> a computer screen that doesn’t come back after sleep
Given all of the known issues with "modern sleep" in modern laptops, I'd hesitate to blame this on Wayland. Sounds more like a driver problem.
When PulseAudio took over, a lot of "PulseAudio problems" were actually bugs in audio drivers that had previously been papered over but were now exposed. Not to say that PulseAudio was perfect in those days, but it got a lot of blame for things that weren't their fault. Wayland seems to be in a similar position sometimes. I get that people don't care all that much about the distinctions if "Xorg" works for them and "Wayland" is broken, but they do still exist.
> Given all of the known issues with "modern sleep" in modern laptops, I'd hesitate to blame this Wayland. Sounds more like a driver problem.
I was about to post "then why does sleep work fine for X11" but I think I recently had issues with it as well. There was a piece of time though where sleep worked fine on X11 and not on wayland for the same device.
It could be the nvidia driver at fault once again though, I'll have to retest things and see if both work with Nouveau.
Also Wayland is fixing it, but FPS games are buggier and have much higher frametime latency by default. After disabling compositor, the frametime latency is only slightly higher but I get weird frame glitches/flickering.
Everything else Wayland works great for and in the case of waydroid gives extra features, but having everything work and be stable is a lot of stress off my plate.
> Given all of the known issues with "modern sleep" in modern laptops
I don't use sleep or hibernate, not even on work Windows laptops, there's always some ensuing flakiness that occurs. My machines are either running or shutdown.
Macbooks are the only devices I've seen return from sleep properly. Windows and linux devices all seem to be filled with issues. I'd sooner blame the actual hardware than wayland.
Yeah that attitude gave us that piece of art called systemd.
Last week a secondary hard drive from a headless machine of mine croaked. Guess what, the whole machine refused to boot and be accessible by ssh in spite of the boot/OS disk being a-ok. I had to plug in a monitor and keyboard for no good reason.
Given all of the known issues with "modern sleep" in modern laptops, I'd hesitate to blame this on Wayland. Sounds more like a driver problem.
When PulseAudio took over, a lot of "PulseAudio problems" were actually bugs in audio drivers that had previously been papered over but were now exposed. Not to say that PulseAudio was perfect in those days, but it got a lot of blame for things that weren't their fault. Wayland seems to be in a similar position sometimes. I get that people don't care all that much about the distinctions if "Xorg" works for them and "Wayland" is broken, but they do still exist.