5befdda84f
Currently, there's a race condition. When resizing from the left, and a client attaches a buffer after the resize ends, you suddenly see the buffer jump to the right, because the resize ended while multiple attaches were in-flight. Making resize a state can fix this, as the server can now know exactly when the resize ended, and whether a commit was before or after that place. We don't implement the correct tracking in this commit; that's left as an exercise to the reader. Additionally, clients like terminals might want to display resize popups to display the number of cells when in a resize. They can use the hint here to figure out whether they are resizing. |
||
---|---|---|
clients | ||
data | ||
desktop-shell | ||
fullscreen-shell | ||
man | ||
protocol | ||
shared | ||
src | ||
tests | ||
wcap | ||
xwayland | ||
.gitignore | ||
autogen.sh | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile.am | ||
notes.txt | ||
README | ||
weston.ini.in |
Weston Weston is the reference implementation of a Wayland compositor, and a useful compositor in its own right. Weston has various backends that lets it run on Linux kernel modesetting and evdev input as well as under X11. Weston ships with a few example clients, from simple clients that demonstrate certain aspects of the protocol to more complete clients and a simplistic toolkit. There is also a quite capable terminal emulator (weston-terminal) and an toy/example desktop shell. Finally, weston also provides integration with the Xorg server and can pull X clients into the Wayland desktop and act as a X window manager. Refer to http://wayland.freedesktop.org/building.html for building weston and its dependencies. The test suite can be invoked via `make check`; see http://wayland.freedesktop.org/testing.html for additional details.