Categories: BlogCanonicalUbuntu

The journey from mir-kiosk to Ubuntu Frame

We now deliver Ubuntu Frame, a display server for embedded devices that makes it easy for developers to deploy their graphics applications on Linux. Ubuntu Frame simplifies the development of embedded displays such as digital signage solutions, kiosks, IoT devices, robots, and more. In this blog, we will discuss the migration from mir-kiosk to Ubuntu Frame.

Goodbye
Sponsored
mir-kiosk, hello Ubuntu Frame

Mir-kiosk was released in 2018. It provided a black screen with a mouse pointer, letting you run any application you want, instantly turning it into a kiosk application. It was designed to help people unlock a full kiosk mode for Linux embedded devices. And as such, it supported several projects on its way.  

It was used in many devices around the world, including smart mirrors, point of sales in countrywide food chains, healthcare kiosks, and more. Since it was open source, our community also used mir-kiosk to develop exciting embedding applications, such as arcade consoles and smart hubs screens. And it is thanks to this production-grade experience, that we now deliver Ubuntu Frame.

mir kiosks running in a smart mirror developed by glancr

Ubuntu Frame is the most reliable display server for embedded Linux systems as its technology has been in development for over 7 years and in production for 5 years. Ubuntu Frame bundles communication protocols, input protocols, and security policies into a single kit, which can then be used in embedded devices.  

The main reason to create Ubuntu Frame was to provide the new generation of smart displays with the latest and greatest full-screen shell. Developments in the field, including our constant collection of developers’ needs, gave us the opportunity to refresh the foundation that we built with mir-kiosk. Ubuntu Frames distills what we’ve learned with our partners and adopters, and provides a solution that adjusts to current needs while future-proofing the development of this technology. 

It also provides an improved experience from a developer and smart displays user’s perspective. New features, such as on-screen-keyboard, power-saving, and an easy configuration system are just some examples. The compatibility of graphics applications developed on the latest graphic toolkits and libraries, such as GTK, Qt, Flutter, and more, simplify the development of embedded displays. 

From mir-kiosk to Ubuntu Frame

While mir-kiosk will remain maintained supporting current customers, we do recommend developers to start migrating to Ubuntu Frame. To support you in this process, we have detailed a process to achieve this migration. If you require commercial support, contact us

Sponsored

Ubuntu Frame is open source, free to use, and long-term supported by Canonical, and will continue to be our recommended way to enable embedded graphics on Ubuntu Core.   

How to contribute?

Ubuntu Frame is open source. This brings several advantages for developers and businesses. You don’t need to be a direct customer to have a say on this project. Even more, as the code is open, you can implement your own features. Its roadmap is publicly available, and our community can directly influence it.    

You can get involved by: 

  • Reporting bugs: we want to know about the problems so we can fix them.
  • Quality assurance: before releasing new features we make a “Call for Testing” a week prior to each update reaching “stable”. This is your opportunity to discover and report any problems.
  • Documentation: there are lots of ways to use Ubuntu Frame and we try to describe the important ones, but maybe we missed yours.
  • Feature requests: we have a lot of ideas on what to do next but you know what you need.
  • Code changes: the code is open and we are open to accepting changes to it. So, don’t worry about maintaining a new fork, and instead, let’s work together.

Ubuntu Frame will continue growing with our community. 

If you want to get involved, please visit our GitHub repository.

Learn more about Ubuntu Frame

Ready to simplify the development of embedded displays? Get started now:

Ubuntu Server Admin

Recent Posts

How to Fix “No Module Named ‘gdbm’” Error in Python

Have you ever been coding along in Python only to be stopped in your tracks…

4 hours ago

Google Authd broker: authenticate to Ubuntu Desktop/Server with your Google account

Today we are announcing the introduction of Authd support for Google IAM, allowing all Ubuntu…

11 hours ago

Canonical and Renesas Announce Partnership to Accelerate Innovation in Enterprise AI

London, UK – Mar 6, 2025 – Canonical, the publisher of Ubuntu, today announced that…

11 hours ago

Install FreePBX and Asterisk on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS for security patches until 2036

Deploying FreePBX and Asterisk on a single Ubuntu virtual machine in a public cloud is…

2 days ago

Certification as a strategy: How Ubuntu & SystemReady boost hardware competitiveness

Canonical and MediaTek enhance reliability, accelerate market entry and reduce Total Cost of Ownership (TCO)…

2 days ago

Ubuntu 20.04 LTS on Azure: how to stay secure after standard support ends

As Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (Focal Fossa) standard support ends on May 31, 2025, Azure users…

2 days ago