Alyssa Ross writes: > Demi Marie Obenour writes: > >> On 7/20/25 03:55, Alyssa Ross wrote: >>> Demi Marie Obenour writes: >>> >>>> If I run `make run-qemu` under a Wayland compositor (tested with both >>>> Sway and Weston), I get a Wayland protocol error ("invalid object 0") >>>> and QEMU exits. It appears that there is a problem with >>>> wayland-proxy-virtwl. I get the following error from foot: >>>> >>>> warn: main.c:437: 'C' is not a UTF-8 locale, falling back to 'C.UTF-8' >>>> warn: config.c:3520: no configuration found, using defaults >>>> Fontconfig warning: no elements found. Check configuration. >>>> Fontconfig warning: adding /var/cache/fontconfig >>>> Fontconfig warning: adding fontconfig >>>> err: wayland.c:1714: no compositor >>>> err: wayland.c:2248: failed to flush wayland socket: Connection reset by peer >>>> >>>> And the following from wayland-proxy-virtwl: >>>> >>>> 2025-07-20 02:14:48.638 wl-proxy [WARNING]: Error handling client: Invalid_argument("invalid bounds in Cstruct.LE.get_uint32 [0,0](4096) off=0 len=4") >>> >>> This is partially fixed with , >>> which is more recent than Spectrum's pinned Nixpkgs. I expect to >>> update that in the next few days, but until then, you can apply it on >>> top of the Nixpkgs revision in lib/nixpkgs.default.nix, and then pass >>> --arg config '{pkgsFun = import /path/to/nixpkgs;}' to any Spectrum >>> Nix command. >>> >>> With that change, I'm able to run foot fine in QEMU. gnome-text-editor >>> runs but prints errors and looks weird, and Firefox doesn't even start. >>> crosvm built from the same tag as rutabaga_gfx used by QEMU works fine, >>> so I think it must be a QEMU bug. I spent some time yesterday trying to >>> debug it, but didn't get anywhere so far. If I can't figure it out soon >>> I'll open an upstream bug report. >> >> That's a good idea. Would it be possible to use vhost-user as a >> workaround? That would use crosvm's implementation instead. > > No. crosvm and QEMU have different ideas of what vhost-user-gpu. > QEMU expects to provide all the graphical stuff itself, using the > vhost-user-gpu protocol[1], whereas the crosvm one has the backend do > almost everything (like every other vhost-user device — also much better > for sandboxing). > > [1]: https://www.qemu.org/docs/master/interop/vhost-user-gpu.html#vhost-user-gpu-protocol Possibly the best way to test this would be to use crosvm, which also supports virtio-sound.