If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Canonical Is Hiring Graphics Stack Developers To Work On Mir
There are 8 implementations of Wayland I found in the 5 minutes of random googling I did.
What you probably found are compositors that link to the wayland libraries, which in turn are based on the wayland protocol. It's theoretically possible to implement a wayland compositor without linking to the wayland libraries, but I don't think that that's been done -- it would be a tremendous amount of work.
Phoronix: Canonical Is Hiring Graphics Stack Developers To Work On Mir
While it was only months ago that Canonical let go of several Mir developers at the same time as other staff reductions for the Unity team and different areas as the company changed their focus, they are now looking for new Mir hires...
I suppose Mir becoming a Wayland compositor gives more choice to projects that do not have the resources to make their own. To put it another way, just think of the countless window managers we have on X.org (Openbox, Fluxbox, Compiz, etc) that won't ever be Wayland compatible. Someone can take the idea behind these window managers and rewrite them on top of Mir; as Mir is no longer associated with a particular desktop. In a way, Mir has a chance to be the defacto implementation of Wayland outside of Plasma, Gnome, or Enlightenment. Still, this would be similar to what Weston's wlc library, Sway's wlroots, or Qt Compositor has already done. But Canonical's project could end up being much bigger and more heavily used compared to the alternatives just listed.
What the articles fails to mention is whether Canonical are hiring people to work on Mir as a Wayland compositor, or Mir as its own solution incompatible with upstream Mesa and AMDGPU, AMDGPU-PRO and Nvidia's proprietary driver.
Comment