> but banning someone who cares about it and removing
> their proposed contributions, feels hostile.
I was curious about this so I did a little digging. It looks like the other developers were not happy with the quality of his contributions. Reading the discussions in https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/xserver/-/issues/1760 and https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/xserver/-/issues/1797 sheds a lot of light on the problems. Quoting two comments from the dozens there: > @metux i appreciate you maintaining and trying to improve Xorg but
> this is the second time you break it recently, you really should
> implement more testing...
and > Honestly, I would strongly recommend just not merging anything @metux
> does from now on. I do not feel that their presence here has been a net
> positive -- I have seen zero actual bugs solved by any of their code
> changes. What I have seen is build breakage, ABI breakage, and ecosystem
> churn from moving code around and deleting code.
> Xorg could use some actual maintenance, but that means fixing actual
> bugs and solving real problems.
In my search I also found that the XLibre project description mentions "BigTech moles killing Xorg", XLibre being "free of DEI discrimination" and wanting to "Make X great again!" (https://github.com/X11Libre/xserver). And he posted an antivax conspiracy on the Linux kernel mailing list (https://lkml.org/lkml/2021/6/10/903). And he appears to be a German WW2 apologist (https://web.archive.org/web/20190404153507/https://lists.dyn...). So... there's that too.
There's waypipe (https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mstoeckl/waypipe), which works well in my experience. Although I must say I don't use network transparency (be it X or Wayland) much these days.