*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1878953 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1878953
** This bug is no longer a duplicate of bug 1905084
Multi-monitor settings are lost when switching between single- and
extended-display modes using the keyboard (Super+P) or in gnome-control-center
**
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1905084 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1905084
** This bug has been marked a duplicate of bug 1905084
Multi-monitor settings are lost when switching between single- and
extended-display modes using the keyboard (Super+P) or in gnome-control-center
This bug is now closed as Invalid since it does seem to be the issue
described in comments #2 and #3. So not a bug, but an interesting point
of confusion that other users might encounter. To "fix" it though would
be an enhancement request. If you like then we can turn this into an
enhancement
Another note (not related to multi-monitor nor Wayland):
GTK3 windows kind of "vibrate" at the edges or produce weird shadows when they
are loading something or when a modal window appears. I notice that in Firefox,
Thunderbird and Eclipse IDE.
Maybe it's related to this:
I was mistaken again, fractional scaling works in Wayland after logging
out and back in.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/100
Title:
Resolution of external monitor goes back to its
Thanks, Daniel for the answer.
1. I think I was mistaken, when I set the resolution of the external
monitor to 2560 ⨉ 1440 while the lid is closed, it persists after
opening and closing the lid, both in X11 and Wayland. So I think the
behaviour is like that and there is no bug after all.
2. I
Please:
1. Try selecting 'Ubuntu on Wayland' from the login screen and tell us
if that has the same bug.
2. Tell us if you are using any fractional scaling settings.
3. Mutter/gnome-shell remembers multiple different display
configurations. So it sounds like it's just switching configurations