Come the next major release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Red Hat is officially dropping the Xorg package, whilst it’ll still be available in RHEL 9 until 2032 the countdown has begun, Xorg is on the way out. Are you and your software going to be ready in time.

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  • @LeFantome
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    357 months ago

    People are completely missing the point here. “Who made Red Hat the arbiter of when Xorg should end?”

    I would say nobody but perhaps a better answer is all of us that have left the work of maintaining Xorg to Red Hat. All that Red Hat is deciding is when they are going to stop contributing. So little is done by others that, if Red Hat stops, Xorg is effectively done.

    Others are of course free to step up. In fact, it may not be much work. Red Hat will still be doing most of the work as they will still be supporting Xwayland ( mostly the same code as Xorg ), libdrm, libinput, KMS, and other stuff that both Xorg and Wayland share. They just won’t be bundling it up, testing it, and releasing it as Xorg anymore.

    We will see if anybody steps up.

    • DefederateLemmyMl
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      07 months ago

      So little is done by others that, if Red Hat stops, Xorg is effectively done.

      Source?

      As far as I know the X.org foundation is an independent non-profit organization, and while Red Hat is a sponsor and they have 1 member in the board of directors (out of 8), they don’t appear to be the main contributor.

      • @LeFantome
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        7 months ago

        http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=x_server_contributors&num=1

        “There were eight major software vendors that turned up from our analysis and that included Apple, Debian, FreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD, Gentoo, Mandriva, Novell, Red Hat, and Tungsten Graphics. The biggest software company contributing to the X server has been Red Hat”

        “In third place for the number of commits is Adam Jackson, an employee of Red Hat. Adam has just been committing to X.Org since 2004 but he represents over 9% of the total workload. Adam Jackson is serving as the X.Org 7.4 release manager.”

        In addition to being the largest contributor, the key part of this discussion is that Red Hat manages the release process.

        EDiT: In my laziness, I pulled an article from years ago that proves nothing. I will leave it though as what it does show is that Red Hat has been doing the heavy lifting on Xorg for over a decade.

        Make up your own mind. Here are the commits to the Xorg project:

        https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/xserver/-/commits/master

        You might notice that a substantial amount of the “Xorg” activity is really XWayland. That both illustrates that X will be actively maintained for a long time yet and that the number of devs that care about Xorg directly is dwindling.

        We will see what happens. My guess is that almost everybody migrates to Wayland before 2027. Time will tell.