I am researching for a project, my aim being to write a window/desktop manager that uses Gecko as the rendering engine, with content being primarily done with XUL.
I know that window managers usually use xlib to access the screen and draw the desktop. But I'm uncertain about how to go about this. >From what I've seen so far, Gecko seems to be using Cairo to do its rendering, and I presume that Cairo is talking directly to X to draw the rendered UI on the screen. But can this work without a window manager? Do I need to write or reuse a tiny barebones window manager just so Gecko can get a fullscreen window and draw the desktop on it? But by far, another huge issue seems to be other programs opening windows, which I gather they do through widget libraries that talk to X. It would be nice if any windows opened could be either in the main desktop XUL document (ideal for layering and effects) or independent XUL windows in their own right, so that any window decoration and control etc. can be done with XUL and javascript. The problem is, how do you get an up-to-date copy of the program's client area and render it inside a XUL box element? A netscape plugin perhaps? Or some other more elegant solution? Any helpful comments or links would be much appreciated. Thanks, Erik _______________________________________________ dev-embedding mailing list [email protected] https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-embedding
