On Wed, May 31, 2017 at 1:54 PM, Quentin Glidic < [email protected]> wrote:
> On 5/31/17 2:37 PM, adlo wrote: > >> Is libweston 1.0 good enough for writing a compositor? >> > > Yes, but each major version is adding or changing API to make it simpler > to write a compositor. Specifically, libweston 2 has introduced a much > nicer output API, thanks to Armin’s GSoC work. > > > Are there any tutorials or simple examples for writing a compositor using >> any version of libweston? >> > > I think someone started something, but it’s probably outdated by now. > > One advice I’d have to give is to use libweston-desktop, that abstract a > lot of protocol stuff and just let you manage toplevel surfaces without > worrying about shell protocols, popups and other boring things like that. > :-) I compiled my own libweston by hand, but when I try to run my compiled Weston on a nested GNOME Wayland-on-Wayland session, I get the error message "Failed to load module: /lib/libweston-3/wayland-backend.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory". Any ideas on why this is happening? Regards adlo
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