I am using OpenBSD on an x86-64 desktop, and X is still very much the supported graphics environment.
That said, there is interest in Wayland in these circles.
https://www.openbsd.org/papers/eurobsdcon2023-matthieu-wayla...
I am using OpenBSD on an x86-64 desktop, and X is still very much the supported graphics environment.
That said, there is interest in Wayland in these circles.
https://www.openbsd.org/papers/eurobsdcon2023-matthieu-wayla...
Supported by whom? Xorg, the server, no longer maintained. Also, OpenBSD users already a tiny fraction of users...if every single OpenBSD desktop switches to Linux and Wayland, not a single metric will change significantly.
OpenBSD also maintains OpenSSH, which has enormous market penetration.
Their ssh supports the -X and -Y options to run remote X applications.
Let me know when those go Wayland-specific and are able to encompass the new protocol.
Until then, get comfortable in a small and discardable minority.
The `-X` and `-Y` options were a mistake to integrate into `ssh(1)`, it makes an assumption that everybody uses an Athena/X11 type system. That said, you can combine waypipe with ssh to do the same thing (ie. `waypipe ssh` will give you the same effect as `ssh -X`).
Until those options are integrated into OpenSSH itself, Wayland remains in the minority.
I'm not sure this statement makes any sense.
> Their ssh supports the -X and -Y options to run remote X applications.
Cool, I remember using it in 2003 a few times. I highly doubt many people going to miss if those were gone. I would not be surprised if the majority of ssh server installations disable x11 session forwarding.
> Until then, get comfortable in a small and discardable minority.
Are you sure you're not confusing Wayland users with OpenBSD users?
OpenBSD maintains its own Xorg fork, called Xenocara.
I mean the discussion is about Linux though no and even if we extend the umbrella with the BSD folks still I don't think wayland drops below %80