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Core Wayland window system code and protocol
Once there has been a fatal display error, any new object requests potentially rely on invalid state. (For example, a failure to read from the compositor could hide a important event.) The safest way to handle the new requests is not to make them. Proxies produced by the request are still created, to ensure that any code using the library does not crash from an unexpected NULL pointer. Signed-off-by: Manuel Stoeckl <code@mstoeckl.com> |
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| egl | ||
| m4 | ||
| protocol | ||
| src | ||
| tests | ||
| .editorconfig | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .gitlab-ci.yml | ||
| autogen.sh | ||
| configure.ac | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| COPYING | ||
| Makefile.am | ||
| publish-doc | ||
| README | ||
| releasing.txt | ||
| TODO | ||
| wayland-scanner.m4 | ||
| wayland-scanner.mk | ||
What is Wayland?
Wayland is a project to define a protocol for a compositor to talk to
its clients as well as a library implementation of the protocol. The
compositor can be a standalone display server running on Linux kernel
modesetting and evdev input devices, an X application, or a wayland
client itself. The clients can be traditional applications, X servers
(rootless or fullscreen) or other display servers.
The wayland protocol is essentially only about input handling and
buffer management. The compositor receives input events and forwards
them to the relevant client. The clients creates buffers and renders
into them and notifies the compositor when it needs to redraw. The
protocol also handles drag and drop, selections, window management and
other interactions that must go through the compositor. However, the
protocol does not handle rendering, which is one of the features that
makes wayland so simple. All clients are expected to handle rendering
themselves, typically through cairo or OpenGL.
The weston compositor is a reference implementation of a wayland
compositor and the weston repository also includes a few example
clients.
Building the wayland libraries is fairly simple, aside from libffi,
they don't have many dependencies:
$ git clone https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland
$ cd wayland
$ ./autogen.sh --prefix=PREFIX
$ make
$ make install
where PREFIX is where you want to install the libraries. See
https://wayland.freedesktop.org for more complete build instructions
for wayland, weston, xwayland and various toolkits.