LXQt 2.1 Released With New Wayland Session Component

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • phoronix
    Administrator
    • Jan 2007
    • 67055

    LXQt 2.1 Released With New Wayland Session Component

    Phoronix: LXQt 2.1 Released With New Wayland Session Component

    LXQt 2.1 is now available as the latest feature release to this Qt-based lightweight desktop environment. Most significant with LXQt 2.1 is the introduction of the lxqt-wayland-session component...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
  • Danny3
    Senior Member
    • Apr 2012
    • 2306

    #2
    Nice!
    And good to have more Qt-based DEs so the Qt project gets more testing and bug reports!

    Comment

    • schmidtbag
      Senior Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 6599

      #3
      Originally posted by Danny3 View Post
      Nice!
      And good to have more Qt-based DEs so the Qt project gets more testing and bug reports!
      I've given LXQt a shot a few times, but ultimately gave up on it due to it breaking every time Qt updated. Could've just been bad maintainers for Arch though.

      Comment

      • pWe00Iri3e7Z9lHOX2Qx
        Senior Member
        • Jul 2020
        • 1470

        #4
        I still need to play with this again. Do the different window management / compositor options in lxqt-wayland-session introduce any weird issues with window decorations / theming etc.?

        Comment

        • Blisterexe
          Junior Member
          • Aug 2024
          • 34

          #5
          Lxqt lets you choose what wayland compositor you want, like any xorg desktop, whic is *extremely* cool.

          Comment

          • Vistaus
            Senior Member
            • Jul 2013
            • 5102

            #6
            Originally posted by schmidtbag View Post
            I've given LXQt a shot a few times, but ultimately gave up on it due to it breaking every time Qt updated. Could've just been bad maintainers for Arch though.
            I've been using LXQt for a while now and it survived the Qt 6.7 to 6.8 upgrade on CachyOS (Arch).

            Comment

            • Veto
              Senior Member
              • Jun 2012
              • 534

              #7
              The Wayland support is considered optional and experimental with LXQt planning to continue supporting the X11 session indefinitely.
              At this point it seems the LXDE based PIXEL desktop is probably a better bet going forward: https://www.phoronix.com/news/Raspbe...ayland-Default

              Comment

              • ahrs
                Senior Member
                • Apr 2021
                • 549

                #8
                Originally posted by schmidtbag View Post
                I've given LXQt a shot a few times, but ultimately gave up on it due to it breaking every time Qt updated. Could've just been bad maintainers for Arch though.
                I've noticed something similar myself, on Gentoo. I run testing though, I'm sure it's better on the stable channel. LXQt really needs to start using the CI features of Github to catch these breakages early instead of waiting for distro reports and then fixing things up later.

                Comment

                • ahrs
                  Senior Member
                  • Apr 2021
                  • 549

                  #9
                  Originally posted by elbar View Post
                  When QT switch happened its memory usage grows, now it is under QT6 but problem is not QT but its KDE bindings and uncommon nature to common desktop today's users.
                  LXQt only uses KDE Frameworks if they make sense for them. They try to use core Qt for everything and when they do use a KDE Framework they keep to the tiers for core frameworks only, that aren't going to pull in the entire Plasma desktop just to use them.

                  EDIT: By the way elbar that bug you linked it two years old and about the KF5 version of KWin. KDE frameworks and Kwin are all on version 6 now. Furthermore, LXQt doesn't have a default window manager or compositor, KWin is just a suggestion that some distributions use (it's the default on Gentoo, and probably other distros but some still configure it differently).
                  Last edited by ahrs; 05 November 2024, 04:14 PM.

                  Comment

                  • Estranged1906
                    Senior Member
                    • Dec 2022
                    • 279

                    #10
                    So LXQt is the first one of the smaller desktops to have "real" Wayland support? Xfce, MATE, Cinnamon are still "work in progress".

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X