@Alkis:

> What issues should they expect from gnome-flashback then?
>  - Harder window resizing due to 1 px border.
>  - Notify-osd notifications ==> I did a quick test and they seem to work; 
> albeit without transparency. Did I miss something?

Right, without transparency and without rounded corners, which is not
the best possible look…

>  - Decorations ==> Example? I couldn't reproduce it.

By decorations I meant the 1px border area, which you already mentioned.
There may be problems with rounded corners here too.

>  - Various docks ==> Example?

Almost any dock will have complicated (i.e. not rectangular) geometry,
which isn't supported without compositing. Try Plank for an example.

@Alberts:

> What is atom systems? Anyway

Intel Atom?

> As upstream developer I am interested that GNOME-Flashback is as close
as possible to what I have upstream. And currently it is far from it
(GNOME-Flashback:Unity).

My plan is to fix this in Xenial+1. Less patches will mean less work for
me, too :P

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
Packages, which is subscribed to metacity in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1565640

Title:
  Set compositing-manager=false by default

Status in metacity package in Ubuntu:
  Won't Fix

Bug description:
  In Ubuntu 12.04 and 14.04, metacity's compositing-manager was false by 
default.
  In 16.04, it's been set to true.

  I tried to pinpoint the advantages vs the disadvantages of that, and 
currently I've only seen disadvantages.
  I was testing with: gsettings set org.gnome.metacity compositing-manager 
false (or metacity --no-composite)
  versus: gsettings set org.gnome.metacity compositing-manager true (or 
metacity --composite)

  Speed: the speed for window drawing and moving around is 3-5 times
  slower when compositing is enabled. This is rather visible locally on
  old computers, but it becomes a real problem when Xorg is used over
  the network, like for example in LTSP thin clients. There, dragging
  around a window draws it in slow motion a whole lot behind the mouse,
  like a trail, while with compositing disabled, everything is lightning
  fast.

  RAM: xrestop shows that with a couple of windows open, metacity now
  needs 10 MB more RAM. This value increases with the number of open
  windows.

  Vsync: in most cases vsync was broken with or without compositing
  (while with compiz it's working much better). I tried with youtube
  videos, with VLC etc. The only difference I saw is that with some SDL
  games like teeworlds, vsync was working with compositing disabled, and
  was broken with compositing enabled.

  So my personal results is that metacity's compositing-manager=true
  doesn't have any advantage currently, and that it makes old client and
  LTSP client performance a whole lot worse. And unfortunately those are
  exactly the cases where we prefer gnome-session-flashback instead of
  e.g. Unity.

  Therefore I'd like to ask you to consider disabling it by default like
  it was in the past.

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