tinywm
wayland-rs
tinywm | wayland-rs | |
---|---|---|
26 | 5 | |
1,437 | 971 | |
- | 2.4% | |
0.0 | 8.2 | |
about 2 years ago | 5 days ago | |
C | Rust | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
tinywm
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Fedora Workstation 41 to No Longer Install Gnome X.org Session by Default
> Nobody's requiring Wayland.
Yet. Defaulting to it is one step on the path towards removing support for X and independent window managers forever.
I deeply, deeply care about running an independent window manager. A minimal X window manager is a page of code: https://github.com/mackstann/tinywm/blob/master/tinywm.c (yes, plus xlib); a minimal Wayland compositor is tens of thousands of lines of code.
> contrary to your statements, it's perfectly ready for prime time
These comments are full of folks mentioning issues. Wayland does not support my window manager; thus it is demonstrably not ready for prime time for me.
> Wayland is the way forward
It may actually be. I’m not as opposed to Wayland as I may sound! But do you understand how you and other Wayland advocates sound — like advocates? ‘Wayland is the way forward’; ‘there's no future for Xorg’; these things are arguably true, but they are also rather cruel to say (a bit like ‘inevitably you and everyone will die’: it really is true, but it’s also not at all a nice thing to say).
I do think that Wayland or something very like it may be the way forward, but it needs to be an evolution, not a revolution. I know that the party line is that that’s not possible, but I suspect that rather than not possible it is just very hard. It’s always easier to greenfield, and it is always hell to be 100% backwards compatible.
But that’s what it needs to be.
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RubyWM – an X11 window manager in pure Ruby
Hah. I didn't think this was quite HN worthy at this point - the code is still a mess, and has plenty of bugs. It was however the wm I actually use since I got frustrated with bspwm and did a very minimalist rewrite of TinyWM [1] in Ruby [2] and expanded it from there. It was painful the first few days until I'd had time to add multiple desktops and the start of a tiling mode. But at this point, it's "almost" pleasant for me.
The warnings are real, though, apart from the initial hyperbole - this is likely to break for you in all kinds of horrible ways still. I use very few applications beyond (my own) terminal, (my own) polybar replacement, (my own) file manager, and a browser, and so once Chrome and my own apps mostly started working ok I've had very little incentive to make sure it behaves nicely with anything else and I know the distinction between different EWMH window types is incomplete and broken - just not in ways that usually affect my own use.
[1] https://github.com/mackstann/tinywm/blob/master/tinywm.c
[2] https://gist.github.com/vidarh/1cdbfcdf3cfd8d25a247243963e55...
- What’s something simple but interesting I can build with c
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WM like i3wm
picking a random bare bones wm tinywm
- TinyWM – A tiny window manager in around 50 lines of C
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I cannot find the desktop environment for me
Or Check out TinyWM. Its just a few lines of code.
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WM/DE iceberg
TinyWM
wayland-rs
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Announcing shikane: a dynamic output configuration tool for Wayland compositors
I was initially having some problems with kanshi and was thinking about contributing the new features I wanted. For some of the features I wanted, kanshi's internals would have to change considerably. Since kanshi consists of only ~1500 lines of C, I began writing a replacement for kanshi in Rust. After many hours of reading Wayland protocol specifications, working on shikane, some help from the Smithay project and their Rust implementation of Wayland protocols, shikane was able to replace kanshi on my machines. I have been using it for over 4 months now.
- Is there a good tutorial for writing an X11 Tiling Window manager in Rust?
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Xremap - Linux key remapper written in Rust
Yes, I agree. Since https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots-rs is deprecated, I'm guessing I should use https://github.com/Smithay/smithay or https://github.com/Smithay/wayland-rs. As soon as I find a library that can use the protocol, preferably without extra dependency, I'll switch it to that.
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Are there any ongoing efforts of making a desktop environment (similar to KDE or Gnome) in Rust?
There's also https://github.com/Smithay/wayland-rs
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Rust, Wayland and the Linux "graphics stack"
Also there is an incomplete Wayland implementation in Rust, but that isn't very actively developed.
What are some alternatives?
chadwm - Making dwm as beautiful as possible!
leftwm - A tiling window manager for Adventurers
dwm-xcb - A port of dwm to XCB.
eww - ElKowars wacky widgets
sowm - An itsy bitsy floating window manager (220~ sloc!).
smithay - A smithy for rusty wayland compositors
wlroots - A modular Wayland compositor library
penrose - A library for writing an X11 tiling window manager
hello-wayland - A hello world Wayland client (mirror)
yofi - yofi is a minimalistic menu for wayland
no-wm - Use X11 without a window manager
wl-clipboard-rs - A safe Rust crate for working with the Wayland clipboard.