Presently XMir uses the X software cursor rather than its own. And the X
software cursor is known to be slightly buggy in some cases. But the
logic is all in Xorg.

When you disable XMir, X will generally switch back to a "hardware
cursor" which performs better and is generally more reliable. So this
gives the illusion that XMir is breaking the cursor. Actually XMir's
just using a slightly unreliable feature of Xorg.

** Also affects: xorg-server (Ubuntu)
   Importance: Undecided
       Status: New

** Summary changed:

- Losing the mouse pointer when switching account
+ Losing the mouse pointer (software cursor) when switching account

** Changed in: mir
       Status: New => Invalid

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1263365

Title:
  Losing the mouse pointer (software cursor) when switching account

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