On Wed, May 28, 2014 at 9:47 PM, Tim Jester-Pfadt <t...@gmx.de> wrote: > Hi, > > I think there might be a confusion regarding package [6]. > > For our regular desktops we need the XOrg server which comes as a binary in > /usr/bin/Xorg provided by the xorg-server package in [extra]. You get this > by setting --enable-xorg at compile time. Now for XWayland we have our own > binary which is completely independet called /usr/bin/Xwayland. You get > this binary by setting --enable-xwayland. You can have this as a standalone > server by doing --disable-xorg --enable-xwayland, which then only builds > XWayland. This is what the xwayland-git package does and therefore doesn't > replace your X server and is a safe way to try out XWayland. You don't have > two X servers afterwards. > > Package [6] does both it compiles the developer Xorg binary and the > development Xwayland binary, but if you want to try Xwayland you only need > the last one. If you want the latest Xorg (which actually gets used by KDE > et al.) you can use xorg-server-git, which only builds Xorg but not > Xwayland. So there is no real need for a package that builds both. > > Regards, > > Tim
Thank you for the clarification. I merged the xorg-server-xwayland-dev to xwayland-git Lukas