- Source: Freedesktop.org
freedesktop.org (fd.o), formerly X Desktop Group (XDG), is a project to work on interoperability and shared base technology for free-software desktop environments for the X Window System (X11) and Wayland on Linux and other Unix-like operating systems. Although freedesktop.org produces specifications for interoperability, it is not a formal standards body.
The project was founded by Havoc Pennington, a GNOME developer working for Red Hat in March 2000. Widely used open-source X-based desktop projects, such as GNOME, KDE's Plasma Desktop, and Xfce, are collaborating with the freedesktop.org project. In 2006, the project released Portland 1.0 (xdg-utils), a set of common interfaces for desktop environments. freedesktop.org joined the X.Org Foundation in 2019. Some of the project's servers are hosted by Portland State University.
Hosted projects
freedesktop.org provides hosting for a number of relevant projects. These include:
= Windowing system and graphics
=Software related to windowing systems and graphics in general
Cairo, a vector graphics library with cross-device output support
Direct Rendering Infrastructure (DRI), a Linux API to access the graphics hardware, used by X11, Wayland compositors, Mesa 3D, etc.
Glamor, a 2D graphics common driver for X server on graphics chipsets which have support for OpenGL/EGL/GBM APIs
Mesa 3D, an implementation of several graphics APIs such as Vulkan and OpenGL
Pixman, a low-level software library for pixel manipulation, providing features such as image compositing and trapezoid rasterization; users include the cairo graphics library and the X.Org Server
Poppler, a PDF rendering library
Video Acceleration API
Wayland, a protocol to replace X11; features: no tearing, lag, redrawing or flicker
X.Org Server, the official reference implementation of the X11 protocol
XCB, an Xlib replacement
Xephyr, a display server
wlroots, a modular Wayland compositor library
= Other
=D-Bus, a message bus akin to DCOP (KDE 3) and Bonobo (GNOME 2)
Elektra, a library for reading and writing configuration
FreeType, a text rendering library
fontconfig, a library for font discovery, name substitution, etc.
fprint, a library for consumer fingerprint reader devices
Geoclue, a geoinformation service
GStreamer, a cross-platform multimedia framework
GTK-Qt engine, a GTK+ 2 engine which uses Qt to draw the graphical control elements, providing the look and feel of KDE applications to GTK+2 applications
HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer), a consistent cross-operating system layer; deprecated and replaced by udev
kmscon, a userspace virtual console to replace the Linux console; uses the KMS driver and supports Unicode
luit, a tool used by terminal emulators
libinput, a library to handle input devices in Wayland compositors and to provide a generic X.Org input driver. It provides device detection, device handling, input device event processing and abstraction to minimize the amount of custom input code compositors need to provide the common set of functionality that users expect.
PulseAudio, a sound server frontend providing software mixing, network audio, and per application volume control
PipeWire, a low-latency server for handling sandbox-friendly audio and video streams on Linux, which provides an implementation of PulseAudio, JACK, and ALSA as well as secure methods for screenshotting and screencasting on Wayland compositors
systemd, a comprehensive init framework to start and manage services and sessions meant to replace older init models
Xft, anti-aliased fonts using the FreeType library, rather than the old X core fonts
pkg-config, a helper program used to generate flags for compiler and linker to include necessary libraries
Also, Avahi (a free Zeroconf implementation) started as a fd.o project but has since become a separate project.
= Base Directory Specification
=XDG Base Directory Specification (XDG BDS) introduces a range of variables where user-specific files used by programs should be found. Many tools and applications utilize these variables by default.
User directories
Besides the variables mentioned below, XDG BDS also specifies that users' local binary files may be installed into $HOME/.local/bin. Systems compliant with the spec are expected to make this directory available in their CLI's PATH environment variable.
XDG_DATA_HOME
For user application's own data files
Default to $HOME/.local/share
XDG_CONFIG_HOME
For user's app configuration files
Default to $HOME/.config
XDG_STATE_HOME
For user-specific app session data, which should be stored for future reuse
Default to $HOME/.local/state
May include logs, recently used files, application-specific information (e.g. window layout, views, opened files, undo history, etc.), akin to session data that should be stored by app by request of system session manager, like X session manager
XDG_CACHE_HOME
For user-specific apps cache files
Default to $HOME/.cache
XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
For user-specific app runtime files like sockets which must not survive reboot and full logout/login cycles
System directories
XDG_DATA_DIRS
Colon-separated list of preference-ordered paths to search for data files in
Default to /usr/local/share/:/usr/share/
XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
The same as above but for config files
Default to /etc/xdg/
Stated aims
The project aims to catch interoperability issues much earlier in the process. It is not for legislating formal standards. Stated goals include:
Collect existing specifications, standards, and documents related to X desktop interoperability and make them available in a central location.
Promote the development of new specifications and standards to be shared among multiple X desktops.
Integrate desktop-specific standards into broader standards efforts, such as Linux Standard Base and the ICCCM.
Work on the implementation of these standards in specific X desktops.
Serve as a neutral forum for sharing ideas about X desktop technology.
Implement technologies that further X desktop interoperability and free X desktops in general.
Promote X desktops and X desktop standards to application authors, both commercial and volunteer.
Communicate with the developers of free operating system kernels, the X Window System itself, free OS distributions, and so on to address desktop-related problems.
Provide source repositories (git and CVS), web hosting, Bugzilla, mailing lists, and other resources to free software projects that work toward the above goals.
See also
Comparison of source-code-hosting facilities
Linux on the desktop
References
Sources
The Big freedesktop.org Interview (Rayiner Hashem & Eugenia Loli-Queru, OSNews, 24 November 2003)
External links
Official website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- D-Bus
- Wayland (protokol)
- Systemd
- Thunar
- GStreamer
- Komunikasi antar proses
- Pintasan (berkas komputer)
- Berkas dan direktori tersembunyi
- Opus (format audio)
- LibreOffice
- Freedesktop.org
- X.Org Foundation
- X.Org Server
- Wayland (protocol)
- D-Bus
- Mesa (computer graphics)
- Systemd
- Poppler (software)
- X Window System
- Media type