Wayland
This section details the manual installation and configuration of Wayland compositors and related services and utilities.
Installation
Unlike Xorg, Wayland implementations combine the display server, the window manager and the compositor in a single application.
Desktop Environments
GNOME, KDE Plasma and Enlightenment have Wayland sessions. GNOME uses its Wayland session by default. When using these desktop environments, applications built with GTK+ will automatically choose the Wayland backend, while Qt5 and EFL applications might require setting some environment variables if used outside KDE or Enlightenment, respectively.
Standalone compositors
Void Linux currently packages the following Wayland compositors:
- Weston: reference compositor for Wayland
- Sway: an i3-compatible Wayland compositor
- Wayfire: 3D Wayland compositor
- Hikari: a stacking compositor with some tiling features
- Cage: a Wayland kiosk
- River: a dynamic tiling Wayland compositor
- labwc: a window-stacking compositor, inspired by Openbox
- Qtile: a dynamic tiling Wayland compositor (via qtile-wayland)
Some compositors do not depend on any fonts, which can cause many applications to not work. Install a font package to fix this.
Video drivers
Both GNOME and KDE Plasma have EGLStreams backends for Wayland, which means they
can use the proprietary NVIDIA drivers. Most other Wayland compositors require
drivers that implement the GBM interface. The main driver for this purpose is
provided by the mesa-dri
package. The "Graphics
Drivers" section has more details regarding
setting up graphics in different systems.
Seat management
Wayland compositors require some way of controlling the video display and accessing input devices. In Void systems, this requires a seat manager service, which can be either elogind or seatd. Enabling them is explained in the "Session and Seat Management" session.
Native applications
Qt5-based applications require
installing the qt5-wayland
package and setting the environment variable
QT_QPA_PLATFORM=wayland-egl
to enable their Wayland backend. Some KDE specific
applications also require installing the kwayland
package.
EFL-based applications require
setting the environment variable ELM_DISPLAY=wl
, and can have issues without
it, due to not supporting XWayland properly. SDL-based
applications require setting the environment variable SDL_VIDEODRIVER=wayland
.
GTK+-based applications
should use the Wayland backend automatically. Information about other toolkits
can be found in the Wayland
documentation.
Media applications, such as mpv(1),
vlc(1) and imv
work natively on Wayland.
Web browsers
Mozilla Firefox ships with a Wayland backend which is disabled by default. To
enable the Wayland backend, either set the environment variable
MOZ_ENABLE_WAYLAND=1
before running firefox
or use the provided
firefox-wayland
script.
Browsers based on GTK+ or Qt5, such as Midori and qutebrowser(1), should work on Wayland natively.
Running X applications inside Wayland
If an application doesn't support Wayland, it can still be used in a Wayland
context. XWayland is an X server that bridges this gap for most Wayland
compositors, and is installed as a dependency for most of them. Its package is
xorg-server-xwayland
. For Weston, the correct package is weston-xwayland
.
Configuration
The Wayland library requires the
XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
environment
variable to determine the directory for the Wayland socket.
It is also possible that some applications use the XDG_SESSION_TYPE
environment variable in some way, which requires that you set it to wayland
.