Oh, I see. That is more interesting.
Just for the curiosity, could you tell me more about the early days before Mir?
I'm wondering why you choose to remove surface flinger.
Is there some constraint if you keep using Surface flinger and another graphics server?
Thanks,
Jaeyong
------- Original Message -------
Sender : Daniel van Vugt<daniel.van.v...@canonical.com>
Date : 2016-01-04 14:41 (GMT+09:00)
Title : Re: Regarding running Android LXC guest in Ubuntu touch by using Mir
SurfaceFlinger is not running. Mir uses the Android graphics driver
directly.
There are however two Mir servers running (nested) on an Ubuntu phone.
They are Unity System Compositor and Unity8.
You can imagine Unity System Compositor as having replaced
SurfaceFlinger entirely.
- Daniel
On 04/01/16 13:37, 유재용 wrote:
> Thanks for the answer Daniel,
>
> Then, if I understand that two distinct display servers are running
> (both Mir and Surface flinger), is this correct?
>
> Jaeyong
>
> ------- *Original Message* -------
>
> *Sender* : Daniel van Vugt
>
> *Date* : 2016-01-04 14:30 (GMT+09:00)
>
> *Title* : Re: Regarding running Android LXC guest in Ubuntu touch by
> using Mir
>
> Hi Jaeyong,
>
> This is indeed the proper mailing list for such questions, but you can
> also use https://answers.launchpad.net/mir
>
> Good question, and I can kind of see how you might think Android is a
> Mir client. But it is not.
>
> The relevant stack is really:
>
> Linux kernel and hardware
> ^
> Android HAL (on phones only, not desktops)
> ^
> libhybris (on phones only, not desktops)
> ^
> Mir server (Unity System Compositor)
> ^
> Mir server (Unity8 shell is a server and a client)
> ^
> Apps (Mir clients)
>
> We do not use Surfaceflinger at all anywhere in Ubuntu Touch. Although
> in the early days before Mir, we did.
>
> I don't know enough about LXC to comment further on that part.
>
> - Daniel
>
>
> On 04/01/16 13:05, 유재용 wrote:
> > Hello Mir developers
> >
> > I saw an article of running Android as a LXC guest on top of Ubuntu
> > touch in the following site.
> >
> >
> https://developer.ubuntu.com/en/start/ubuntu-for-devices/porting-new-device/
> >
> > Here, I have some question with the Mir display server. I hope if you
> > could help me out understand the
> >
> > details of display server/client relationship with the above example.
> >
> > In the diagram (see above link), there is a single Mir display server
> > placed in Ubuntu touch side.
> >
> > And, it looks like Android is working as a Mir client to the display
> server.
> >
> > As I know, Surface flinger is acting as a compositor (i.e., display
> > server) in Android side. I'm wondering
> >
> > how do you manage to work Surface flinger as a Mir client?
> >
> > And, would it be possible to run 2 display servers (i.e., Surface
> > flinger and Mir) within LXC but giving
> >
> > different virtual terminals to each other? (Are there some possibilities
> > of mess-up in GPU context switches
> >
> > in between display servers?)
> >
> > If the question is not proper on this mailing list, could you let me
> > know the pointers that I can these sort of questions?
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Jaeyong
> >
> >
> >
>
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