Yes, I made it using a laptop’s trackpad, how could you tell?
[Image description: Panel 1: Young man confidently walking, his vest bears the Wayland logo. Behind him is a grunt with the Gnome logo on his face holding a katana. The young man says: “It’s high time you retire, old man!” Panel 2: An old man with a long beard and the Xorg logo on his chest is sitting on a throne and petting a rat, the XFCE mascot. He says: “It’s still a hundred years too early for you to defeat me!” ]
Wayland gets so many more of the basics so much better than X11 it’s not even funny anymore. X11 is stuttery, unsecure, unmaintaned, can’t really be updated for new features that are pretty important in 2024 (VRR, HDR). For now with my usage, the only big disadvantage I saw from Wayland is that you can’t restart it like X11 when something goes wrong, but that’s the thing, I haven’t had to restart it like I had to often with X11. Even on Nvidia Wayland is better now, except maybe for gaming but that’s Nvidia for you.
You absolutely can restart Wayland. The command to do so is just specific to whichever DE or WM you’re using as they have their own Wayland Compositor implementation.
DEs should implement good commands for that
startplasma-wayland
)qdbus org.kde.ksmserver /KSMServer logout 0 3 3
)kwin_wayland --replace
)Some of those are completely undiscoverable
Yeah, I agree. I just ended up aliasing them.
Haha me too, didnt know the third one
Not for me
Source?
Received a number of commits just last week: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg
VRR is supported, at least on AMD: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Variable_refresh_rate
For HDR you have a point, afaik.
And yet X11 works rock solid for me, while Wayland still crashes whenever I so much as look at it wrong. The amount of time and work I’ve lost because of Wayland crapping out on me isn’t even funny anymore. On AMD by the way, so no blaming Nvidia’s crappy Linux support.
Wayland will probably be the better product one day, but this day is not that day, at least not for every use-case. Great that it works fantastically for you, I genuinely advise you to keep using it, but keep in mind that ‘mileage may vary’ from person to person. Personally for now I’ll stick to X11, as I need to get work done and unfortunately don’t have time to muck around with Wayland’s antics.
The Xorg devs have literally stated as much themselves.
The vast majority of those commits are literally because of Xwayland.
Barely, it has numerous issues. The Wayland VRR implementations address much of those issues.
HDR literally can’t be added to Xorg without rewriting the entire stack. They’ve been trying to get HDR working for something like around 10yrs before they gave up completely.
Wayland on the other hand has been designed from the ground up to be completely expandable, directly addressing the largest problem with Xorg, maintainability.
Yes, that’s true. What would reduce edge cases however, is if you reported those bugs.
That day is coming sooner then later.
That’s fine, however you should switch as soon as it becomes viable to do so.
X11 is insecure. Any program can read any keystroke, any windows contents, can input anything anywhere etc.
The concept of separate apps basically doesnt exist.
Those security features are misleading.
A second app can already read all of your files, modify the first app, modify $PATH to replace your display server and do anything it wants as your user. Running wayland instead of Xorg provides no tangible benefits in security.
Yes and wayland is a puzzle piece of fixing that.
The other one is containerized apps that use a trusted system portal to get opt-in filesystem access to actually needed directories.
The only time I have actually gotten X11 to crash was an unrelated kernel panic.
Also no one uses X11 networking by default lmao, its always X forward over SSH, that is definitely secure and still something wayland can’t do.
Sure it can, with waypipe (like, for a while now…)
Just
waypipe ssh [command]
You can even run X apps over this through cage even when X11 forwarding is disabled by the host (because, you know, the security issues…)
I see you have never used nVidia cards.
It’s still buttry smooth, you just have to downgrade back to x11 when the Nvidia drivers shit in there hands and claps.
I was referring to crashing X11. That happens all the time with nVidia.
I thought it was hyperbole, that sucks. If your using an Nvidia card from before 2014(kepler) those drivers aren’t officially being supported anymore on linux. I’d recommend upgrading, maybe going used if your strapped for cash. 20series and later is getting a lot of love rn so id probably wouldn’t go older than 20 series.
Oh, I did upgrade, to AMD card. Since then 0 issues. :D
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