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    2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Lomiri (was Unity8)
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      • alan_gA Offline
        alan_g
        last edited by alan_g

        Going Wayland is going cross-distro

        One of the big changes has been to the Mesa graphics drivers: Ubuntu used to carry a "Mir EGL" distro patch that enabled EGL clients to use the "mirclient API". Because Mesa changed in ways that broke that patch badly it was dropped in Ubuntu 18.04. I'll discuss this further below under "Going Wayland".
        ...
        Unity8 is based on Mir and @mariogrip had done the work needed for Unity8 to run on Ubuntu 18.04 without "Mir EGL" by using Wayland instead of the "mirclient API" (which is supported by recent versions of Mir).

        In the OP I neglected to mention one very useful side-effect of these changes: Because Unity8 can now run without the "Mir EGL" distro patch it is no longer restricted to running on Ubuntu.

        As recently mentioned on the Mir forum Mir works on the following distros:

        • Arch (in the AUR)
        • Fedora (in the archive)
        • Ubuntu (in the archive)
        • Debian (not in the archive - yet)
        • Pop!
        • Solus
        • PostmarketOS (There are a few additional patches to be upstreamed)

        On most of these distros developers have also got Unity8 running.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • D Offline
          doniks @alan_g
          last edited by

          @alan_g said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

          Another effect of the loss of "Mir EGL" in Mesa and the consequent switch to Wayland ls that the "Mir-on-Mir" support needed to use the Unity greeter is no longer available. Some work has been done on providing a "Mir-on-Wayland" graphics platform in Mir, but that needs significant rework (it is on my list of things I want to get to, but if you fancy taking it on get in touch).

          The way I understood it is that wayland replaces mir as protocol/api. So mir stays as the implementation of the server, but it goes away as an interface. So the only mir on wayland that one would need in the future is mir-the-server on wayland. Which, is just wayland (mir's implementation of a wayland server) on wayland.

          Wouldn't it then be more logical to have a greeter that is a wayland client? Or maybe the login managers from some other desktop environment could be used.

          Curious what you think.

          alan_gA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • alan_gA Offline
            alan_g @doniks
            last edited by

            @doniks said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

            Wouldn't it then be more logical to have a greeter that is a wayland client? Or maybe the login managers from some other desktop environment could be used.

            Curious what you think.

            The Canonical design was for unity-system-compositor [USC] to be a system wide Mir server that supported both the greeter and login session based shells. Only USC would interact with the hardware, it would see the greeter and session shells as Mir clients. The session shells would use the mirclient API (a.k.a. "Mir-on-Mir") but that requires "Mir EGL" and is no longer possible.

            This architecture has a number of desirable features: only one system-wide task has to negotiate access to the hardware, and that task also controls transitions between user sessions, login screens and lock screens.

            Once Mir has a Mir-on-Wayland platform it will be possible to retain that architecture and use Wayland instead of the mirclient API.

            F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • dobeyD Offline
              dobey
              last edited by

              @alan_g said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

              Once Mir has a Mir-on-Wayland platform it will be possible to retain that architecture and use Wayland instead of the mirclient API.

              Per our discussion on Telegram, I think the best place to start with this is to enumerate the list of Mir protocol features we depend on in Unity 8, so that we can get Wayland protocol extensions or alternate methods of use implemented.

              To start, the two things I am most aware of that we need mirclient API for, are:

              • Greeter
              • "trusted prompt sessions" (app overlays, like content-hub)

              There might be more, but I"m not sure what they are. If we could get solutions for these two implemented first though, I think we'd be a long way back toward getting a decent Unity 8 setup with the new Mir.

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              • F Offline
                fossMan @alan_g
                last edited by

                @alan_g said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                Once Mir has a Mir-on-Wayland platform it will be possible to retain that architecture and use Wayland instead of the mirclient API.

                Naive question alert, sorry:
                is it possible to estimate/ quantify the amount of work for that task in any way? E.g, how many skilled developers will need to work on this problem fulltime in order to have a solution in one year? 50, 100, 4...?

                alan_gA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • alan_gA Offline
                  alan_g @fossMan
                  last edited by

                  @fossMan said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                  @alan_g said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                  Once Mir has a Mir-on-Wayland platform it will be possible to retain that architecture and use Wayland instead of the mirclient API.

                  Naive question alert, sorry:
                  is it possible to estimate/ quantify the amount of work for that task in any way? E.g, how many skilled developers will need to work on this problem fulltime in order to have a solution in one year? 50, 100, 4...?

                  Almost all the code concerned is here:

                  $ wc -l src/server/graphics/nested/*
                     253 src/server/graphics/nested/buffer.cpp
                      64 src/server/graphics/nested/buffer.h
                      20 src/server/graphics/nested/CMakeLists.txt
                      54 src/server/graphics/nested/cursor.cpp
                      51 src/server/graphics/nested/cursor.h
                     225 src/server/graphics/nested/display_buffer.cpp
                     105 src/server/graphics/nested/display_buffer.h
                     442 src/server/graphics/nested/display.cpp
                     178 src/server/graphics/nested/display.h
                     183 src/server/graphics/nested/host_buffer.cpp
                      73 src/server/graphics/nested/host_buffer.h
                      54 src/server/graphics/nested/host_chain.h
                      95 src/server/graphics/nested/host_connection.h
                      50 src/server/graphics/nested/host_stream.h
                      52 src/server/graphics/nested/host_surface.h
                      49 src/server/graphics/nested/host_surface_spec.h
                     528 src/server/graphics/nested/input_platform.cpp
                      84 src/server/graphics/nested/input_platform.h
                      92 src/server/graphics/nested/ipc_operations.cpp
                      48 src/server/graphics/nested/ipc_operations.h
                     825 src/server/graphics/nested/mir_client_host_connection.cpp
                     134 src/server/graphics/nested/mir_client_host_connection.h
                      74 src/server/graphics/nested/native_buffer.h
                     234 src/server/graphics/nested/nested_display_configuration.cpp
                      78 src/server/graphics/nested/nested_display_configuration.h
                      35 src/server/graphics/nested/passthrough_option.h
                     227 src/server/graphics/nested/platform.cpp
                     117 src/server/graphics/nested/platform.h
                    4424 total
                  

                  That needs re-implementing to use Wayland protocol extensions instead of the mirclient API.

                  It isn't a lot of code, and not a lot of work. But it does need someone that can read mirclient code and write Wayland code. I've done that a few times (for the "internal" clients in the example shells) and the concepts correspond well.

                  There are few other parts of the system that would need touching (e.g. the configuration to set it up) but that is less of a problem.

                  I think it would take me a couple of days (but the unexpected could happen). However, that's probably the fastest it could be: there are not many that know the Mir codebase as well as I do.

                  tl;dr: Depending on the developer's background, anywhere from a few days to a month.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                  • F Offline
                    fossMan
                    last edited by fossMan

                    Thanks @alan_g.
                    What exactly is the "mirclient API", is that an abstraction or a specific set of files? Could you give a small example e.g a line of code showing dependence on that API, and perhaps how a Wayland extension could replace it?

                    alan_gA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • alan_gA Offline
                      alan_g @fossMan
                      last edited by alan_g

                      @fossMan said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                      What exactly is the "mirclient API", is that an abstraction or a specific set of files? Could you give a small example e.g a line of code showing dependence on that API, and perhaps how a Wayland extension could replace it?

                      The mirclient API is the API provided by libmirclient.so. It is the API through which Mir proposed to support "Convergent" application toolkits. There are various bits of UBports relying on this API that need rework to Wayland (so learning to do that will remain useful after this exercise).

                      Here's some mirclient API code:

                                  Surface surface{mir_connection_create_render_surface_sync(DecorationProvider::connection, width, height)};
                      
                                  auto const buffer_stream =
                                      mir_render_surface_get_buffer_stream(surface, width, height, mir_pixel_format_xrgb_8888);
                      
                                  auto window = WindowSpec::for_gloss(DecorationProvider::connection, width, height)
                                      .set_fullscreen_on_output(output_id)
                                      .set_event_handler(&handle_event_for_background, this)
                                      .add_surface(surface, width, height, 0, 0)
                                      .set_name(wallpaper_name).create_window();
                      

                      and some equivalent Wayland code:

                              ctx.surface = wl_compositor_create_surface(globals.compositor);
                      ...
                              ctx.shell_surface = wl_shell_get_shell_surface(globals.shell, ctx.surface);
                              wl_shell_surface_set_fullscreen(
                                  ctx.shell_surface,
                                  WL_SHELL_SURFACE_FULLSCREEN_METHOD_DEFAULT,
                                  0,
                                  ctx.output.output);
                      ...
                              auto const shm_pool = make_scoped(
                                  make_shm_pool(globals.shm, stride * height, &ctx.content_area),
                                  &wl_shm_pool_destroy);
                      
                              ctx.buffer = wl_shm_pool_create_buffer(
                                      shm_pool.get(),
                                      0,
                                      width, height, stride,
                                      WL_SHM_FORMAT_ARGB8888);
                      

                      https://github.com/MirServer/mir/pull/669/files#diff-ea35a63c157fb0d09e5713c6ee0b1dbe

                      F 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • F Offline
                        fossMan @alan_g
                        last edited by fossMan

                        @alan_g said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                        The mirclient API is the API provided by libmirclient.so.

                        Thanks for the example. Is there any way to download an example of a libmirclient.so file without installing anything? The closest I got was a mention on this Ubuntu package

                        EDIT: or perhaps there is some documentation of the libmirclient API in order to understand better exactly what parts of the code is addressing the API?

                        alan_gA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • alan_gA Offline
                          alan_g @fossMan
                          last edited by

                          @fossMan https://mir-server.io/doc/group__mir__toolkit.html

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                          • F Offline
                            fossMan
                            last edited by

                            I would like to look at these issues but can't spare the focus time until start of June.

                            alan_gA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • alan_gA Offline
                              alan_g @fossMan
                              last edited by

                              @fossMan said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                              I would like to look at these issues but can't spare the focus time until start of June.

                              I imagine there will still be issues left for you when you have the time. 8-)

                              dobeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • dobeyD Offline
                                dobey @alan_g
                                last edited by

                                @alan_g I see in the Mir 1.4.0 release discourse mention of the layer-shell extension. If I understand correctly how this extension works, we should be able to use it for re-implementing the trusted overlays, no?

                                If we could do that, and get it done soon, that would be a huge step forward in being able to use unity8 on wayland.

                                alan_gA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • alan_gA Offline
                                  alan_g @dobey
                                  last edited by

                                  @dobey said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                                  @alan_g I see in the Mir 1.4.0 release discourse mention of the layer-shell extension. If I understand correctly how this extension works, we should be able to use it for re-implementing the trusted overlays, no?

                                  I agree we should map out Wayland protocols that can help replace mirclient functionality. But in this specific case, I don't think layer-shell addresses the same concerns as trusted prompts, so I don't immediately see how you imagine using it.

                                  I'll have a closer look at this idea after the holiday weekend to see what I've missed.

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                                  • G Offline
                                    GizmoChicken @alan_g
                                    last edited by

                                    @alan_g said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                                    2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?

                                    Given recent progress, how about 2020Q1: Time to make Unity8 great again?

                                    alan_gA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • alan_gA Offline
                                      alan_g @GizmoChicken
                                      last edited by

                                      @GizmoChicken said in 2019: Time to make Unity8 great again?:

                                      Given recent progress, how about 2020Q1: Time to make Unity8 great again?

                                      I like it! Maybe we can just rename this thread?

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