The Linux DMA-BUF protocol for Wayland is widely used these days and supported by multiple compositors for negotiating optimal buffer allocation parameters between clients and compositors. The current fifth version of linux-dmabuf was marked as stable with it working out well and no need for any other changes before removing the “experimental” tag.
The new transient seat protocol for Wayland is for creating short-lived seats for remote users. These transient seats will be automatically removed as soon as the client disconnects. The transient seat protocol is intended for use with Wayland’s virtual input and virtual pointer protocols for remote desktop use.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
With Wayland Protocols 1.33 there are various fixes/clarifications and then two main changes: Linux DMA-BUF is now considered stable and the transient seat protocol (ext-transient-seat) is introduced for the first time.
The Linux DMA-BUF protocol for Wayland is widely used these days and supported by multiple compositors for negotiating optimal buffer allocation parameters between clients and compositors.
The current fifth version of linux-dmabuf was marked as stable with it working out well and no need for any other changes before removing the “experimental” tag.
These transient seats will be automatically removed as soon as the client disconnects.
The transient seat protocol is intended for use with Wayland’s virtual input and virtual pointer protocols for remote desktop use.
Wayland’s transient seat protocol already has support for Sway / wlroots along with WayVNC.
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