD Apu as main gpu and the nvidia one as secondary GPU. The DE runs on Amd and games run on Nvidia. Thanks for nothing Nvidia, making me work around your bs.

    michaelmrose,

    Doesn’t that drastically limit your monitor support like to ONE?

    pan_troglodytes,

    xorg is going to die eventually. probably long after the xorg fanbois, but it will die - and wayland or something better will take its place.

    velox_vulnus,

    If I remember, there was another display protocol being developed as an answer to Wayland for BSD. I don’t remember what it was called, but that project was basically about an open source MacOS.

    jollyrogue,

    Was it Arcan or something else?

    LeFantome,

    RavynOS?

    velox_vulnus,

    I think the predecessors to RavynOS, it was called HelloSystem I think. In that project, they were talking about an alternative display server protocol.

    Audacity9961,

    OpenBSD, NetBSD and FreeBSD all support or are planning to support Wayland.

    drwho,

    I’m okay if Xorg dies off. I just hope that the stuff I use everyday works reliably with Wayland before it does.

    theshatterstone54,

    I’m glad to have some of the more reasonable Xorg users express their opinions here. I share in this opinion.

    umbrella,
    @umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar
    • Wayland breaks in-home streaming: Not familiar with this, so will assume true.

    False. Sunshine works perfectly on Wayland, and last I checked Steam’s in-home streaming works fine on AMD/Intel, it’s an nvidia driver thing.

    Jaxseven,
    @Jaxseven@beehaw.org avatar

    The only thing I can’t get working on Sunshine on Wayland is a visible mouse cursor. Makes streaming Baldur’s Gate 3 with a cursor a pain.

    umbrella, (edited )
    @umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar

    Thats a Sunshine issue, happens to me on both Wayland and X.

    Try disabling hardware cursor on your respective DE, it fixed the issue on my machine.

    MigratingtoLemmy,

    I’m very new to the Wayland vs Xorg: could someone tell me why having a compositor work as a compositor, server and client (window manager) is a good idea? Doesn’t this limit customisation? If someone wants to create a window manager, they’re going to have to implement a lot more software than just their product. I thought abstracted software with stable interfaces was king in software, other than having performance issues (I believe Wayland solves some of these problems).

    So, if I’m on IceWM/Ratpoison and want to switch, do I manually convert my config, or do I have equivalent WMs in Wayland?

    theshatterstone54,

    I think Ratpoison had an alternative. According to wiki.archlinux.org/title/wayland there is Cagebreak, which is inspired by Ratpoison.

    MigratingtoLemmy,

    Thanks, had a look. Seems fantastic, I’ll keep this in mind!

    axelf, (edited )
    @axelf@lemmy.ml avatar

    There is nothing stopping a Wayland compositor from exposing an interface that would allow for a choice of “window manager”. In fact, wlroots could almost count as such a compositor - it implements the bulk of a compositor, but none of the bits of a window manager. Of course, Plasma and Gnome also allow window managers to be integrated as plugins, but I presume that is not what you want.

    It is not like the X window manager idea is impeccable either: To name one thing, picom or other compositors could display much nicer and context aware animations if only the window manager interface was not like it is.

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