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Think twice about Wayland. It breaks everything!

Think twice before abandoning X11. Wayland breaks everything!

image

Source: https://x.com/LundukeJournal/status/1940441670098809093

Hence, if you are interested in existing applications to "just work" without the need for adjustments, then you may be better off avoiding Wayland.

Wayland solves no issues I have but breaks almost everything I need. Even the most basic, most simple things (like xkill) - in this case with no obvious replacement. And usually it stays broken, because the Wayland folks mostly seem to care about Automotive, Gnome, maybe KDE - and alienating everyone else (e.g., people using just an X11 window manager or something like GNUstep) in the process.


Update 06/2025: X11 is alive and well, despite what Red Hat wants you to believe. https://github.com/X11Libre/xserver revitalizes the Xorg X11 server as a community project under new leadership.

And Red Hat wanted to silence it.


As 2024 is winding down:

For the record, even in the latest Raspberry Pi OS you still can't drag a file from inside a zip file onto the desktop for it to be extracted. So drag-and-drop is still broken for me.

And Qt move() on a window still doesn't work like it does on all other desktop platforms (and the Wayland folks think that is good).

And global menus still don't work (outside of not universally implemented things like qt_extended_surface set_generic_property).


The Wayland project seems to operate like they were starting a greenfield project, whereas at the same time they try to position Wayland as "the X11 successor", which would clearly require a lot of thought about not breaking, or at least providing a smooth upgrade path for, existing software.

In fact, it is merely an incompatible alternative, and not even one that has (nor wants to have) feature parity (missing features). And unlike X11 (the X Window System), Wayland protocol designers actively avoid the concept of "windows" (making up incomprehensible words like "xdg_toplevel" instead).

DO NOT USE A WAYLAND SESSION! Let Wayland not destroy everything and then have other people fix the damage it caused. Or force more Red Hat/Gnome components (glib, Portals, Pipewire) on everyone!

Please add more examples to the list.

Wayland seems to be made by people who do not care for existing software. They assume everyone is happy to either rewrite everything or to just use Gnome on Linux (rather than, say, twm with ROX Filer on NetBSD).

Edit: When I wrote the above, I didn't really realize what Wayland even was, I just noticed that some distributions (like Fedora) started pushing it onto me and things didn't work properly there. Today I realize that you can't "install Wayland", because unlike Xorg, there is not one "Wayland display server" but actually every desktop envrironment has its own. And maybe "the Wayland folks" don't "only care about Gnome", but then, any fix that is done in Gnome's Wayland implementation isn't automatically going to benefit all users of Wayland-based software, and possibly isn't even the implementation "the Wayland folks" would necessarily recommend.

Edit 12/2023: If something wants to replace X11 for desktop computers (such as professional Unix workstations), then it better support all needed features (and key concepts, like windows) for that use case. That people also have displays on their fridge doesn't matter the least bit in that context of discussion. Let's propose the missing Wayland protocols for full X11 feature parity.

Edit 08/2024: "Does Wayland becoming the defacto standard display server for Linux serve to marginalize BSD?" https://fossforce.com/2024/07/the-unintended-consequences-linuxs-wayland-adoption-will-have-on-bsd/

Wayland is broken by design

  • A crash in the window manager takes down all running applications
  • You cannot run applications as root
  • You cannot do a lot of things that you can do in Xorg by design
  • There is not one /usr/bin/wayland display server application that is desktop environment agnostic and is used by everyone (unlike with Xorg)
  • It offloads a lot of work to each and every window manager. As a result, the same basic features get implemented differently in different window managers, with different behaviors and bugs - so what works on desktop environment A does not necessarily work in desktop environment B (e.g., often you hear that something "works in Wayland", even though it only really works on Gnome and KDE, not in all Wayland implementations). This summarizes it very well: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland/-/issues/233

Apparently the Wayland project doesn't even want to be "X.org 2.0", and doesn't want to provide a commonly used implementation of a compositor that could be used by everyone: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland/-/issues/233. Yet this would imho be required if they want to make it into a worthwile "successor" that would have any chance of ever fixing the many Wayland issues at the core.

Wayland breaks screen recording applications

  • MaartenBaert/ssr#431 ❌ broken since 24 Jan 2016, no resolution ("I guess they use a non-standard GNOME interface for this")
  • https://github.com/mhsabbagh/green-recorder ❌ ("I am no longer interested in working with things like ffmpeg/wayland/GNOME's screencaster or solving the issues related to them or why they don't work")
  • vkohaupt/vokoscreenNG#51 ❌ broken since at least 7 Mar 2020. ("I have now decided that there will be no Wayland support for the time being. Reason, there is no budget for it. Let's see how it looks in a year or two.") - This is the key problem. Wayland breaks everything and then expects others to fix the wreckage it caused on their own expense.
  • obsproject/obs-studio#2471 ❌ broken since at least 7 Mar 2020. ("Wayland is unsupported at this time", "There isn't really something that can just be easily changed. Wayland provides no capture APIs")
  • There is a workaround for OBS Studio that requires a obs-xdg-portal plugin (which is known to be Red Hat/Flatpak-centric, GNOME-centric, "perhaps" works with other desktops)
  • phw/peek#1191 ❌ broken since 14 Jan 2023. Peek, a screen recording tool, has been abandoned by its developerdue to a number of technical challenges, mostly with Gtk and Wayland ("Many of these have to do with how Wayland changed the way applications are being handled")

As of February 2024, screen recording is still broken utterly on Wayland with the vast majority of tools. Proof

Workaround: Find a Wayland compositor that supports the wlr-screencopy-unstable-v1 protocol and use wf-recorder -a. The default compositor in Raspberry Pi OS (Wayfire) does, but the default compositor in Ubuntu doesn't. (That's the worst part of Wayland: Unlike with Xorg, it always depends on the particular Wayand compositor what works and what is broken. Is there even one that supports everything?)

Wayland breaks screen sharing applications

  • jitsi/jitsi-meet#2350 ❌ broken since 3 Jan 2018
  • jitsi/jitsi-meet#6389 ❌ broken since 24 Jan 2016 ("Closing since there is nothing we can do from the Jitsi Meet side.") See? Wayland breaks stuff and leaves application developers helpless and unable to fix the breakage, even if they wanted.

NOTE: As of November 2023, screen sharing in Chromium using Jitsi Meet is still utterly broken, both in Raspberry Pi OS Desktop, and in a KDE Plasma installation, albeit with different behavior. Note that Pipewire, Portals and whatnot are installed, and even with them it does not work.

Wayland breaks automation software

sudo pkg install py37-autokey

This is an X11 application, and as such will not function 100% on 
distributions that default to using Wayland instead of Xorg.

Wayland breaks Gnome-Global-AppMenu (global menus for Gnome)

Wayland broke global menus with KDE platformplugin

Good news: According to this report global menus now work with KDE platformplugin as of 4/2022

Wayland breaks global menus with non-KDE Qt platformplugins

Wayland breaks AppImages that don't ship a special Wayland Qt plugin

  • https://blog.martin-graesslin.com/blog/2018/03/unsetting-qt_qpa_platform-environment-variable-by-default/ ❌ broke AppImages that don't ship a special Wayland Qt plugin. "This affects proprietary applications, FLOSS applications bundled as appimages, FLOSS applications bundled as flatpaks and not distributed by KDE and even the Qt installer itself. In my opinion this is a showstopper for running a Wayland session." However, there is a workaround: "AppImages which ship just the XCB plugin will automatically fallback to running in xwayland mode" (see below).

Wayland breaks Redshift

Update 2023: Some Wayland compositors (such as Wayfire) now support wlr_gamma_control_unstable_v1, see https://github.com/WayfireWM/wayfire/wiki/Tutorial#configuring-wayfire and jonls/redshift#663. Does it work in all Wayland compositors though?

Wayland breaks global hotkeys

Wayland does not work for Xfce?

See below.

Wayland does not work properly on NVidia hardware?

Apparently Wayland relies on nouveau drivers for NVidia hardware. The nouveau driver has been giving unsatisfactory performance since its inception. Even clicking on the application starter icon in Gnome results in a stuttery animation. Only the proprietary NVidia driver results in full performance.

See below.

Update 2024: The situation might slowly be improving. It remains to be seen whether this will work well also for all existing old Nvidia hardware (that works well in Xorg).

Wayland does not work properly on Intel hardware

Wayland prevents GUI applications from running as root

  • https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1274451 ❌ broken since 22 Oct 2015 ("No this will only fix sudo for X11 applications. Running GUI code as root is still a bad idea." I absolutely detest it when software tries to prevent me from doing what some developer thinks is "a bad idea" but did not consider my use case, e.g., running truss for debugging on FreeBSD needs to run the application as root. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1323302 suggests it is not possible: "These sorts of security considerations are very much the way that "the Linux desktop" is going these days".)

Suggested solution

Wayland is biased toward Linux and breaks BSD

  • https://blog.netbsd.org/tnf/entry/wayland_on_netbsd_trials_and ❌ broken since 28 Sep 2020 ("Wayland is written with the assumption of Linux to the extent that every client application tends to #include <linux/input.h> because Wayland's designers didn't see the need to define a OS-neutral way to get mouse button IDs. (...) In general, Wayland is moving away from the modularity, portability, and standardization of the X server. (...) I've decided to take a break from this, since it's a fairly huge undertaking and uphill battle. Right now, X11 combined with a compositor like picom or xcompmgr is the more mature option."

Wayland complicates server-side window decorations

  • https://blog.martin-graesslin.com/blog/2018/01/server-side-decorations-and-wayland/ ❌ FUD since at least 27 January 2018 ("I heard that GNOME is currently trying to lobby for all applications implementing client-side decorations. One of the arguments seems to be that CSD is a must on Wayland. " ... "I’m burnt from it and are not interested in it any more.") Server-side window decorations are what make the title bar and buttons of all windows on a system consistent. They are a must have_ for a consistent system, so that applications written e.g., Gtk will not look entirely alien on e.g., a Qt based desktop, and to enforce that developers cannot place random controls into window titles where they do not belong. Client-side decorations, on the other hand, are destroying uniformity and consistency, put additional burden on application and toolkit developers, and allow e.g., GNOME developers to put random controls (that do not belong there) into window titles (like buttons), hence making it more difficult to achieve a uniform look and feel for all applications regardless of the toolkit being used.

Red Hat employee Matthias Clasen ("I work at the Red Hat Desktop team... I am actually a manager there... the people who do the actual work work for me") expicitly stated "Client-side everything" as a principle, even though the protocol doesn't enforce it: "Fonts, Rendering, Nested Windows, Decorations. "It also gives the design more freedom to use the titlebar space, which is something our designers appreciate" (sic). Source

Wayland breaks windows rasing/activating themselves

Wayland breaks RescueTime

Wayland breaks window managers

Apparently Wayland (at least as implemented in KWin) does not respect EWMH protocols, and breaks other command line tools like wmctrl, xrandr, xprop, etc. Please see the discussion below for details.

Wayland requires JWM, TWM, XDM, IceWM,... to reimplement Xorg-like functionality

  • Screen recording and casting
  • Querying of the mouse position, keyboard LED state, active window position or name, moving windows (xdotool, wmctrl)
  • Global shortcuts
  • System tray
  • Input Method support/editor (IME)
  • Graphical settings management (i.e. tools like xranrd)
  • Fast user switching/multiple graphical sessions
  • Session configuration including but not limited to 1) input devices 2) monitors configuration including refresh rate / resolution / scaling / rotation and power saving 3) global shortcuts
  • HDR/deep color support
  • VRR (variable refresh rate)
  • Disabling input devices (xinput alternative)

As it currently stands minor WMs and DEs do not even intend to support Wayland given the sheer complexity of writing all the code required to support the above features. You do not expect JWM, TWM, XDM or even IceWM developers to implement all the featured outlined in ^1.

Wayland breaks _NET_WM_STATE_SKIP_TASKBAR protocol

  • https://github.comelectron/electron#33226 ("skipTaskbar has no effect on Wayland. Currently Electron uses _NET_WM_STATE_SKIP_TASKBAR to tell the WM to hide an app from the taskbar, and this works fine on X11 but there's no equivalent mechanism in Wayland." Workarounds are only available for some desktops including GNOME and KDE Plasma.) ❌ broken since March 10, 2022

Wayland breaks NoMachine NX

Wayland breaks xclip

xclip is a command line utility that is designed to run on any system with an X11 implementation. It provides an interface to X selections ("the clipboard"). Apparently Wayland isn't compatible to the X11 clipboard either.

This is another example that the Wayland requires everyone to change components and take on additional work just because Wayland is incompatible to what we had working for all those years.

Wayland breaks SUDO_ASKPASS

Wayland breaks auto-type in password managers

Wayland breaks X11 atoms

X11 atoms can be used to store information on windows. For example, a file manager might store the path that the window represents in an X11 atom, so that it (and other applications) can know for which paths there are open file manager windows. Wayland is not compatible to X11 atoms, resulting in all software that relies on them to be broken until specifically ported to Wayland (which, in the case of legacy software, may well be never).

Possible workaround (to be verified): Use the (Qt proprietary?) Extended Surface Wayland protocol casually mentioned in https://blog.broulik.de/2016/10/global-menus-returning/ "which allows you to set (and read?) arbitrary properties on a window". Is it the set_generic_property from https://github.com/qt/qtwayland/blob/dev/src/extensions/surface-extension.xml?

Wayland breaks games

Games are developed for X11. And if you run a game on Wayland, performance is subpar due to things like forced vsync. Only recently, some Wayland implementations (like KDE KWin) let you disable that.

Wayland breaks xdotool

(Details to be added; apparently no 1:1 drop-in replacement available?)

Wayland breaks xkill

xkill (which I use on a regular basis) does not work with Wayland applications.

What is the equivalent for Wayland applications?

Wayland breaks screensavers

Is it true that Wayland also breaks screensavers? https://www.jwz.org/blog/2023/09/wayland-and-screen-savers/

Wayland breaks setting the window position

Other platforms (Windows, Mac, other destop environments) can set the window position on the screen, so all cross-platform toolkits and applications expect to do the same on Wayland, but Wayland can't (doesn't want to) do it.

  • PCSX2/pcsx2#10179 PCX2 (Playstation 2 Emulator) ❌ broken since 2023-10-25 ("Disables Wayland, it's super broken/buggy in basically every scenario. KDE isn't too buggy, GNOME is a complete disaster.")

  • Wayland might allow the compositor (not: the application) to set window positions, but that means that as an application author, I can't do anything but wait for KDE to implement https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=15329 - and even then, it will only work under KDE, not Gnome or elsewhere. Big step backward compared to X11!

Wayland breaks color mangement

Apparently color management as of 2023 (well over a decade of Wayland development) is still in the early "thinking" stage, all the while Wayland is already being pushed on people as if it was a "X11 successor".

https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pq/color-and-hdr/-/blob/main/doc/color-management-model.md

Wayland breaks DRM leasing

According to Valve, "DRM leasing is the process which allows SteamVR to take control of your VR headset's display in order to present low-latency VR content".

Wayland breaks In-home Streaming

Wayland breaks NetWM

Extended Window Manager Hints, a.k.a. NetWM, is an X Window System standard for the communication between window managers and applications

Wayland breaks window icons

Update 6/2024: Looks like this will get unbroken thanks to xdg_toplevel_icon_manager_v1, so that QWindow::setIcon will work again. If, and that's a big if, all compositors will support it. At least KDE is on it.

Wayland breaks drag and drop

Wayland breaks ./windowmanager --replace

  • Many window managers have a --replace argument, but Wayland compositors break this convention.

Wayland breaks Xpra

Xpra is an open-source multi-platform persistent remote display server and client for forwarding applications and desktop screens.

  • Under Xpra a context menu cannot be used: it opens and closes automatically before you can even move the mouse on it. "It's not just GDK, it's the Wayland itself. They decided to break existing applications and expect them to change how they work." (Xpra-org/xpra#4246) ❌ broken since 2024-06-01

Wayland breaks multi desktop docks

  • "Unfortunately Wayland is not designed to support multi desktop dock projects. This is why each DE using Wayland is building their own custom docks. Plus there is a lot of complexity to support Wayland based apps and also merge that data with apps running in Xwayland. A dock isn't useful unless it knows about every window and app running on the system." zquestz/plank-reloaded#70 ❌ broken since 2025-06-10

Xwayland breaks window resizing

Workarounds

  • Users: Refuse to use Wayland sessions. Uninstall desktop environments/Linux distributions that only ship Wayland sessions. Avoid Wayland-only applications (such as PreSonus Studio One) (potential workaround: run in https://github.com/cage-kiosk/cage)
  • Application developers: Enforce running applications on X11/XWayland (like LibrePCB does as of 11/2023)

Examples of Wayland being forced on users

This is exactly the kind of behavior this gist seeks to prevent.

Summary what is wrong with Wayland, by one of its contributors

image

Source: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/-/issues/179#note_2965661

History

  • 2008: Wayland was started by krh (while at Red Hat)
  • End of 2012: Wayland 1.0
  • Early 2013: GNOME begins Wayland porting

Source: "Where's Wayland?" by Matthias Clasen - Flock 2014

A decade later... Red Hat wants to force Wayland upon everyone, removing support for Xorg

What now?

Following the professional application KiCad's advice:

Recommendations for Users

For Professional Use

If you use KiCad professionally or require a reliable, full-featured experience, we strongly recommend:

Use X11-based desktop environments such as:

XFCE with X11 KDE Plasma with X11 MATE

Traditional desktop environments that maintain X11 support

Install X11-compatible display managers like LightDM or KDM instead of GDM if your distribution defaults to Wayland-only

Choose distributions that maintain X11 support - some distributions are moving to Wayland-only configurations that may not meet your needs

Source: https://www.kicad.org/blog/2025/06/KiCad-and-Wayland-Support/#

Similarly, for Krite: https://www.davidrevoy.com/article1030/debian-12-kde-plasma-2024-install-guide#d-krita-as-appimage

References

@securerootd
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I am frankly surprised (in a positive way!) by the attention Xlibre is receiving. There are already so many reports and several MRs. Now I find out that maybe even Fedora might adopt it instead of Xorg.

https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel-announce@lists.fedoraproject.org/thread/3RJJZBMLIQKYVUFV6URL3634CNDILSLF/

Not happening. Fedora/RH is the main backer of Unix-opposing systemd/wayland/gnome/gtk design.

image

@alerikaisattera
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Unix-opposing

Linux Is Not UniX

@darkhog
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darkhog commented Jun 24, 2025

Unix-opposing

Linux Is Not UniX

That's not what it stands for. It literally stands for LINUs's uniX.

@alerikaisattera
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That's not what it stands for. It literally stands for LINUs's uniX.

Doesn't matter. Linux is not Unix. If you are so obsessed with Unix, go use macOS or another certified Unix

@regs01
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regs01 commented Jun 25, 2025

Unix is not Certified Unix

And Android is Linux, just not GNU/Linux.

@insilications
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It is unbelievable that the Gnome Foundation supports such amateurish behavior. This strident behavior is more characteristic of 18-year-old students who think they are part of a militant university committee. It only increases the noise in the signal-to-noise ratio. It is unprofessional: On X11 and the Fascists Maggots

@rfc-2549
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Doesn't matter. Linux is not Unix. If you are so obsessed with Unix, go use macOS or another certified Unix

UNIX is an operating system that is POSIX compliant. GNU/Linux is POSIX compliant (but not certified by the OpenGroup)

So i'm sorry to inform you that Linux is indeed an UNIX operating system. but we call it unix-like because of trade marks. Not because it is not UNIX. So repeat with me. GNU/Linux is indeed an UNIX :)

@alerikaisattera
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And Android is Linux, just not GNU/Linux.

Android is as Linux as macOS is FreeBSD or Windows is OpenVMS

GNU/Linux is an incorrect term that only the most deranged Stallman simps use

Linux is POSIX compliant

Not exactly

GNU/Linux

Go eat some foot fungus in honor of your beloved fat neckbeard

@rfc-2549
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Go eat some foot fungus in honor of your beloved fat neckbeard

Wow. I'm very glad i'm something similar to Cthulhu or something because a mere word can make you go insane. Damn. Chill my man

Linux is a kernel. Not an operating system. Why don't you go suck some big corporate cock to your beloved Linux Foundation Goldman Sachs Spokeman? Idiot

Also please do explain how is linux not POSIX compliant and why GNU/Linux is an incorrect term because while I bothered on elaborating i just see you sperging and insulting without any clear purpose. Do you want to talk my friend? Is everything okay?

@alerikaisattera
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Stallman simps are so utterly deranged lol

Linux is a kernel. Not an operating system.

Yes, but unfortunately the word "Linux" is typically used to refer to the OS, not the kernel

Idiot

Stallman simp attemps insulting. Funny

how is linux not POSIX compliant

It fails to properly implement some parts of POSIX standard, such as POSIX file locks

why GNU/Linux is an incorrect term

It is incorrect because GNU is just a set of applications and utilities that are no more special than any other applications and utilities, and the only reason this term exists is because the fat neckbeard wants you to believe that he made something very important, when in reality his applications and utilities lie on the drive for months without being used, though they likely have been more useful back in the 1990s

@rfc-2549
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i don't simp for stallman i don't know in which comment i say "GOD I CANNOT STOP THINKING ABOUT SUCKING STALLMANS COCK". If I understood my posts correctly I never simped for Stallman nor I even mentioned the fucking GPL. Nor i mentioned Stallman, you pulled that from our corporate-licking ass. I think GNU is retarded and the GPL is a stupid license.

Now I'm curious: Why do you have to make it so clear you hate Stallman?

It's called GNU/Linux because GNU is a part of the OS and Linux is the other. I don't care about people don't knowing which words and concepts they're using. Their idiocy is not my shame. I'm sorry for knowing the concepts and words well?

Retard.

@alerikaisattera
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I never simped for Stallman

Anyone who uses the term GNU/Linux is a Stallman simp

Retard

Stallman simp attemps insulting. Funny

@rfc-2549
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>Anyone who uses the term GNU/Linux is a Stallman simp
>Stallman simp attemps insulting. Funny

image

@insilications
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It is unbelievable that the Gnome Foundation supports such amateurish behavior. This strident behavior is more characteristic of 18-year-old students who think they are part of a militant university committee. It only increases the noise in the signal-to-noise ratio. It is unprofessional: On X11 and the Fascists Maggots

Its not that they are wrong, i mostly heard just far right BS from X11 chills. Like Xorg is already under Red Hats Control why would they randomly decide to replace it with something that is also under control by them like did they randomly decide to kill something they control to force you on something they also control when they already are the ones in Control. Like the conspiracys dont make any sense. Xorg is Legacy Software, if you want to save it write from scratch an X11 implementation. Dont take the decades of technical debt with you.

They could have explained the hijacking of a technical problem as a political issue and culture war, as you just described. They could have addressed the concerns of those who think X11 will be completely abandoned. That would have been a professional and objective response. However, this guy's amateur response only adds fuel to the fire.

@darkhog
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darkhog commented Jun 26, 2025

fat neckbeard wants you to believe that he made something very important, when in reality his applications and utilities lie on the drive for months without being used, though they likely have been more useful back in the 1990s

Dude, I've used ls today. And yes, it's the GNU part of the GNU/Linux. Just like GCC is.

@guiodic
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guiodic commented Jun 26, 2025

It is incorrect because GNU is just a set of applications and utilities that are no more special than any other applications and utilities

Totally wrong. GNU provides everything you need to make a working operating system, apart from the Linux kernel. In particular, it provides the core system libraries and thus the core system APIs, without which nothing would work.

You can take away X and still have an OS.
You can take away systemd and still have an OS (just use init=/bin/bash in the kernel command line to start the system.)
You can take away pretty everything, but GNU and Linux.

If you take away the GNU components, you don't have an operating system.
If you take away the Linux kernel, you don't have an operating system.

Sure, you can replace each GNU component with something else. But then you no longer have the same operating system, but another system that uses Linux as its kernel anyway.
You can also replace the Linux kernel with another (that of FreeBSD for example) and get another operating system. The funny thing is that this GNU+kfreeBSD system is more like GNU+Linux than GNU+Linux is like something-else+Linux.

Ultimately, the essential components of almost all distributions are GNU and Linux, which is why the name GNU/Linux is the most technically accurate.

@probonopd
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You can take away GNU and still have a working Linux desktop operating system.
In fact, you can download one here:
https://www.alpinelinux.org/

@rfc-2549
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alpine linux, gnu free
look inside
gcc

@Consolatis
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Consolatis commented Jun 26, 2025

And there I thought this gist was about wayland deficiencies. Something else to discuss?

@rfc-2549
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Of course Consolatis: I think tabs are better because they take less disk space, emacs is better because it allows more things than Vim, runit is better because it's simpler and thus better for and end user (maybe not for a prod environment), kde and gnome both are garbage and qemu is alright but i'm more of a bhyve enjoyer myself. What about you?

@probonopd
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Correct. Friendly quarterly reminder to everyone (including myself) to stay on topic.

@rfc-2549
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Ight if the owner says something I follow the rules. Thanks for le fish

@guiodic
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guiodic commented Jun 27, 2025

You can take away GNU and still have a working Linux desktop operating system. In fact, you can download one here: https://www.alpinelinux.org/

It seems to me you did not read my post.

@reaperx7
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I have another break I just found:

Wayland break Mouse Screengrabbing in Proton/Wine games.

While gaming today, I tried using my mouse during a test session for Cinnamon (the sanity based fork of GNOME), and the mouse refused to grab during FullScreen sessions making gameplay virtually impossible without attempts to alt+tab out and resync to the screen, which still didn't work after reclicking. I was forced to close the gaming session and relaunch from Xfce (X11 session) to have a proper gaming experience.

I highly doubt Xfce will ever get things into a usable state for wayland. This is just bad software and slipshod design.

@darkhog
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darkhog commented Jun 28, 2025

Doesn't Cinnamon work in X11? No need to launch separate DE. For all we know it might've been Cinnamon-related and not Wayland-related, especially since if this bug was a Whaleland bug, we'd already know it. Please test if Cinnamon under X11 does the same. Then (if Cinnamon under X11 is fine) test if under Wayland+different DE (GNOME or KDE) it also occurs.

If it is confirmed breakage in Wayland itself, I think it must be a new one.

@reaperx7
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It happens in Cinnamon, Plasma, and Gnome.

I tested in Cinnamon, Plasma, and Gnome under X11 (thanks to Arch still leaving X11 support in like smart people), and the problem never occurred.

This is because the protocol that tells a screen to grab the mouse doesn't exist in wayland, and can't be used also in Xwayland either. Yet another basic X function not even implemented. Xmouse I believe is the universally recognized protocol.

@Consolatis
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This is because the protocol that tells a screen to grab the mouse doesn't exist in wayland

Wrong.

and can't be used also in Xwayland either.

Wrong.

@reaperx7
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This is because the protocol that tells a screen to grab the mouse doesn't exist in wayland

Wrong.

and can't be used also in Xwayland either.

Wrong.

Then why doesn't it work?

Instead of just staying I'm wrong, prove I'm wrong.

@Consolatis
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Consolatis commented Jun 28, 2025

The protocol that tells a screen to grab the mouse doesn't exist in wayland

Mysterious wayland-protocol which apparently does not exist.

and can't be used also in Xwayland either

A wayland compositor supporting xwayland takes over the window manager part for X11. It can do anything the window manager on X11 can do. And it is responsible to manage keyboard and mouse focus. So of course it can react to global mouse grabs from X11 clients.

@reaperx7
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reaperx7 commented Jun 29, 2025

The protocol that tells a screen to grab the mouse doesn't exist in wayland

Mysterious wayland-protocol which apparently does not exist.

and can't be used also in Xwayland either

A wayland compositor supporting xwayland takes over the window manager part for X11. It can do anything the window manager on X11 can do. And it is responsible to manage keyboard and mouse focus. So of course it can react to global mouse grabs from X11 clients.

So why is it not working on every wayland desktop environment? Gnome, Cinnamon, and Plasma... The mouse grabbing doesn't work even after multiple alt+tabs to refocus the scene in focus and the mouse pointer keeps slipping from grab.

Especially on multiple monitors. For a single monitor it's a non-issue. For multiple monitors, the mouse goes wherever.

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