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99 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
99 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
# <div align="center">Pinnacle</div>
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<div align="center">
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<picture>
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<source media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)" srcset="/assets/cool_logo_dark_theme.png">
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<source media="(prefers-color-scheme: light)" srcset="/assets/cool_logo_light_theme.png">
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<img alt="Cool logo" src="/assets/cool_logo_dark_theme.png">
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</picture>
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</div>
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<div align="center">
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A very, VERY WIP Smithay-based wayland compositor
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</div>
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## Info
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### Why Pinnacle?
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Well, I currently use [Awesome](https://github.com/awesomeWM/awesome). And I really like it! Unfortunately, Awesome doesn't exist for Wayland ([anymore](http://way-cooler.org/blog/2020/01/09/way-cooler-post-mortem.html)). There doesn't seem to be any Wayland compositor out there that has all of the following:
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- Tags for window management
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- Configurable in Lua (or any other programming language for that matter)
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- Has a bunch of batteries included (widget system, systray, etc)
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So, this is my attempt at making an Awesome-esque Wayland compositor.
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## Dependencies
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You'll need the following packages, as specified by [Smithay](https://github.com/Smithay/smithay):
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```
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libwayland
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libxkbcommon
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libudev
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libinput
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libgdm
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libseat
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```
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Package names will vary across distros. TODO: list those names.
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## Building
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Build the project with:
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```
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cargo build [--release]
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```
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## Running
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After building, run the executable located in either:
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```
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./target/debug/pinnacle --<backend> // without --release
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./target/release/pinnacle --<backend> // with --release
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```
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Or, run the project directly with
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```
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cargo run [--release] -- --<backend>
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```
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`backend` can be one of two values:
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- `winit`: run Pinnacle as a window in your graphical environment
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- `udev`: run Pinnacle in a tty. NOTE: I tried running udev in Awesome and some things broke so uh, don't do that
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## Configuration
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Please note: this is VERY WIP and has basically no options yet.
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Pinnacle supports configuration through Lua (and hopefully more languages if I architect it correctly :crab:).
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Run Pinnacle with the `PINNACLE_CONFIG` environment variable set to the path of your config file. If not specified, Pinnacle will look for the following:
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```
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$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/pinnacle/init.lua
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~/.config/pinnacle/init.lua // if XDG_CONFIG_HOME isn't set
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```
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The following will use the example config file in [`api/lua`](api/lua):
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```
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PINNACLE_CONFIG="./api/lua/example_config.lua" cargo run -- --<backend>
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```
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### Autocomplete and that cool stuff
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It is *highly* recommended to use the [Lua language server](https://github.com/LuaLS/lua-language-server) and set it up to have the [`api/lua`](api/lua) directory as a library, as I'll be using its doc comments to provide autocomplete and error checking.
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#### For VS Code:
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Install the [Lua](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=sumneko.lua) plugin, then go into its settings and add the absolute(?) path to the [`api/lua`](api/lua) directory to Workspace: Library.
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#### For Neovim:
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Pass this table into your Lua language server settings:
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```lua
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Lua = {
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workspace = {
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library = {
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"/path/to/pinnacle/api/lua"
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}
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}
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}
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```
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Doc website soon:tm:
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## Controls
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The following controls are currently hardcoded:
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- `Ctrl + Left Mouse`: Move a window
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- `Ctrl + Right Mouse`: Resize a window
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You can find the rest of the controls in the [`example_config`](api/lua/example_config.lua).
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