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- Wayland
Wayland is the language (protocol) that applications can use to talk to a display server in order to make themselves visible and get input from the user (a person)
- Wayland Architecture - freedesktop. org
The open source stack uses the drm Wayland extension, which lets the client discover the drm device to use and authenticate and then share drm (GEM) buffers with the compositor
- Wayland FAQ - freedesktop. org
The Wayland architecture integrates the display server, window manager and compositor into one process You can think of Wayland as a toolkit for creating clients and compositors
- Wayland
Wayland is a protocol for a compositor to talk to its clients as well as a C library implementation of that 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
- Wayland
The 1 0 4 versions of Wayland and Weston were released The 1 0 4 releases are maintenance releases and most importantly fix a CPU eating bug in the weston plane code
- Chapter 4. Wayland Protocol and Model of Operation
The Wayland protocol provides clients a mechanism for sharing data that allows the implementation of copy-paste and drag-and-drop The client providing the data creates a wl_data_source object and the clients obtaining the data will see it as wl_data_offer object
- Appendix A. Wayland Protocol Specification
wl_fixes - wayland protocol fixes This global fixes problems with other core-protocol interfaces that cannot be fixed in these interfaces themselves
- Chapter 2. Types of Compositors - freedesktop. org
A different compositor, a session compositor would provide the actual desktop environment There are many ways for different types of compositors to co-exist In this section, we introduce three types of Wayland compositors relying on libwayland-server
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