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README.md

Weston

screenshot of skeletal Weston desktop

Weston is the reference implementation of a Wayland compositor, as well as a useful environment in and of itself.

Out of the box, Weston provides a very basic desktop, or a full-featured environment for non-desktop uses such as automotive, embedded, in-flight, industrial, kiosks, set-top boxes and TVs. It also provides a library allowing other projects to build their own full-featured environments on top of Weston's core.

The core focus of Weston is correctness and reliability. Weston aims to be lean and fast, but more importantly, to be predictable. Whilst Weston does have known bugs and shortcomings, we avoid unknown or variable behaviour as much as possible, including variable performance such as occasional spikes in frame display time.

A small suite of example or demo clients are also provided: though they can be useful in themselves, their main purpose is to be an example or test case for others building compositors or clients.

If you are after a more mainline desktop experience, the GNOME and KDE projects provide full-featured desktop environments built on the Wayland protocol. Many other projects also exist providing Wayland clients and desktop environments: you are not limited to just what you can find in Weston.

Reporting issues and contributing

Weston's development is hosted on freedesktop.org GitLab. Please also see the contributing document, which details how to make code or non-technical contributions to Weston.

Building Weston

Weston is built using Meson. Weston often depends on the current release versions of Wayland and wayland-protocols.

If necessary, the latest Meson can be installed as a user with:

$ pip3 install --user meson

Weston's Meson build does not do autodetection and it defaults to all features enabled, which means you likely hit missing dependencies on the first try. If a dependency is avoidable through a build option, the error message should tell you what option can be used to avoid it. You may need to disable several features if you want to avoid certain dependencies.

$ git clone https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/weston.git
$ cd weston
$ meson build/ --prefix=...
$ ninja -C build/ install
$ cd ..

The meson command populates the build directory. This step can fail due to missing dependencies. Any build options you want can be added on that line, e.g. meson build/ --prefix=... -Ddemo-clients=false. All the build options can be found in the file meson_options.txt.

Once the build directory has been successfully populated, you can inspect the configuration with meson configure build/. If you need to change an option, you can do e.g. meson configure build/ -Ddemo-clients=false.

Every push to the Weston master repository and its forks is built using GitLab CI. Reading the configuration may provide a useful example of how to build and install Weston.

More detailed documentation on building Weston is available on the Wayland site. There are also more details on how to run and write tests.

For building the documentation see documentation.

Running Weston

Once Weston is installed, most users can simply run it by typing weston. This will launch Weston inside whatever environment you launch it from: when launched from a text console, it will take over that console. When launched from inside an existing Wayland or X11 session, it will start a 'nested' instance of Weston inside a window in that session.

Help is available by running weston --help, or man weston, which will list the available configuration options and display backends. It can also be configured through a file on disk; more information on this can be found through man weston.ini.

Documentation

To read the Weston documentation online, head over to the Weston website.

For documenting weston we use sphinx together with breathe that understands XMLs databases generated by doxygen. So far, this is a compromise until better tools are available in order to remove the doxygen dependency. You should be able to install both sphinx and breathe extension using pip3 command, or your package manager. Doxygen should be available using your distribution package manager.

Once those are set-up, run meson with -Ddoc=true option in order to enable building the documentation. Installation will place the documentation in the prefix's path under datadir (i.e., share/doc).

Adding and improving documentation

For re-generating the documentation a special docs target has been added. Although first time you build (and subsequently install) weston, you'll see the documentation being built, updates to the spinx documentation files or to the source files will only be updated when using docs target!

Example:

$ ninja install # generates and installs the documentation
# time passes, hack hack, add doc in sources or rST files
$ ninja install # not sufficient, docs will not be updated
$ ninja docs && ninja install # run 'docs' then install

Improving/adding documentation can be done by modifying rST files under doc/sphinx/ directory or by modifying the source code using doxygen directives.

Libweston

Libweston is an effort to separate the re-usable parts of Weston into a library. Libweston provides most of the boring and tedious bits of correctly implementing core Wayland protocols and interfacing with input and output systems, so that people who just want to write a new "Wayland window manager" (WM) or a small desktop environment (DE) can focus on the WM part.

Libweston was first introduced in Weston 1.12, and is expected to continue evolving through many Weston releases before it achieves a stable API and feature completeness.

Libweston's primary purpose is exporting an API for creating Wayland compositors. Libweston's secondary purpose is to export the weston_config API so that third party plugins and helper programs can read weston.ini if they want to. However, these two scopes are orthogonal and independent. At no point will the compositor functionality use or depend on the weston_config functionality.

API/ABI (in)stability and parallel installability

As libweston's API surface is huge, it is impossible to get it right in one go. Therefore developers reserve the right to break the API/ABI and bump the major version to signify that. For git snapshots of the master branch, the API/ABI can break any time without warning.

Libweston major can be bumped only once during a development cycle. This should happen on the first patch that breaks the API or ABI. Further breaks before the next Weston major.0.0 release do not cause a bump. This means that libweston API and ABI are allowed to break also after an alpha release, up to the final release. However, breaks after alpha should be judged by the usual practices for allowing minor features, fixes only, or critical fixes only.

To make things tolerable for libweston users despite API/ABI breakages, different libweston major versions are designed to be perfectly parallel-installable. This way external projects can easily depend on a particular API/ABI-version. Thus they do not have to fight over which ABI-version is installed in a user's system. This allows a user to install many different compositors each requiring a different libweston ABI-version without tricks or conflicts.

Note, that versions of Weston itself will not be parallel-installable, only libweston is.

For more information about parallel installability, see http://ometer.com/parallel.html

Versioning scheme

In order to provide consistent, easy to use versioning, libweston follows the rules in the Apache Portable Runtime Project http://apr.apache.org/versioning.html.

The document provides the full details, with the gist summed below:

  • Major - backward incompatible changes.
  • Minor - new backward compatible features.
  • Patch - internal (implementation specific) fixes.

Weston and libweston have separate version numbers in meson.build. All releases are made by the Weston version number. Libweston version number matches the Weston version number in all releases except maybe pre-releases. Pre-releases have the Weston micro version 91 or greater.

A pre-release is allowed to install a libweston version greater than the Weston version in case libweston major was bumped. In that case, the libweston version must be Weston major + 1.

Pkg-config files are named after libweston major, but carry the Weston version number. This means that Weston pre-release 2.1.91 may install libweston-3.pc for the future libweston 3.0.0, but the .pc file says the version is still 2.1.91. When a libweston user wants to depend on the fully stable API and ABI of a libweston major, he should use (e.g. for major 3):

PKG_CHECK_MODULES(LIBWESTON, [libweston-3 >= 3.0.0])

Depending only on libweston-3 without a specific version number still allows pre-releases which might have different API or ABI.

Forward compatibility

Inspired by ATK, Qt and KDE programs/libraries, libjpeg-turbo, GDK, NetworkManager, js17, lz4 and many others, libweston uses a macro to restrict the API visible to the developer - REQUIRE_LIBWESTON_API_VERSION.

Note that different projects focus on different aspects - upper and/or lower version check, default to visible/hidden old/new symbols and so on.

libweston aims to guard all newly introduced API, in order to prevent subtle breaks that a simple recompile (against a newer version) might cause.

The macro is of the format 0x$MAJOR$MINOR and does not include PATCH version. As mentioned in the Versioning scheme section, the latter does not reflect any user visible API changes, thus should be not considered part of the API version.

All new symbols should be guarded by the macro like the example given below:

#if REQUIRE_LIBWESTON_API_VERSION >= 0x0101

bool
weston_ham_sandwich(void);

#endif

In order to use the said symbol, the one will have a similar code in their configure.ac:

PKG_CHECK_MODULES(LIBWESTON, [libweston-1 >= 1.1])
AC_DEFINE(REQUIRE_LIBWESTON_API_VERSION, [0x0101])

If the user is not interested in forward compatibility, they can use 0xffff or similar high value. Yet doing so is not recommended.

Libweston design goals

The high-level goal of libweston is to decouple the compositor from the shell implementation (what used to be shell plugins).

Thus, instead of launching 'weston' with various arguments to choose the shell, one would launch the shell itself, e.g. 'weston-desktop', 'weston-ivi', 'orbital', etc. The main executable (the hosting program) will implement the shell, while libweston will be used for a fundamental compositor implementation.

Libweston is also intended for use by other project developers who want to create new "Wayland WMs".

Details:

  • All configuration and user interfaces will be outside of libweston. This includes command line parsing, configuration files, and runtime (graphical) UI.

  • The hosting program (main executable) will be in full control of all libweston options. Libweston should not have user settable options that would work behind the hosting program's back, except perhaps debugging features and such.

  • Signal handling will be outside of libweston.

  • Child process execution and management will be outside of libweston.

  • The different backends (drm, x11, etc) will be an internal detail of libweston. Libweston will not support third party backends. However, hosting programs need to handle backend-specific configuration due to differences in behaviour and available features.

  • Renderers will be libweston internal details too, though again the hosting program may affect the choice of renderer if the backend allows, and maybe set renderer-specific options.

  • plugin design ???

  • xwayland ???

There are still many more details to be decided.

For packagers

Always build Weston with --with-cairo=image.

The Weston project is (will be) intended to be split into several binary packages, each with its own dependencies. The maximal split would be roughly like this:

  • libweston (minimal dependencies):

    • headless backend
    • wayland backend
  • gl-renderer (depends on GL libs etc.)

  • drm-backend (depends on libdrm, libgbm, libudev, libinput, ...)

  • x11-backend (depends of X11/xcb libs)

  • xwayland (depends on X11/xcb libs)

  • rdp-backend (depends on freerdp)

  • weston (the executable, not parallel-installable):

    • desktop shell
    • ivi-shell
    • fullscreen shell
    • weston-terminal, etc. we install by default
    • screen-share
  • weston demos (not parallel-installable)

    • weston-simple-* programs
    • possibly all the programs we build but do not install by default
  • and possibly more...

Everything should be parallel-installable across libweston major ABI-versions (libweston-1.so, libweston-2.so, etc.), except those explicitly mentioned.

Weston's build may not sanely allow this yet, but this is the intention.