| *wayland.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2025 Jun 28 |
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| VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar |
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| Wayland Protocol Support *wayland* |
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| 1. Useful Wayland information |wayland-useful| |
| 2. Wayland selections |wayland-selections| |
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| ============================================================================== |
| 1. Useful Wayland information *wayland-useful* |
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| *wayland-seat* |
| Functionality such as the clipboard for Wayland requires a seat to use. A |
| Wayland seat can consist of a keyboard, pointer, and touch device(s). The |
| seat to use can be set with the 'wlseat' option. Only useful if you use |
| multiple Wayland seats in the same Wayland session. |
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| *wayland-gui* |
| See |gui-wayland|. Please note that when using the GUI, Vim uses the toolkit |
| such as GTK for accessing the clipboard, and does not access the clipboard |
| though Wayland. You can check this though the |v:clipmethod| variable, which |
| should equal to "none" when running the GUI. |
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| Wayland commands: |
| *:wlrestore* *:wl* |
| :wl[restore] [display] Reinitializes the connection to the Wayland compositor. |
| Useful when running Vim in a screen/tmux session that |
| continues running after the Wayland compositor |
| restarts. |
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| [display] should be in the format of the |
| $WAYLAND_DISPLAY environment variable (e.g. |
| "wayland-0"). If [display] is omitted, then it |
| reinitializes the connection using the same value as |
| was used for the previous execution of this command. |
| If the value was never specified, then it uses the |
| value of $WAYLAND_DISPLAY environment variable. This |
| will also update |v:clipmethod|. |
| {only available when compiled with the |+wayland| |
| feature} |
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| Wayland errors: |
| *E1548* |
| Vim failed communicating with the Wayland compositor. This is likely due to |
| the Wayland compositor process being killed. Try the `:wlrestore` command to |
| try connecting again. |
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| ============================================================================== |
| 2. Wayland Selections *wayland-selections* |
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| Vim supports the wlr-data-control-unstable-v1 and ext-data-control-v1 |
| protocols, for accessing the current Wayland selection. These are the best |
| case scenario protocols, see |wayland-focus-steal|. Selection in this case |
| essentially means the "clipboard." You can check if your Wayland compositor |
| supports either of these protocols by running the wayland-info command, which |
| should be bunded with libwayland on your system: > |
| wayland-info | grep -E '(ext_data_control|zwlr_data_control)' |
| <If grep finds a match, then you have either or both protocols on your system. |
| If you don't get any match, then please see |wayland-focus-steal| for more |
| information. |
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| If you come from X11, then the regular Wayland selection is equivalent to the |
| CLIPBOARD selection in X11, and the primary Wayland selection equates to the |
| X11 primary selection. Accessing these selections is the same as X11 in Vim, |
| in which the + register is the regular selection, and the * register is the |
| primary selection, note that your compositor may not support primary |
| selections, see |wayland-primary-selection| for more details. |
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| *wayland-persist* |
| If you use X11 cut buffers, no such things exist on Wayland. Instead to |
| emulate such functionality, a separate clipboard manager must be used in order |
| to persist selection data when a Wayland client exists. |
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| *wayland-and-x11* |
| If your version of Vim comes compiled with both X11 and Wayland support, then |
| Vim determines which one to use when accessing the clipboard using the |
| 'clipmethod' option. |
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| *wayland-primary-selection* |
| If you find X11 style primary selections useful, Wayland also implements this |
| behaviour in its own protocols: |
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| - The primary selection protocol is the most widely supported, but requires |
| focus in order to be used, see |wayland-focus-steal|. |
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| - Data control protocol available on your system, such as the ext or wlr |
| protocols, then primary selection is also supported. This is unless you are |
| using version 1 (not the same as the 'v1' in the protocol name), of the |
| wlr-data-control protocol. Then the primary selection protocol will be used |
| as a fallback. |
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| *wayland-focus-steal* *wayland-gnome* |
| If you are using the GNOME desktop environment on Wayland, as of this writing, |
| there is no method of accessing/modifying the clipboard for external clients |
| such as Vim without being focused. Focused in this case means the client has |
| received some sort of input event, such as a window being focused. This is |
| what the wlr-data-control-unstable-v1 and ext-data-control-v1 protocols solve. |
| If your Wayland compositor does not support the above protocols, then the |
| above explanation applies. |
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| To solve this problem, Vim implements a way of gaining focus in order to |
| access the clipboard, by creating a temporary transparent top-level surface. |
| This is by default disabled and can be enabled via the 'wlsteal' option. |
| Moreover, a seat that has a keyboard is also required, see 'wlseat', and the |
| xdg-shell protocol must be available. |
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| Note that this method can have several side effects from the result of focus |
| stealing. For example, if you have a taskbar that shows currently opened apps |
| in your desktop environment, then when Vim attempts to steal focus, it may |
| "flicker," as if a window was opened then immediately closed after. |
| Additionally, if you are in fullscreen mode, this focus stealing won't work, |
| because the created surface won't ever gain focus. If this happens, Vim will |
| seem to freeze temporarily, see 'wltimeoutlen' for more information. |
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| vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl |