Developer releases new Rust X11 server built with AI

Jos Dehaes has released yserver, a new MIT-licensed X11 display server written in Rust. The project received significant assistance from Claude Code, an AI coding agent from Anthropic.

The server focuses on modern Linux needs by removing legacy features such as the DDX driver ABI, multiple screen support, and indirect GLX. It connects directly to hardware via DRM/KMS and Vulkan while using libseat for seat management and running as a single-threaded process.

Yserver already supports sessions in MATE, Xfce, and Cinnamon desktop environments. It has been tested successfully on AMD Ryzen and Radeon systems, Intel Kaby Lake graphics, NVIDIA with proprietary drivers, Snapdragon X1, and Apple M1 and M2 chips running Asahi Linux.

The project remains early in development with only one primary contributor and an incomplete security model. FreeBSD support is planned but has not begun, and the name yserver is described as a placeholder.

Relaterte artikler

Ratty, a GPU-rendered terminal emulator written in Rust, has introduced unusual 3D features to the command line. The tool uses the Bevy game engine to display a spinning rat as the default cursor and supports interactive 3D modes.

Rapportert av AI

Warp has released the source code for its terminal client on GitHub under dual MIT and AGPLv3 licenses. The company is shifting its development model to emphasize human oversight on features and reviews, with AI agents handling code implementation. CEO Zach Lloyd announced the move to foster community contributions through this agentic workflow.

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis