Information for Wayland/Weston
← RZ-G
Note: weston-ini is located /etc/xdg/weston/weston.ini
To edit the file weston.ini you can use the 'vi' editor that is in the BSP.
Remove toolbar and clock
In weston-ini,
[shell] clock-format=none panel-position=none
Change Weston Background
Single color setting of background
In weston-ini,
[shell] background-color=0xff000000 <- Black background-color=0xffff0000 <- Red background-color=0xff00ff00 <- Green background-color=0xff0000ff <- Blue
Top 8 bits are an alpha value. For example, 0x7fxxxxxx is translucent, but 0x00xxxxxx is not transparent and the wallpaper is displayed.
Change the background Image
In weston-ini,
[shell] background-image=/xxx/xxx/xxxx.png background-type=tile (scale, scale-crop or tile (default)
More details about weston.ini options
For more options, see the "SHELL SECTION" on this page: https://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/bionic/man5/weston.ini.5.html
Remove Window Frame
To remove window frame on a Qt app, follow https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3948441/how-to-remove-the-window-border-containing-minimize-maximize-and-close-buttons
Changing the Video Mode for Weston
The display configuration is controlled by a file named 'weston.ini' located in the folder /etc/xdg/weston. Currently there is this section in it that sets some specific display timings.
In order to make a display work with the RZ/G2 board, the 'mode' settings need to be change to something that the display supports. In order to find those settings, run the 'cvt' command providing it the desired mode as parameters.
For example, on the RZ/G2E board, the maximum resolution is 1080p at 30Hz. Therefore you would use the command:
cvt 1920 1080 30
This should give you the proper display timings for running your display at 1080p 30fps and will force that specific mode.
You can also just specify a resolution (without timing).
[output] name=HDMI-A-1 mode=1280x720
After modifying the configuration and saving the file, restart the Weston desktop using this command:
systemctl restart weston
Another option is to set mode to "current" which keeps the current video resolution that the system was booted with.
[output] name=HDMI-A-1 mode=current
Then then set the resolution on the kernel command line in u-boot by changing the boot args to specify the resolution you want:
=> setenv bootargs 'root=/dev/mmcblk0p2 rootwait video=HDMI-A-1:1280x720-32 => saveenv
Rotation and flipping
The output can be rotated and flipped adding the transform option to the output section:
normal Normal output. 90 90 degrees clockwise. 180 Upside down. 270 90 degrees counter clockwise. flipped Horizontally flipped flipped-90 Flipped and 90 degrees clockwise flipped-180 Flipped and upside down flipped-270 Flipped and 90 degrees counter clockwise
For example:
[output] name=HDMI-A-1 mode=720x1280@60 transform=flipped-90
Take a Screenshot
You can take a screenshot on our board by using the utility weston-screenshooter.
- Modify the file /etc/default/weston and add the line:
OPTARGS="--debug"
- Restart weston by using the command:
$ systemctl restart weston
- While your application is running, use the following command:
$ weston-screenshooter
- After running weston-screenshooter, a .png file will be created in that directory. For example: "wayland-screenshot-2020-09-20_10-47-10.png"
Actually there is also a Weston keyboard shortcut that can be used: Super key + s, where the Super Key is usually the key close to Ctrl and Alt with Window logo on it.
Screen recording
Similarly, Super key + r starts / stops recording the screen, the output is a .wcap file. This is a lossless Weston proprietary format, it can be converted by using wcap-decode:
wcap-decode --yuv4mpeg2 capture.wcap > capture.y4m
The .y4m is a raw format can be opened using vlc and potentially encoded using ffmpeg:
ffmpeg -y -i capture.y4m -c:v libx264 -pix_fmt yuv420p capture.mp4
Enable /dev/fb0
The legacy Frame Buffer device interface (/dev/fb0) exists in the system, but when you write to it, nothing will be changed on the LCD when Weston is running. Therefore, if you want to use /dev/fb0, please disable weston.
systemctl stop weston
When you want to use weston again, please run
systemctl start weston
Multi-display with Wayland/Weston
One of the most frequently asked question is how to drive multiple display with RZ/G2 (RZ/G2E-N-M-H, since RZ/G2L cannot really drive more than one display).
There are some limitations on what Weston, as Wayland compositor, can do. Some limitations are due to Wayland protocol itself.
The most important thing to bear in mind is that what Weston can do well is extended desktop, for clone mode there are patches but they are not tested, independent driving is not really supported because it would require two DRM/KMS devices. However, also in extended mode there are caveats. By design Wayland does not allow application to set the position, each new window has, instead, a random initial position and then the user can move it or set to full screen. Wayland does allow applications to open in full-screen but it will open in the current active display, that is the one with the mouse pointer or last touch input. (utouch-evemu could be theoretically used to select the current active display).
Because of this limitation, a workaround using IVI-shell (In-vehicle infotainment) can be considered: it extends the Wayland core protocol to tie wl_surface and a given ID. With this ID, shell can identify which wl_surface is drawn by which application.
Another possibility is not to use Weston to control both screen, so one display can be managed by Weston / DRM and therefore have the full HW acceleration, the other is instead handled by LinuxFB/DirectFB purely in SW. This can be often acceptable for relatively simple/static GUIs.
Qt
Regarding QT, theoretically there can be a Qt application using EGLFS and another one using OpenGLES through Wayland. However this option cannot work because RZ/G2 does not support EGLFS. More details about Qt for Embedded Linux are available here.
Android
On Android, instead, multi display is much better supported and the limitations above do not apply. There is also a demo showing the dual display support with RZ/G2M (details / link TBD).
Touch Screen Calibration
Touch calibration and color changing can be done normally in Wayland/Weston.
Note that touch calibration must be enabled first in weston.ini (link)
Here is an example of how to enable touch (link)
Bring Window to Top
In Weston, there is not an API to change the z-order of windows in code. Of course, individual application windows will come to the top when pressed by the mouse pointer, but many times you want to control that using application software.
However, when writing a Qt application, when you want to bring the Qt surface to the top, just set window "visible" setting to FALSE and TRUE again.
Prevent Timeout and Screen Lock
By default, if Weston sits with no user input, it will time out and put up a screen lock screen. To prevent, you can do one of two methods:
Method 1:
Add --idle-time=0 to the command line of weston-start
/usr/bin/weston-start --idle-time=0
Method 2:
Add the follow lines to /etc/xdg/weston/weston.ini
[core] idle-time=0 [shell] locking=false
Restart Weston
- If you want to restart weston, you can do this:
$ systemctl restart weston@root.service
- For Yocto, the location of the .service files in the rotofs are /lib/systemd/system/ which is where the file weston@.service is located.