Comment by LeFantome
1 day ago
It is refreshing to see somebody else notice that the complaints about systemd and Wayland are philosophically incompatible.
Systemd is creating the same kind of monolith monoculture that Xorg represented. Wayland is far more modular.
Regardless of your engineering preferences, rejecting change is the main reason to object to both.
> Wayland is far more modular.
Not sure I agree here, assuming you mean "... than X11". With Wayland, you put your display code, input-handling code, compositor code, session-handling code, and window-management code all in the same process. (Though there is a Wayland protocol being worked on to allow moving the WM bits out-of-process.)
With X11, display and input-handling are in the X server, and all those other functions can be in other processes, communicating over standard interfaces.
> you put your display code, input-handling code, compositor code, session-handling code, and window-management code all in the same process
That's an implementation detail. You can absolutely separate one out from the other and do IPC - it just doesn't make much sense to do so for most of these.
The only one where I see it making sense is the window manager, which can simply be an extension/plugin either in a scripting language or in wasm or whatever.
How is Wayland more modular? It conflates the window manager, the compositor, and the display server, all into a single component that must be replaced as a single unit. This kind of new conflation is exactly what people dislike about systemd.
It's less monolithic in the sense that instead of one creaky unmaintainable ancient mass of software doing the actual rendering gruntwork there are now five (and counting) somewhat incompatible slick untested new masses of software doing it in slightly different ways that application developers have to worry about. It's kind of a pick your poison situation.
I do not have a strong opinion about Xorg vs Wayland. My only real concern is that it might make it harder for the BSDs but that seems to be being dealt with. I do like being able to use X over the nextwork but that is a problem that can be solved.
I do dislike System D for two reasons. One is exactly because it s a monolith and, in effect, an extension of the OS. The other is the attitude of the developers which becomes very evident if you browser the issues.
> I do like being able to use X over the nextwork but that is a problem that can be solved.
And in fact has been: https://github.com/wayland-transpositor/wprs
> My only real concern is that it might make it harder for the BSDs
Our OpenBSD packager has already said in our Matrix channel that he'll be testing here and there in order to keep me honest ;)