pywm - backend for newm
Unfortunately, newm as well as pywm are currently unmaintained.
pywm is an abstraction layer for newm encapsulating all c code.
Basically this is a very tiny compositor built on top of wlroots, making all the assumptions that wlroots does not. On the Python side pywm exposes Wayland clients (XDG and XWayland) as so-called views and passes along all input. This way, handling the positioning of views, animating their movement, ... based on keystrokes or touchpad inputs (i.e. the logical, not performance-critical part of any compositor) is possible Python-side, whereas rendering and all other performance-critical aspects are handled by c code.
Check the Python class PyWM
and c struct wm_server
for a start, as well as newms Layout
.
See also pywm-fullscreen for a trivial implementation opening one application in fullscreen.
v0.3 with a better renderer implementation supporting blur has been merged into master. There are still some bugs around but I consider it an alpha stage.
If you install newm via the AUR, pywm is installed automatically.
Prerequisites for PyWM, apart from Python, are given by wlroots:
- python and pip
- gcc, meson and ninja
- pkg-config
- wayland
- wayland-protocols
- xorg-xwayland
- EGL
- GLESv2
- libdrm
- GBM
- libinput
- xkbcommon
- udev
- pixman
- libseat
Compilation is handled by meson and started automatically via pip (you need to install prerequisites first):
pip3 install git+https://github.com/jbuchermn/pywm
In case of issues, clone the repo and execute meson build && ninja -C build
in order to debug.
Configuration is handled via key-value pairs given to the PyWM
contructor:
Key | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
enable_xwayland |
False |
Boolean: Start XWayland |
xkb_model |
String: Keyboard model (xkb ) |
|
xkb_layout |
String: Keyboard layout (xkb ) |
|
xkb_variant |
String: Keyboard variant (xkb ) |
|
xkb_options |
String: Keyboard options (xkb ) |
|
outputs |
List of dicts: Output configuration (see next lines) | |
output.name |
"" |
String: Name of output to attach config to actual output |
output.scale |
1.0 |
Number: HiDPI scale of output |
output.width |
0 |
Integer: Output width (or zero to use preferred) |
output.height |
0 |
Integer: Output height (or zero to use preferred) |
output.mHz |
0 |
Integer: Output refresh rate in milli Hertz (or zero to use preferred) |
output.pos_x |
None |
Integer: Output position x in layout (or None to be placed automatically) |
output.pos_y |
None |
Integer: Output position y in layout (or None to be placed automatically) |
xcursor_theme |
String: XCursor theme (if not set, read from; if set, exported to XCURSOR_THEME ) |
|
xcursor_size |
24 |
Integer: XCursor size (if not set, read from; if set, exported to XCURSOR_SIZE ) |
tap_to_click |
True |
Boolean: On tocuhpads use tap for click enter |
natural_scroll |
True |
Boolean: On touchpads use natural scrolling enter |
focus_follows_mouse |
True |
Boolean: Focus window upon mouse enter |
contstrain_popups_to_toplevel |
False |
Boolean: Try to keep popups contrained within their window |
encourage_csd |
True |
Boolean: Encourage clients to show client-side-decorations (see wlr_server_decoration_manager ) |
debug |
False |
Boolean: Loglevel debug plus output debug information to stdout on every F1 press |
texture_shaders |
basic |
String: Shaders to use for texture rendering (see src/wm/shaders/texture ) |
renderer_mode |
pywm |
String: Renderer mode, pywm (enable pywm renderer, and therefore blur), wlr (disable pywm renderer) |
Be aware that current wlroots requires seatd
under certain circumstances. Example systemd service (be sure to place your user in group _seatd
):
[Unit]
Description=Seat management daemon
Documentation=man:seatd(1)
[Service]
Type=simple
ExecStart=seatd -g _seatd
Restart=always
RestartSec=1
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target