Wayland is very much a work in progress whether that be on KDE Plasma or any other system but Compositor Handoffs are an incredible concept that will revolut...
It’s a nice feature in theory. In practice, the sort of crash this guards against happens to me no more than once a year. Often more rarely. And I’m including all my machines in this anecdata - my personal desktop, laptop, corporate workstation, with Intel and NVIDIA GPUs in the mix. 😄
In the video he provides additional use cases outside of crashes. If I’m understanding it correctly, one is the ability to seamlessly transition across and/or run multiple DE’s in real-time, and the second is reimagining app loading by being able to restore apps from the disk as if they never left RAM. Someone please correct me if I misinterpreted this
In addition this feature makes debugging and developing KWin much easier because you can just restart the compositor without interrupting your workflow.
Hahaha. You know what, I thought that’d be the case but I’ve been on Wayland on my Framework since Ubuntu 20.04 LTS and I’m baffled at the stability of the stack. I thought it’d be a removed show, and it wasn’t. I guess a decade of development didn’t go in vain. 😄
It’s a nice feature in theory. In practice, the sort of crash this guards against happens to me no more than once a year. Often more rarely. And I’m including all my machines in this anecdata - my personal desktop, laptop, corporate workstation, with Intel and NVIDIA GPUs in the mix. 😄
I believe it’s possible to turn this into a very robust hibernation feature.
In the video he provides additional use cases outside of crashes. If I’m understanding it correctly, one is the ability to seamlessly transition across and/or run multiple DE’s in real-time, and the second is reimagining app loading by being able to restore apps from the disk as if they never left RAM. Someone please correct me if I misinterpreted this
In addition this feature makes debugging and developing KWin much easier because you can just restart the compositor without interrupting your workflow.
Well, that’s probably because you’re running XOrg.
Badum-bum-tish I’ll be here all night.
Hahaha. You know what, I thought that’d be the case but I’ve been on Wayland on my Framework since Ubuntu 20.04 LTS and I’m baffled at the stability of the stack. I thought it’d be a removed show, and it wasn’t. I guess a decade of development didn’t go in vain. 😄