Every article tag can be clicked to get a list of all articles in that category. Every article tag also has an RSS feed! You can customize an RSS feed too!
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

The folks Unity3D are currently doing a "HackWeek" when they work on special projects. It looks like the Linux team are working on using SDL instead of X11 directly which will bring Mir & Wayland support amongst other things.

For those that don't know: X11, Mir and Wayland are what allow you to see windows, drag them around and generally do everything on your Linux computer. X11 is really old and Wayland/Mir will eventually replace it.

I follow Unity developer Na'Tosha Bard on twitter, and it has been fun to see the progress on it, here's what they have done so far!

#unity3d #HackWeek End of Day 1 Status: X11 is out. SDL is partially in. pic.twitter.com/YrWSY6unWk

— Na'Tosha Bard (@natosha_bard) May 9, 2016

#unity3d #HackWeek Day 2: Switch to SDL mostly complete. Partial input handling working. No more assertion failures. pic.twitter.com/4XWYwavziL

— Na'Tosha Bard (@natosha_bard) May 10, 2016

OK, Bonus #unity3d #HackWeek Status: #unity3d running on Wayland! pic.twitter.com/agsZT4kLpE

— Na'Tosha Bard (@natosha_bard) May 10, 2016


I love that Unity developers do things like this. SDL support should make things like multiple monitor handling much better. That is something I am especially keen for, as multiple monitor handling in a lot of Unity games is often really poor. SDL could also help them improve things like gamepad/controller support too.

Worth noting that these changes may not end up in the official Unity builds, but we can hope it all works out.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Editorial, Unity
0 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
28 comments
Page: 1/2»
  Go to:

Liam Dawe May 11, 2016
Quoting: z3ntuYou should also include: https://twitter.com/natosha_bard/status/730147691372646401
Yeah, that was supposed to be in, I accidentally duplicated one. Fixed.
legluondunet May 11, 2016
Nice news! More comfortable and efficiency are the developping tools on Linux, more developpers will develop on this platform.


Last edited by legluondunet on 11 May 2016 at 11:51 am UTC
devland May 11, 2016
They should also stop collecting user data without their explicit consent.
Hopefully you guys haven't forgotten. :)
https://www.gamingonlinux.com/articles/unity3d-games-phone-home-with-details-of-your-hardware-software.4452


Last edited by devland on 11 May 2016 at 12:06 pm UTC
TemplateR May 11, 2016
What is the difference between SDL and X11?
MacabreHeart May 11, 2016
Quoting: TemplateRWhat is the difference between SDL and X11?

One is a complete windowing system that is based around a 20-something year old design (x11), one is a toolkit that can generate windows and handle input for multiple windowing systems and is substantial more modern in it's design (sdl)
Linas May 11, 2016
View PC info
  • Supporter Plus
Quoting: TemplateRWhat is the difference between SDL and X11?
SDL in an abstraction layer with multiple backends. It provides access to audio, keyboard, mouse, joystick, and graphics hardware. X11 is a windowing system that functions as a backend for SDL, but also can be used directly. They are moving away from using X11 directly to SDL abstraction, which allows it to work on other backends such as Wayland.
borartr May 11, 2016
I especially hope that SDL itself will profit from it (bugfixes/performance wise). It it in my opinion still not very good. For example even Trine 1 is unplayable even on lowest settings (extremly ugly) on my intel laptop (<10 fps), which should not be the case for such a simple sidescroller imho.
Not sure if it is good for a game engine to put a additional layer between it and the system in general, but for unity I personally dont care much as long as it works better than before.
burnall May 11, 2016
But if I'm not mistaken none of the current distributions is using any of the new display servers as a default yet. I hoped at least that Fedora 24 will use Wayland as a default, but unfortunatly it's still too unstable. Everything goes soooo slow.
TemplateR May 11, 2016
Quoting: MacabreHeart
Quoting: TemplateRWhat is the difference between SDL and X11?

One is a complete windowing system that is based around a 20-something year old design (x11), one is a toolkit that can generate windows and handle input for multiple windowing systems and is substantial more modern in it's design (sdl)

That means, that SDL is much better then X11?
Liam Dawe May 11, 2016
Quoting: borartrI especially hope that SDL itself will profit from it (bugfixes/performance wise). It it in my opinion still not very good. For example even Trine 1 is unplayable even on lowest settings (extremly ugly) on my intel laptop (<10 fps), which should not be the case for such a simple sidescroller imho.
Not sure if it is good for a game engine to put a additional layer between it and the system in general, but for unity I personally dont care much as long as it works better than before.
A games performance has little to do with using SDL.
Alloc May 11, 2016
Wondering about performance though which already seems to be still lacking a bit behind Unity's DX implementation. Would have expected it to be even lower then when "directly" talking to the windowing system (though I actually thought it would more or less talk directly to some OpenGL stuff?) instead of having SDL as an additional layer in between?
Imants May 11, 2016
Quoting: AllocWondering about performance though which already seems to be still lacking a bit behind Unity's DX implementation. Would have expected it to be even lower then when "directly" talking to the windowing system (though I actually thought it would more or less talk directly to some OpenGL stuff?) instead of having SDL as an additional layer in between?
It has practically no effect on performance. It has more effect on system stability and usability. Most of the performance is stilt in hands of those who writes OpenGL implementation.
Kristian May 11, 2016
Quoting: TemplateR
Quoting: MacabreHeart
Quoting: TemplateRWhat is the difference between SDL and X11?

One is a complete windowing system that is based around a 20-something year old design (x11), one is a toolkit that can generate windows and handle input for multiple windowing systems and is substantial more modern in it's design (sdl)

That means, that SDL is much better then X11?

SDL and X11 aren't competing projects. As has been mentioned SDL sits at a higher level of abstraction. SDL is one way of using, among others, X11. This means that Unity will more easily support various new technologies. It is up to the developers of SDL to support stuff like X11, Wayland, Mir, etc. So that if SDL adds supports for things like that, then the developers at Unity don't have to worry about that.
nocri May 11, 2016
Changing the method of window handling should not influence performance -- it is just a way of getting information from the display server (like X11(...)) where in the computer memory you should be creating images to be presented in your window and what format should it be in (of course it is very simplified definition :) ).
MacabreHeart May 11, 2016
Quoting: burnallBut if I'm not mistaken none of the current distributions is using any of the new display servers as a default yet. I hoped at least that Fedora 24 will use Wayland as a default, but unfortunatly it's still too unstable. Everything goes soooo slow.
You, sir/madam, need to read up a little bit. Gnome 3 on Wayland is perfectly stable and perfectly usable for most use cases. It not being the default in Fedora is because there are a few things that aren't quite at parity with the X11 version of Gnome 3. Remote desktop and the on-screen keyboard are the major ones, but the list also includes things such as better handling of mice and some Mutter specific code changes
M@GOid May 11, 2016
Quoting: borartrI especially hope that SDL itself will profit from it (bugfixes/performance wise). It it in my opinion still not very good. For example even Trine 1 is unplayable even on lowest settings (extremly ugly) on my intel laptop (<10 fps), which should not be the case for such a simple sidescroller imho.
Not sure if it is good for a game engine to put a additional layer between it and the system in general, but for unity I personally dont care much as long as it works better than before.


I think the Trine games are problematic with OpenSource drivers. I have a Core i7 and a R9 290 (radeonsi driver) and it plays like crap, even if I set everything to low.

Must be one of those bad OpenGL ports, too dependent of the forgiveness in the Nvidia proprietary drivers.
Tak May 11, 2016
The main impetuses behind this project are:
* Getting ahead of the curve for Wayland/Mir/NextBigThing
* Potentially sharing a little more code between Linux and other "Linuxlike" platforms



QuoteSDL support should make things like multiple monitor handling much better. That is something I am especially keen for, as multiple monitor handling in a lot of Unity games is often really poor. SDL could also help them improve things like gamepad/controller support too.
I wouldn't expect SDL to magically improve this. Engine support for multimonitor systems is already there, and the same engine API will be exposed to game developers regardless of what's powering it on the back end. Similarly, SDL2-style gamepad mapping has been supported since Unity 5.0 - how developers handle it is a different issue.



QuoteWondering about performance though which already seems to be still lacking a bit behind Unity's DX implementation. Would have expected it to be even lower then when "directly" talking to the windowing system (though I actually thought it would more or less talk directly to some OpenGL stuff?) instead of having SDL as an additional layer in between?
In this case, SDL would only be used for window setup and input - rendering would still use OpenGL directly.
F.Ultra May 11, 2016
View PC info
  • Supporter
Quoting: Guest1. Any special reason why would you support Unity3D?
2. Everyones acting like X11 is the past and is really buggy and slow - but really most don't have real problems with X11 and if there are problems let us fix them or rewrite parts if neccesarry.

But X11 is the past and is really buggy (try for example to create a 100% no-one-can-bypass screen saver lock for X11). More to the point is that the devs behind X11 is the same devs that are creating Wayland.

The only sad thing with these nice changes to Unity3D is that AFAIK Unity3D is statically linked to each game and does not exist as a shared resource in for example Steam so for this new version to be used games have to be updated one by one(?).
c3224 May 11, 2016
Unity is working on SDL supprot and SDL includes X11, Wayland and Mir support; Unity guys are too dumb to work on Wayland and Mir directly, so they are not working on Wayland and Mir and your headline is wrong. Mir, Wayland, X11 and other subsystems support in SDL was worked on by SDL developers an community (guys who are not dumb). It was a damn time to use SDL for an engine which claims support to multiple platforms, they aim too add "Build to XYZ" buttons all over the place but all of their builds, except Windows ones, are bad and full of bugs.

According to screnshoots they are using Ubuntu, a Linux distribution with unique DE, unique display system and unique patches to almost all librarys and unique defaults, hey my Linux traitors, do you know what that means? It means there will be all kind of bugs and issues in other distributions because game developers (engine developers also) dont understand that Ubuntu is "a little bit special kid" and at the end they dont support Linux they support Ubuntu.

kkthnxbye
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.