Now that we have a few years of experience with the Wayland protocol, I thought I would put some of my observations in writing. This, what will hopefully become a series rather than just one post, considers how to design Wayland protocol extensions the right way.
This first post considers protocol object lifespan and the related races between the compositor/server and the client. I assume that the reader is already aware of the Wayland protocol basics. If not, I suggest reading Chapter 4. Wayland Protocol and Model of Operation.
25 Jul 2014
5 Jun 2014
From pre-history to beyond the global thermonuclear war
This is a short and vague glimpse to the interfaces that the Linux kernel offers to user space for display and graphics management, from the history to what is hot and new, to what might perhaps be coming after. The topic came current for me when I started preparing Weston for global thermonuclear war.
31 Jan 2014
Improving presentation on Wayland
In the last two (or three?) weeks at Collabora I have been looking into a Wayland protocol extension that would allow accurately timed presentation. Accurate timing is essential for two quite different use cases: video playback with audio/video synchronization, and interactive GUI with just-in-time redrawing. Video playback with A/V sync was our primary goal when we started working on this, and there is Frederic Plourde's first proposal from October 2013. Since then I have realized that also other kinds of applications need timings, especially feedback on when their content updates were shown, and when is the next chance to show an update (vblank). Primarily my re-design started with the aim to improve resizing performance when I got the assignment from Daniel Stone to push Wayland presentation protocol forward. The RFC v2 of Wayland presentation extension is now out for review and discussion.