Wayland: Difference between revisions

From Alpine Linux
(Mentions that this should only be done when not using PAM)
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Generally it's inadvisable to configure <code>XDG_*</code> variables manually as this configuration may have errors or conflict with other utilities that do this automatically.
Generally it's inadvisable to configure <code>XDG_*</code> variables manually as this configuration may have errors or conflict with other utilities that do this automatically.


That said, on a system that's not using elogind/pam, it's often necessary to set up <code>XDG_RUNTIME_DIR</code> manually. This can be done by adding snippet like this one to shell init scripts (e.g.: <code>~/.profile</code>):
That said, on a system that's not using elogind/pam, it's often necessary to set up <code>XDG_RUNTIME_DIR</code> manually. This can be done by adding a snippet like this one to shell init scripts (e.g.: <code>~/.profile</code>):


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Revision as of 13:31, 8 January 2023

This material needs expanding ...

A more thorough guide to installing, configuring, and running wayland on Alpine would be better.


Wayland is a new display protocol that aims to replace X11.


XDG_RUNTIME_DIR

As per the protocol spec, Wayland compositors require the XDG_RUNTIME_DIR variable to be set. A login manager such as Elogind can configure this and other Freedesktop.org environment variables automatically.

Generally it's inadvisable to configure XDG_* variables manually as this configuration may have errors or conflict with other utilities that do this automatically.

That said, on a system that's not using elogind/pam, it's often necessary to set up XDG_RUNTIME_DIR manually. This can be done by adding a snippet like this one to shell init scripts (e.g.: ~/.profile):

if test -z "${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}"; then
  export XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/tmp/$(id -u)-runtime-dir
  if ! test -d "${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}"; then
    mkdir "${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}"
    chmod 0700 "${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}"
  fi
fi

See also