, the only announced
desktop environment with native support for Mir was Canonical's
Unity 8. No other
Linux distribution announced plans to adopt Mir as default display server. On 23 July 2013,
Compiz developer Sam Spilsbury had announced a proof-of-concept port of
Kodi to Mir, based on the previous proof-of-concept port of Kodi to Wayland. On the same day Canonical developer Oliver Ries had confirmed that "this is the first native Mir client out in the wild". Among Ubuntu derivatives using a non-Unity environment,
Xubuntu developers had announced in early August 2013 that they would evaluate running
Xfce via XMir, but three weeks later decided to refrain from adopting it.
Ubuntu In June 2013, Canonical's publicly announced milestones for Mir development were to ship Unity 7 with XMir by default and a pure X11 fallback mode with
Ubuntu 13.10, remove the X11 fallback with
Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, and Unity 8 running natively on Mir by
Ubuntu 14.10. Later, on , Canonical announced a postponement of their Mir plans for desktop use and not use XMir as default in Ubuntu 13.10.
Ubuntu Touch, however is targeted to ship with Mir and a smartphone version of Unity 8. In May 2016, during his traditional video interview with the community held during the Ubuntu Online Summit,
Mark Shuttleworth confirmed that "You will be able to get 16.10 with Unity 8, just like you can get 16.04 with MATE, or KDE, or GNOME. It'll be there, it'll be an option, and the team that's working on that is committed to making that a first-class option." On 5 April 2017, Canonical announced that with the release of Ubuntu 18.04 LTS, the Unity 8 interface would be abandoned in favor of
GNOME. When asked if the decision would also mean the end of Mir development, Canonical's Michael Hall said that given the divergent development paths taken by Mir and its competitor,
Wayland, "Using Mir simply isn't an option we have." However,
Mark Shuttleworth clarified on 8 April 2017 that development would continue for Mir's use in
Internet of Things (IoT) applications, stating: "we have lots of IoT projects using Mir as a compositor so that code continues to receive investment."
Toolkits •
SDL supported both Mir and Wayland starting with SDL 2.0.2 but it was disabled by default. Wayland and Mir support was enabled by default starting with SDL 2.0.4. With the release of 2.0.10, Mir support was dropped in favor of Wayland. •
GTK 3.16 included an experimental Mir backend, but was removed in GTK 4. •
Qt5 is the official and supported toolkit for Unity8 and Ubuntu Touch, included in the Ubuntu
SDK. == Criticism ==