Decided to try writing a Wayland compositor for fun. Took me a few days to get things going to a video-able state.

This is scrollable tiling, heavily inspired by PaperWM (which I'm still using and very much enjoying). You've got an infinite strip of windows that you can scroll through.

It's also got dynamic workspaces which work like in GNOME Shell (the Correct™ way to do workspaces), but all monitors have workspaces.

The repo is github.com/YaLTeR/niri if you want to peek at the code

Added quite a number of things into the compositor since then. It's at the point where I can somewhat-comfortably use it for working or (Wayland-only) gaming sessions.

Today I figured out how to make it run as a proper session, launched from GDM, with systemd integration and all. It even mostly works!

Also finally implemented the ability to take screenshots—this one is from a real session.

Kinda want to try my hand at the screencast portal for OBS. How hard can it be, right? 🙃

Almost done adding touchpad gesture support to Smithay!

Here you can see the pinch zoom/rotate gesture visually in gtk4-demo, then the swipe gesture only in WAYLAND_DEBUG on the right, then the hold gesture by stopping the kinetic scrolling by putting a finger on the touchpad.

After adding dmabuf feedbacks to niri, I stumbled upon an extremely strange performance problem when using overlay planes. One specific animation, with a GTK 4 window open, stutters, but only when going into one direction.

Spent half a day debugging it with Smithay developers. Couldn't crack it yet; for some reason an AMDGPU kernel worker just... takes a while under those specific conditions, causing delayed frames. Seems to be doing the same thing as in the normal case, just... slower somehow.

Aaand my touchpad gesture support has been merged into Smithay! :ablobcatbongo:

I'm quite enjoying playing with the Tracy profiler. Turns out when you run the program with sudo, it records a ton of extra useful info, like CPU core scheduling, monitor VSync events, kernel context switches, what your process is blocked on.

I also annotated my compositor with Tracy Frame events for monitor VBlank cycles. I can then set a target FPS in Tracy and instantly see which frames were too slow! Both in the bar at the top, and in the main area highlighted in red.

lol a few days ago someone posted niri on the orange site and now it surpassed all my other projects by star count 🫠

aaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhh these two days were a grind but I somehow got monitor streaming working! with pipewire and dmabufs and dbus and screencast portal and everything! and it wooorkssssssssss woooooooooooooo

I just streamed for an hour from this and nothing crashed??

Dmabuf screencasting is crazy good. Here's a histogram of the screencasting overhead on my 2560×1600@165 screen—the median is 300 microseconds, and the worst across 12,669 frames was just below 1 ms. Most of that time is spent rendering the frame, perhaps something could even be further optimized in Smithay.

And yeah, if you look at the profiling timeline, I zoomed it in such a way that almost the entire width is taken by one frame, that is 6.05 ms long. Most of it is completely empty!

Today in Wayland compositor profiling! Turns out closing a shm pool file descriptor can result in a fat stall of up to like 6 ms with the kernel waiting on some spinlocks. Which is extra fun when you realize it covers the entire frame budget of your 165 Hz screen, and some clients are sometimes doing it every frame!

I'm trying a "dropping thread" workaround where the fd closing happens on a separate thread. Appears to work at the first glance.

new main loop stall dropped

and it is, uhhhhh, epoll_wait doing blocking disk decryption for solid 8 ms? is that a thing that it does?

seems to have happened once over a long period but still

Found the same disc decryption during rendering. Does it just randomly decide to do it or something?

Aside from this and some other weirdness, not a single dropped frame on my slower laptop! (which is admittedly just 60 Hz)

Thought of another thing to plot in Tracy: target presentation time offset! This is the difference between when a frame was shown on screen and the target time that we were rendering for.

Here you can see data across 17 seconds of runtime while recording with OBS. Offset on both monitors fluctuates within a few microseconds around zero, which means that our rendering lands right on time.

It's also common to see one frame worth of offset like on this zoomed-out screenshot. This happens when the compositor wakes up from idling too late into the monitor refresh cycle and doesn't manage to render a new frame in time.

I'm still working on niri btw (and using it myself too). Today I finally finished a window layout refactor that was due from very early on.

Now the layout always works correctly, with all the paddings, struts, fullscreen windows and animations. It's tricky because while most of the logic operates only on the "working area" (view excluding struts), fullscreen windows in particular must cover the entire view area, while otherwise acting as just another regular window column.

niri development is ongoing, getting a lot of help from kchibisov too.

Today I implemented an interactive area screenshot capture tool. Almost like a mini screenshot UI :ablobcatbongo:

Decided to make a new demo video for niri, finally. The last one was so old that niri didn't even have cursors implemented, it showed an orange rectangle instead. 🫠

Here's the link again for the curious: github.com/YaLTeR/niri

Very happy I've come this far writing my own compositor from scratch. Honestly thought my motivation would only last for two weeks max, but here we are. :blobcattea:

Learned a ton in the process, and now this experience helps me with Mutter & Shell profiling.

#rust

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@YaLTeR
This is very interesting, I really do like the idea of visual cues and just enough animations to communicate what is happening. I daily drive sway, and have had a watchful interest in hyprland for this reason, I do think there are a lot of ways this tech could innovate like having existing layouts with dead space blocks until filled with a new window, and resizing the parent container to not use 100% of the screen similar to 0:50

By the way what is the name of the paint app on the left? I'm not sure I've seen it before.

@CleoMenezesJr

@lorendias @CleoMenezesJr yeah, definitely some interesting underexplored ideas left.

The app is Rnote and it's very good: flathub.org/apps/com.github.fl

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