Wayland
Wayland is a display server protocol. It is aimed to become the successor of the X Window System. You can find a comparison between Wayland and Xorg on Wikipedia.
Display servers using the Wayland protocol are called compositors because they also act as compositing window managers. Below you can find a list of Wayland compositors.
For compatibility with native X11 applications to run them seamlessly, XWayland can be used, which provides an X Server in Wayland.
Requirements
Most Wayland compositors only work on systems using Kernel mode setting. Wayland by itself does not provide a graphical environment; for this you also need a compositor (see the following section), or a desktop environment that includes a compositor (e.g. GNOME or KDE).
For the GPU driver and Wayland compositor to be compatible they must support the same buffer API. There are two main APIs: GBM and EGLStreams.
Buffer API | GPU driver support | Wayland compositor support |
---|---|---|
GBM | All except NVIDIA < 495* | All |
EGLStreams | NVIDIA | GNOME, Weston (with a third-party patch) |
Since NVIDIA introduced GBM support, many compositors (including Mutter and KWin) started using it by default for NVIDIA ≥ 495. GBM is generally considered better with wider support, and EGLStreams only had support because NVIDIA did not provide any alternative way to use their GPUs under Wayland with their proprietary drivers. Furthermore, KWin dropped support for EGLStreams after GBM was introduced into NVIDIA.
If you use a popular desktop environment/compositor and a GPU still supported by NVIDIA, you are most likely already using GBM backend. To check, run journalctl -b 0 --grep "renderer for"
. To force GBM as a backend, set the following environment variables:
GBM_BACKEND=nvidia-drm __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME=nvidia
Compositors
See Window manager#Types for the difference between Tiling and Stacking.
Tiling
- Cardboard — Scrolling compositor, inspired by PaperWM, based on wlroots.
- dwl — dwm-like Wayland compositor based on wlroots.
- Hyprland — A dynamic tiling Wayland compositor that does not sacrifice on its looks.
- river — Dynamic tiling Wayland compositor inspired by dwm and bspwm.
Stacking
- Liri Shell — Part of Liri, built using QtQuick and QtCompositor as a compositor for Wayland.
- labwc — wlroots-based compositor inspired by Openbox.
Other
- kiwmi — A fully programmable Wayland Compositor.
Some of the above may support display managers. Check /usr/share/wayland-sessions/compositor.desktop
to see how they are started.
Display managers
Display managers listed below support launching Wayland compositors.
Name | Runs itself on Wayland? | Description |
---|---|---|
GDM | GNOME display manager. | |
greetd | Minimal and flexible login daemon. | |
LightDM | Cross-desktop display manager. | |
Ly | TUI display manager written in C | |
SDDM | QML-based display manager. | |
tbsm | Simple CLI session launcher written in pure bash. |
GUI libraries
See details on the official website.
GTK
The and packages have the Wayland backend enabled. GTK will default to the Wayland backend, but it is possible to override it to Xwayland by modifying an environment variable: .
Qt
To enable Wayland support in Qt 5 or 6, install the or package, respectively.
To run a Qt application with the Wayland plugin , use -platform wayland
or QT_QPA_PLATFORM=wayland
environment variable. To force the usage of X11 on a Wayland session, use . This might be necessary for some proprietary applications that do not use the system's implementation of Qt, such as .
allows Qt to use the xcb (X11) plugin instead if Wayland is not available.
On some compositors, for example sway, Qt applications running natively might have missing functionality. For example, KeepassXC will be unable to minimize to tray. This can be solved by installing and setting before running the application.
Clutter
The Clutter toolkit has a Wayland backend that allows it to run as a Wayland client. The backend is enabled in the package.
To run a Clutter application on Wayland, set .
SDL2
As of SDL2 version 2.0.22, SDL defaults to preferring Wayland over X11.
GLFW
To use GLFW with the Wayland backend, install the glfw-wayland package (instead of glfw-x11).
GLEW
The package currently still does not work with a lot of GLEW-based applications, so the only option is to use with Xwayland. See .
EFL
EFL has complete Wayland support. To run a EFL application on Wayland, see Wayland project page.
winit
Winit is a window handling library in Rust. It will default to the Wayland backend, but it is possible to override it to Xwayland by modifying an environment variable: .
Electron
Wayland support can be activated either using per-application command line flags or more globally using a configuration file.
Command line flags
To use -based applications natively under Wayland, the following flags need to be added to your application exec command line (for Electron 20): .
Missing top bars can be solved by additionally using the following flag: . This will typically be necessary under GNOME (supported since electron17).
You can do this for instance by modifying the .desktop file and adding the flags to the end of the line.
Configuration file
Create or edit the file (defaults to if ${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}
is unset) and add the previously mentioned flags (one option per line, with no empty lines):
Older Electron versions
applies only to the latest version of Electron. Older versions of Electron can be configured using their own file. Versioned files can be soft-linked to .
Older versions may also require different flags, depending on the corresponding Chromium version. For example, the following flags work on Electron 13:
XWayland
XWayland is an X server that runs under Wayland and provides compatibility for native X11 applications that are yet to provide Wayland support. To use it, install the package.
XWayland is started via a compositor, so you should check the documentation for your chosen compositor for XWayland compatibility and instructions on how to start XWayland.
- Security: XWayland is an X server, so it does not have the security features of Wayland
- Performance: XWayland has a nearly identical performance to that of X11. In some cases you might notice degraded performance, especially on NVIDIA cards.
- Compatibility: XWayland isn't fully backward compatible with X11. Some applications may not work properly under XWayland.
Nvidia driver
Enabling DRM KMS is required. There may be additional information in the official documentation regarding your display manager (e.g. GDM).
Tips and tricks
Automation
- ydotool () - Generic command-line automation tool (not limited to wayland). Enable/start the user unit. See , ydotoold(1).
- wtype () - xdotool type for wayland. See .
- keyboard - Python library that works on Windows and Linux with experimental OS X support. Also see the mouse library.
Kwin Wayland debug console
If you use , execute the following to see which windows use Xwayland or native Wayland, surfaces, input events, clipboard contents, and more.
$ qdbus org.kde.KWin /KWin org.kde.KWin.showDebugConsole
Detect Xwayland applications visually
To determine whether an application is running via Xwayland, you can run . Move your mouse pointer over the window of an application. If the red mouse moves, the application is running via Xwayland.
Alternatively, you can use and see if the eyes are moving, when moving the mouse pointer over an application window.
An other option is to run xwininfo (from xorg-xwininfo) in a terminal window : when hovering over an Xwayland window the mouse pointer will turn into a + sign. If you click the window it will display some information and end, but it will not do anything with native Wayland windows.You can use to end it.
Remap keyboard or mouse keys
Troubleshooting
Color correction
Slow motion, graphical glitches, and crashes
Gnome-shell users may experience display issues when they switch to Wayland from X. One of the root cause might be the set by yourself for Xorg-based gnome-shell. Just try to remove it from or other rc files to see if everything goes back to normal.
Remote display
- (used by sway) offers a VNC backend via wayvnc since version 0.10. RDP backend has been removed .
- has now remote desktop enabled at compile time, see and for details.
- There was a merge of FreeRDP into Weston in 2013, enabled via a compile flag. The package has it enabled since version 6.0.0.
- (or waypipe-gitAUR) is a transparent proxy for Wayland applications, with a wrapper command to run over SSH
Input grabbing in games, remote desktop and VM windows
In contrast to Xorg, Wayland does not allow exclusive input device grabbing, also known as active or explicit grab (e.g. keyboard, mouse), instead, it depends on the Wayland compositor to pass keyboard shortcuts and confine the pointer device to the application window.
This change in input grabbing breaks current applications' behavior, meaning:
- Hotkey combinations and modifiers will be caught by the compositor and will not be sent to remote desktop and virtual machine windows.
- The mouse pointer will not be restricted to the application's window which might cause a parallax effect where the location of the mouse pointer inside the window of the virtual machine or remote desktop is displaced from the host's mouse pointer.
Wayland solves this by adding protocol extensions for Wayland and XWayland. Support for these extensions is needed to be added to the Wayland compositors. In the case of native Wayland clients, the used widget toolkits (e.g GTK, Qt) needs to support these extensions or the applications themselves if no widget toolkit is being used. In the case of Xorg applications, no changes in the applications or widget toolkits are needed as the XWayland support is enough.
These extensions are already included in , and supported by .
The related extensions are:
- XWayland keyboard grabbing protocol
- Compositor shortcuts inhibit protocol
- Relative pointer protocol
- Pointer constraints protocol
Supporting Wayland compositors:
- Mutter, GNOME's compositor since release 3.28
- wlroots supports relative-pointer and pointer-constraints
Supporting widget toolkits:
- GTK since release 3.22.18.
GTK themes not working
See https://github.com/swaywm/sway/wiki/GTK-3-settings-on-Wayland.
Avoid loading NVIDIA modules
Add as environment variable before launching a Wayland compositor like sway.
See also
- Wayland documentation online
- Official Wayland Git Repo
- Fedora:How to debug Wayland problems
- Are we Wayland yet?
- Awesome Wayland projects
- Cursor themes
- Arch Linux forum discussion
- i3 Migration Guide - Common X11 apps used on i3 with Wayland alternatives
- Wayland Explorer - A better way to read Wayland documentation
- How can I tell if an application is using XWayland