Canonical Announces Mir Display Server
New X replacement will support the Unity desktop in future Ubuntu releases.
Canonical has announced development of a new open source display server called Mir. This server is intended as "a replacement for the X Window server system to unlock next-generation user experiences for devices ranging from Linux desktop to mobile devices powered by Ubuntu."
According to the Mir spec page, the purpose of Mir is to enable the development of the next generation Unity and, contrary to some previous speculation, it will not be based upon the Wayland display server and protocol, which has received attention recently as a possible X replacement.
The Mir specification page gives three principal reasons why Canonical wants to replace the venerable X Window, which has served the Linux and Unix communities for 30 years:
- X Window shares too much system state across process boundaries.
- The complexity of X Window leaves room for applications to spoof input events they don't own.
- The compositor hierarchy ends on the session level. (The graphical shell starts after boot, with no ingrataion of the shell from boot time).
Canonical's grand vision of a single platform for mobile and desktop systems has already led to the development of the homegrown Unity desktop; Mir now takes that integration down deeper into the system.
The roadmap states that, by May 2013, the project intends to integrate "Unity Next with Mir and provide enough facility to start iterating the actual shell development, providing developers with a solid platform and designers with means for rapid prototyping." By October 2013, Unity Next and Mir window management should be completely integrated to support an Ubuntu Phone product. According to the spec, the developers want to fully replace X in user sessions and provide a legacy mode to support X clients. By April 2014, they plan to achieve "complete convergence across the form factors."
The Mir project will produce the libmir-server and libmir-client libraries.
Subscribe to our Linux Newsletters
Find Linux and Open Source Jobs
Subscribe to our ADMIN Newsletters
Support Our Work
Linux Magazine content is made possible with support from readers like you. Please consider contributing when you’ve found an article to be beneficial.
News
-
CIQ Releases Compatibility Catalog for Rocky Linux
The company behind Rocky Linux is making an open catalog available to developers, hobbyists, and other contributors, so they can verify and publish compatibility with the CIQ lineup.
-
KDE Gets Some Resuscitation
KDE is bringing back two themes that vanished a few years ago, putting a bit more air under its wings.
-
Ubuntu 26.04 Beta Arrives with Some Surprises
Ubuntu 26.04 is almost here, but the beta version has been released, and it might surprise some people.
-
Ubuntu MATE Dev Leaving After 12 years
Martin Wimpress, the maintainer of Ubuntu MATE, is now searching for his successor. Are you the next in line?
-
Kali Linux Waxes Nostalgic with BackTrack Mode
For those who've used Kali Linux since its inception, the changes with the new release are sure to put a smile on your face.
-
Gnome 50 Smooths Out NVIDIA GPU Issues
Gamers rejoice, your favorite pastime just got better with Gnome 50 and NVIDIA GPUs.
-
System76 Retools Thelio Desktop
The new Thelio Mira has landed with improved performance, repairability, and front-facing ports alongside a high-quality tempered glass facade.
-
Some Linux Distros Skirt Age Verification Laws
After California introduced an age verification law recently, open source operating system developers have had to get creative with how they deal with it.
-
UN Creates Open Source Portal
In a quest to strengthen open source collaboration, the United Nations Office of Information and Communications Technology has created a new portal.
-
Latest Linux Kernel RC Contains Changes Galore
Linux kernel 7.0-rc3 includes more changes than have been made in a single release in recent history.
