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desktop revision 1.2
      1 $NetBSD: desktop,v 1.2 2017/01/13 10:41:16 leot Exp $
      2 
      3 NetBSD Desktop Roadmap
      4 ======================
      5 
      6 This roadmap deals with desktop support. Note that "desktop support"
      7 means several quite different things:
      8    - issues pertaining to running the Windows-like Linux desktops
      9      (e.g. GNOME, KDE, Mate, Trinity, as well as other similar things
     10      like LXDE) on NetBSD in more or less their current form;
     11    - issues pertaining to running these systems with NetBSD
     12      infrastructure, for better system integration and to avoid
     13      depending on unpopular packages like dbus and policykit;
     14    - issues specific to developer-oriented desktops;
     15    - other issues pertaining to using a NetBSD machine as one's desktop
     16      login system, regardless of the UI;
     17    - issues pertaining to running or developing a more Unix-oriented
     18      desktop environment, which is kind of blue-sky for the time being.
     19 
     20 Also, "desktop support" and "laptop support" are closely related in
     21 the sense that in the conventional wisdom laptops run more or less the
     22 same user-facing software as desktops. Additional specifically laptop-
     23 related issues, such as power management, are discussed in the
     24 "mobile" roadmap (q.v.).
     25 
     26 Furthermore, many of the above issues can be ~orthogonally divided
     27 into one of the following three broad categories:
     28 
     29    a. Providing new infrastructure for supporting facilities whose
     30       needs are reasonably well understood but are not traditionally
     31       handled by Unix and/or are not currently handled by NetBSD, or
     32       where traditional/existing support is chronically defective.
     33       Examples include font management, printing, mounting removable
     34       media, and also things like support for location services.
     35 
     36    b. Providing new infrastructure for supporting facilities whose
     37       needs are not in fact well understood. This tends to cover the
     38       domains where we don't like the GNOME/KDE/Linux tools, like
     39       dbus, as well as things that existing desktop environments fall
     40       down on entirely, like integrating with large home directory
     41       trees.
     42 
     43    c. Refactoring existing infrastructure (whether NetBSD-specific or
     44       historical Unix) to integrate new facilities and software models
     45       smoothly instead of bolting layers of crud on top of outdated
     46       structure. Examples include revisiting the assumption that
     47       logins happen on teletypes, and facing the need to restrict the
     48       access of large applications rather than giving them all the
     49       privileges of the user starting them.
     50 
     51 
     52 The following elements, projects, and goals are relatively near-term:
     53 
     54  1. Don't ship twm as the default X window manager
     55  2. Making removable media work using GNOME/KDE infrastructure
     56  3. Making wireless config work using GNOME/KDE infrastructure
     57  4. Sane font handling
     58  5. Get Eclipse running properly from pkgsrc
     59  6. Better printer management
     60  7. Work out a long-term plan for compositing, Wayland, and graphics
     61     architecture issues
     62 
     63 The following elements, projects, and goals are longer-term:
     64 
     65  8. Publish/subscribe sockets or IPC
     66  9. Better native RPC library and tools
     67  10. Native removable media handling
     68  11. Native wireless config
     69  12. User switching and secure attention key
     70  13. wscons graphics
     71 
     72 The following elements, projects, and goals are rather blue-sky so far:
     73 
     74  14. Something akin to ARexx
     75  15. A more Unix-oriented root window/desktop basis 
     76  16. Full console virtualization
     77 
     78 
     79 Explanations
     80 ============
     81 
     82 
     83  1. Don't ship twm as the default X window manager
     84 
     85 It's embarrassing that in 2016 we were still shipping twm as the
     86 default window system config. Heck, it was embarrassing in 2006. The
     87 work needed to move to ctwm has been largely done (by youri) and at
     88 least some of it committed, but this still (as of January 2017) isn't
     89 enabled by default.
     90 
     91   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
     92   - It would be silly at this point to release 8.0 without it, so
     93     ideally someone will step up to get it finished and enabled.
     94   - Contact: XXX please fill in
     95 
     96 
     97  2. Making removable media work using GNOME/KDE infrastructure
     98 
     99 Ideally when you insert a USB stick it mounts automatically, like with
    100 GNOME and KDE on Linux. I believe this is not currently working. It
    101 used to depend on hal, which was always problematic and perennially
    102 broken, but hal got deprecated and I'm not sure what is even involved.
    103 (XXX: someone please clarify.)
    104 
    105 
    106  3. Making wireless config work using GNOME/KDE infrastructure
    107 
    108 Ideally it would be possible to configure your wireless networking
    109 using the GNOME/KDE/etc. tools. I believe this does not work either.
    110 (XXX: someone please clarify.)
    111 
    112 
    113  4. Sane font handling
    114 
    115 See "System-level font handling in Unix" on the wiki projects page.
    116 
    117   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
    118   - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
    119   - Contact: dholland
    120 
    121 
    122  5. Get Eclipse running properly from pkgsrc
    123 
    124 As of last report Eclipse was bodgily packaged (this may not be
    125 fixable) and didn't really work (this should be). Because Eclipse is
    126 Java this depends on JDK stuff.
    127 
    128   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
    129   - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
    130   - Contact: ? (XXX)
    131 
    132 
    133  6. Better printer management
    134 
    135 See "New LPR/LPD for NetBSD" on the wiki projects page.
    136 
    137   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
    138   - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
    139   - Contact: dholland
    140 
    141 
    142  7. Work out a long-term plan for compositing, Wayland, and graphics
    143     architecture issues
    144 
    145 Nobody seems to have a good idea of what the way forward ought to be,
    146 so probably it would be advisable for someone to dig into the issues
    147 and report back.
    148 
    149   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
    150   - There is currently no clear timeframe or release target.
    151   - Contact: ? (XXX)
    152 
    153 
    154  8. Publish/subscribe sockets or IPC
    155 
    156 It's clear that even though traditionally Unix has next to no such
    157 facilities, a "modern" desktop system requires the ability to post
    158 notices about from one component to another. (Probably the closest
    159 thing traditional Unix ever had along these lines was comsat(8).)
    160 
    161 dholland observed some time back that there isn't really a problem if
    162 what you want to do is contact a well-known service: we have inetd for
    163 that, and while inetd could use some polishing before being deployed
    164 for such purposes that isn't a very big deal. The interesting case is
    165 multicast: when you want to send a notice to anyone who happens to be
    166 around and interested in seeing notices of some particular type,
    167 without needing to know who they are.
    168 
    169 dbus does this badly, both because the implementation is poor and
    170 because the basic concept of a "message bus" is flawed. A better model
    171 is publish-subscribe channels: a message sent ("published") on the
    172 channel is delivered to all listeners ("subscribers"), and neither the
    173 publishers nor the subscribers need to know about one another, only
    174 about the existence of the channel... which becomes effectively a well
    175 known service.
    176 
    177 The original (very tentative) plan was to wedge publish/subscribe into
    178 AF_UNIX sockets, because AF_UNIX sockets already satisfy several
    179 important criteria: (1) they have a large and flexible namespace,
    180 namely the whole file system namespace; (2) they support credential
    181 reporting; (3) the socket/bind/listen/connect API (probably) provides
    182 enough flexibility to handle the connection model; and (4) they
    183 already exist. However, nobody has yet looked into this very closely
    184 and the interface may not turn out to be very suitable after all.
    185 
    186 Note that (like anything of this sort) the naming scheme for the
    187 channels is critical, as is the development of sane protocols to run
    188 over them. Note that the publish/subscribe sockets should be transport
    189 only; protocols should be a higher-level issue. (This is one of a
    190 number of things dbus gets wrong.)
    191 
    192 One of the other things this infrastructure should provide is a decent
    193 way to post notices (e.g. for media changes, device insertions, and so
    194 on) out of the kernel, which has historically always been a problem in
    195 Unix.
    196 
    197 This item is sometimes also referred to as "dbus avoidance" -
    198 theoretically one could avoid dbus with some other architecture too,
    199 but nothing much else has been proposed.
    200 
    201 An example application we already have in base is the notices that
    202 sshd sends to blacklistd. Currently this makes a mess if sshd is
    203 running and blacklistd isn't.
    204 
    205   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
    206   - There is currently no timeframe or release target.
    207   - Contact: dholland
    208 
    209 
    210  9. Better native RPC library and tools
    211 
    212 Another thing dbus doesn't do very well: it's an IPC/RPC library. In
    213 the long run to support existing desktops we probably need
    214 dbus-compatible IPC tools. In the short run though we'd do well to
    215 pick or develop something of our own, and (finally) deprecate SunRPC.
    216 
    217   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
    218   - There is currently no timeframe or release target.
    219   - Contact: dholland or ? (XXX)
    220 
    221 
    222  10. Native removable media handling
    223 
    224 Given publish/subscribe channels, implement proper native support for
    225 mounting removable media upon insertion. This should integrate with
    226 GNOME/KDE/etc. but also work natively; e.g. provided the right
    227 services are running, it should work even when running on a text-only
    228 console.
    229 
    230 
    231  11. Native wireless config
    232 
    233 Similarly, implement a native wireless config scheme. While we
    234 currently have wpa_cli, it lacks a certain something...
    235 
    236 
    237  12. User switching and secure attention key
    238 
    239 See the project page on the wiki.
    240 
    241   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
    242   - There is currently no timeframe or release target.
    243   - Contact: dholland or ? (XXX)
    244 
    245 
    246  13. wscons graphics
    247 
    248 There's been talk on and off for some time about supporting cairo or
    249 qt-embedded or similar things directly on the console. This is
    250 probably a good infrastructure step for any UI scheme that doesn't
    251 involve an X server, such as potentially phones or tablets. (See the
    252 "mobile" roadmap for more on that.)
    253 
    254 
    255  14. Something akin to ARexx
    256 
    257 We have a number of veteran Amiga users and whenever there's a
    258 discussion of dbus usually ARexx eventually comes up. It would be
    259 great to have something like ARexx for talking to/scripting/
    260 controlling applications. But given that GNOME and KDE and their
    261 imitations are all based on Windows and that the state of the art
    262 seems to be dbus, if we want this we're going to have to design and
    263 build it out ourselves. It would be a good thing to do.
    264 
    265 Just remember that the good parts of ARexx didn't include the Rexx
    266 language. :-)
    267 
    268   - As of January 2017 nobody is actively working on this.
    269   - There is currently no timeframe or release target.
    270   - Contact: mlelstv? (XXX)
    271 
    272 
    273  15. A more Unix-oriented root window/desktop basis
    274 
    275 All the existing desktops (apart from OS X, which is NextStep, but not
    276 all that much different either) are based on Windows. They share a
    277 number of properties that are not consistent with the Unix philosophy
    278 or design model.
    279 
    280 First, Unix is about files, and like or or not, files in Unix are
    281 organized in a hierarchical namespace. The Windows-like desktops, like
    282 Windows, provide a file manager as an afterthought and the desktop
    283 workspace itself has no notion of current directory, no notion of
    284 directory navigation, and only limited notions of interacting with
    285 files at all. In fact, the things that show up on the desktop
    286 typically live in a reserved directory that the desktop software
    287 insists on polluting your homedir with. A Unix desktop should have
    288 directory navigation integrated with the root window somehow -- there
    289 are many possible ways to do this, and virtually any choice would be
    290 better than what you get from GNOME and KDE. It shouldn't be necessary
    291 to open a shell (or a "file manager") to work effectively with a large
    292 source tree.
    293 
    294 Second, Unix is also about text, and existing desktop software is not.
    295 While people tend to think of GUIs and text as mutually exclusive,
    296 this is not actually the case: a GUI provides a lot of ways to place
    297 and format text that can't be done in text mode (let alone on a
    298 teletype) -- a good start, for example, might be to display the first
    299 few lines of a file when you roll the mouse over it, but one can go a
    300 lot further than that.
    301 
    302 Third, Unix is supposed to be about pluggable components. A Unix
    303 desktop should have functionality for plugging components together
    304 graphically, whether those components are traditional shell tools or
    305 "services" or "objects" or more complex things. No existing desktop
    306 has anything like this, certainly not as native functionality.
    307 
    308 Anything like this is going to have to be designed and written, since
    309 it's clearly not going to be forthcoming from the Linux desktop folks.
    310 (Note that while it would be a big effort it would also be a great
    311 publicity lever...)
    312 
    313 
    314  16. Full console virtualization
    315 
    316 The Unix notion of a login session is stuck in the 70s, where you log
    317 in on a glass teletype and that's all you get. The consoles of modern
    318 computers have assorted other widgets as well: pointing devices, game
    319 controllers, cameras, scanners, removable storage, hotkeys, audio
    320 playback and record... not to mention graphics and video. Right now we
    321 have a bodgy scheme for chowning or chmod'ing devices on console
    322 login; in addition to potentially causing problems (what happens if
    323 one user leaves a process behind that's recording audio, then logs out
    324 and walks away?) this doesn't work well with multiple users logged in
    325 at once on the console. It also doesn't work at all with remote logins.
    326 
    327 In an ideal world, all your console hardware would be tied to your
    328 console login session, and virtualized appropriately so that multiple
    329 console logins each get suitably arbitrated access. Furthermore, it
    330 should be possible to forward your console hardware to a remote login
    331 session -- for example if you have a usb stick you should be able to
    332 log in somewhere and mount it there.
    333 
    334 Getting to this requires refactoring the way we think about logins and
    335 login devices, but it's high time.
    336 
    337