|  |  |  | 			Weston
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							|  |  |  | 			======
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							|  |  |  | Weston is the reference implementation of a Wayland compositor, and a
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							|  |  |  | useful compositor in its own right.  Weston has various backends that
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							|  |  |  | lets it run on Linux kernel modesetting and evdev input as well as
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							|  |  |  | under X11.  Weston ships with a few example clients, from simple
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							|  |  |  | clients that demonstrate certain aspects of the protocol to more
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							|  |  |  | complete clients and a simplistic toolkit.  There is also a quite
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							|  |  |  | capable terminal emulator (weston-terminal) and an toy/example desktop
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							|  |  |  | shell.  Finally, weston also provides integration with the Xorg server
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							|  |  |  | and can pull X clients into the Wayland desktop and act as an X window
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							|  |  |  | manager.
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							|  |  |  | Refer to http://wayland.freedesktop.org/building.html for building
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							|  |  |  | weston and its dependencies.
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							|  |  |  | The test suite can be invoked via `make check`; see
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							|  |  |  | http://wayland.freedesktop.org/testing.html for additional details.
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							|  |  |  | Developer documentation can be built via `make doc`. Output will be in
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							|  |  |  | the build root under
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							|  |  |  | docs/developer/html/index.html
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							|  |  |  | docs/tools/html/index.html
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							|  |  |  | 			Libweston
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							|  |  |  | 			=========
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							|  |  |  | Libweston is an effort to separate the re-usable parts of Weston into
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							|  |  |  | a library. Libweston provides most of the boring and tedious bits of
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							|  |  |  | correctly implementing core Wayland protocols and interfacing with
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							|  |  |  | input and output systems, so that people who just want to write a new
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							|  |  |  | "Wayland window manager" (WM) or a small desktop environment (DE) can
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							|  |  |  | focus on the WM part.
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							|  |  |  | Libweston was first introduced in Weston 1.9, and is expected to
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							|  |  |  | continue evolving through many Weston releases before it achieves a
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							|  |  |  | stable API and feature completeness.
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							|  |  |  | API/ABI (in)stability and parallel installability
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							|  |  |  | -------------------------------------------------
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							|  |  |  | As libweston's API surface is huge, it is impossible to get it right
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							|  |  |  | in one go. Therefore developers reserve the right to break the API/ABI
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							|  |  |  | between every 1.x.0 Weston release (minor version bumps), just like
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							|  |  |  | Weston's plugin API does. For git snapshots of the master branch, the
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							|  |  |  | API/ABI can break any time without warning or version bump.
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							|  |  |  | Libweston API or ABI will not be broken between Weston's stable
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							|  |  |  | releases 1.x.0 and 1.x.y, where y < 90.
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							|  |  |  | To make things tolerable for libweston users despite API/ABI breakages,
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							|  |  |  | libweston is designed to be perfectly parallel-installable. An
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							|  |  |  | API/ABI-version is defined for libweston, and it is bumped for releases as
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							|  |  |  | needed. Different non-backward compatible ABI versions of libweston can be
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							|  |  |  | installed in parallel, so that external projects can easily depend on a
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							|  |  |  | particular ABI-version. Thus they do not have to fight over which ABI-version
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							|  |  |  | is installed in a user's system. This allows a user to install many
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							|  |  |  | different compositors each requiring a different libweston ABI-version
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							|  |  |  | without tricks or conflicts.
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							|  |  |  | Note, that versions of Weston itself will not be parallel-installable,
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							|  |  |  | only libweston is.
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							|  |  |  | For more information about parallel installability, see
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							|  |  |  | http://ometer.com/parallel.html
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							|  |  |  | Libweston design goals
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							|  |  |  | ----------------------
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							|  |  |  | The high-level goal of libweston is to decouple the compositor from
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							|  |  |  | the shell implementation (what used to be shell plugins).
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							|  |  |  | Thus, instead of launching 'weston' with various arguments to choose the
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							|  |  |  | shell, one would launch the shell itself, e.g. 'weston-desktop',
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							|  |  |  | 'weston-ivi', 'orbital', etc. The main executable (the hosting program)
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							|  |  |  | will implement the shell, while libweston will be used for a fundamental
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							|  |  |  | compositor implementation.
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							|  |  |  | Libweston is also intended for use by other project developers who want
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							|  |  |  | to create new "Wayland WMs".
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							|  |  |  | Details:
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							|  |  |  | - All configuration and user interfaces will be outside of libweston.
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							|  |  |  |   This includes command line parsing, configuration files, and runtime
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							|  |  |  |   (graphical) UI.
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							|  |  |  | - The hosting program (main executable) will be in full control of all
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							|  |  |  |   libweston options. Libweston should not have user settable options
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							|  |  |  |   that would work behind the hosting program's back, except perhaps
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							|  |  |  |   debugging features and such.
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							|  |  |  | - Signal handling will be outside of libweston.
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							|  |  |  | - Child process execution and management will be outside of libweston.
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							|  |  |  | - The different backends (drm, fbdev, x11, etc) will be an internal
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							|  |  |  |   detail of libweston. Libweston will not support third party
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							|  |  |  |   backends. However, hosting programs need to handle
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							|  |  |  |   backend-specific configuration due to differences in behaviour and
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							|  |  |  |   available features.
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							|  |  |  | - Renderers will be libweston internal details too, though again the
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							|  |  |  |   hosting program may affect the choice of renderer if the backend
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							|  |  |  |   allows, and maybe set renderer-specific options.
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							|  |  |  | - plugin design ???
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							|  |  |  | - xwayland ???
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							|  |  |  | - weston-launch is still with libweston even though it can only launch
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							|  |  |  |   Weston and nothing else. We would like to allow it to launch any compositor,
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							|  |  |  |   but since it gives by design root access to input devices and DRM, how can
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							|  |  |  |   we restrict it to intended programs?
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							|  |  |  | There are still many more details to be decided.
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							|  |  |  | For packagers
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							|  |  |  | -------------
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							|  |  |  | Always build Weston with --with-cairo=image.
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							|  |  |  | The Weston project is (will be) intended to be split into several
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							|  |  |  | binary packages, each with its own dependencies. The maximal split
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							|  |  |  | would be roughly like this:
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							|  |  |  | 
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							|  |  |  | - libweston (minimal dependencies):
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							|  |  |  | 	+ headless backend
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							|  |  |  | 	+ wayland backend
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							|  |  |  | - gl-renderer (depends on GL libs etc.)
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							|  |  |  | - drm-backend (depends on libdrm, libgbm, libudev, libinput, ...)
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							|  |  |  | - x11-backend (depends of X11/xcb libs)
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							|  |  |  | - xwayland (depends on X11/xcb libs)
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							|  |  |  | - fbdev-backend (depends on libudev...)
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							|  |  |  | - rdp-backend (depends on freerdp)
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							|  |  |  | 
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							|  |  |  | - weston (the executable, not parallel-installable):
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							|  |  |  | 	+ desktop shell
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							|  |  |  | 	+ ivi-shell
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							|  |  |  | 	+ fullscreen shell
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							|  |  |  | 	+ weston-info, weston-terminal, etc. we install by default
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							|  |  |  | 	+ screen-share
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							|  |  |  | - weston demos (not parallel-installable)
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							|  |  |  | 	+ weston-simple-* programs
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							|  |  |  | 	+ possibly all the programs we build but do not install by
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							|  |  |  | 	  default
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							|  |  |  | 
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							|  |  |  | - and possibly more...
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							|  |  |  | Everything should be parallel-installable across libweston major
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							|  |  |  | ABI-versions (libweston-1.so, libweston-2.so, etc.), except those
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							|  |  |  | explicitly mentioned.
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							|  |  |  | Weston's build may not sanely allow this yet, but this is the
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							|  |  |  | intention.
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