ref: 60b64002196eb39d59a4d4263a98fe9f8dcb187e
dir: /sys/man/6/vgadb/
.TH VGADB 6 .SH NAME vgadb \- VGA controller and monitor database .SH DESCRIPTION .PP The VGA database, .BR /lib/vgadb , consists of two parts, the first describing how to identify and program a VGA controller and the second describing the timing parameters for known monitors to be loaded into a VGA controller to give a particular resolution and refresh rate. Conventionally, at system boot, the program .B aux/vga (see .IR vga (8)) uses the monitor type in .BR /env/monitor , the display resolution in .BR /env/vgasize , and the VGA controller information in the database to find a matching monitor entry and initialize the VGA controller accordingly. .PP The file comprises multi-line entries made up of attribute/value pairs of the form .IB attr = value or sometimes just .IR attr . Each line starting without white space starts a new entry. Lines starting with .B # are comments. .PP The first part of the database, the VGA controller identification and programming information, consists of a number of entries with attribute .B ctlr and no value. Within one of these entries the following attributes are meaningful: .TF 0xC0000 .TP .I nnnnn an offset into the VGA BIOS area. The value is a string expected to be found there that will identify the controller. For example, .B 0xC0068="#9GXE64 Pro" would identify a #9GXEpro VGA controller if the string .B "#9GXE64 Pro" was found in the BIOS at address 0xC0068. There may be more than one identifier attribute per controller. If a match cannot be found, the first few bytes of the BIOS are printed to help identify the card and create a controller entry. .TP .IB nnnnn - mmmmm A range of the VGA BIOS area. The value is a string as above, but the entire range is searched for that string. The string must begin at or after .I nnnnn and not contain any characters at or after .IR mmmmm . For example, .B 0xC0000-0xC0200="MACH64LP" identifies a Mach 64 controller with the string .B MACH64LP occurring anywhere in the first 512 bytes of BIOS memory. .TP .B ctlr VGA controller chip type. This must match one of the VGA controller types known to .B /dev/vgactl (see .IR vga (3)) and internally to .BR aux/vga . Currently, .BR ark2000pv , .BR clgd542x , .BR ct65540 , .BR ct65545 , .BR cyber938x , .BR et4000 , .BR hiqvideo , .BR ibm8514 , .BR mach32 , .BR mach64 , .BR mach64xx , .BR mga2164w , .BR neomagic , .BR s3801 , .BR s3805 , .BR s3928 , .BR t2r4 , .BR trio64 , .BR virge , .BR vision864 , .BR vision964 , .BR vision968 , and .B w30c516 are recognized. .TP .B ramdac RAMDAC controller type. This must match one of the types known internally to .BR aux/vga . Currently .BR att20c490 , .BR att20c491 , .BR att20c492 , .BR att21c498 , .BR bt485 , .BR rgb524mn , .BR sc15025 , .BR stg1702 , .BR tvp3020 , .BR tvp3025 , and .B tvp3026 are recognized. .TP .B clock clock generator type. This must match one of the types known internally to .BR aux/vga . Currently .BR ch9294 , .BR icd2061a , .BR ics2494 , .BR ics2494a , .BR s3clock , .BR tvp3025clock , and .B tvp3026clock are recognized. .TP .B hwgc hardware graphics cursor type. This must match one of the types known to .B /dev/vgactl and internally to .BR aux/vga . Currently .BR ark200pvhwgc , .BR bt485hwgc , .BR clgd542xhwgc , .BR clgd546xhwgc , .BR ct65545hwgc , .BR cyber938xhwgc , .BR hiqvideohwgc , .BR mach64xxhwgc , .BR mga2164whwgc , .BR neomagichwgc , .BR rgb524hwgc , .BR s3hwgc , .BR t2r4hwgc , .BR tvp3020hwgc , and .B tvp3026hwgc are recognized. .TP .B membw Memory bandwidth in megabytes per second. .I Vga chooses the highest refresh rate possible within the constraints of the monitor (explained below) and the card's memory bandwidth. .TP .B linear Whether the card supports a large (>64kb) linear memory window. The value is either .B 1 or .B 0 (equivalent to unspecified). The current kernel graphics subsystem requires a linear window; entries without .B linear=1 are of historic value only. .TP .B link This must match one of the types known internally to .BR aux/vga . Currently .B vga and .B ibm8514 are recognized. The type .B vga handles generic VGA functions and should almost always be included. The type .B Ibm8514 handles basic graphics accelerator initialization on controllers such as the early S3 family of GUI chips. .PD .PP The .BR clock , .BR ctlr , .BR link , and .B ramdac values can all take an extension following a .B '-' that can be used as a speed-grade or subtype; matching is done without the extension. For example, .B ramdac=stg1702-135 indicates the STG1702 RAMDAC has a maximum clock frequency of 135MHz, and .B clock=ics2494a-324 indicates that the frequency table numbered 324 should be used for the ICS2494A clock generator. .PP The functions internal to .B aux/vga corresponding to the .BR clock , .BR ctlr , .BR link , and .B ramdac values will be called in the order given for initialization. Sometimes the clock should be set before the RAMDAC is initialized, for example, depending on the components used. In general, .BR link=vga will always be first and, if appropriate, .BR link=ibm8514 will be last. .PP The entries in the second part of .B /lib/vgadb have as attribute the name of a monitor type and the value is conventionally a resolution in the form .IB X x Y\f1, where .I X and .I Y are numbers representing width and height in pixels. The monitor type (i.e. entry) .B include has special properties, described below and shown in the examples. The remainder of the entry contains timing information for the desired resolution. Within one of these entries the following attributes are meaningful: .TF interlace .TP .B clock the video dot-clock frequency in MHz required for this resolution. The value 25.175 is known internally to .IR vga (8) as the baseline VGA clock rate. .B defaultclock the default video dot-clock frequency in MHz used for this resolution when no memory bandwidth is specified for the card or when .I vga cannot determine the maximum clock frequency of the card. .TP .B shb start horizontal blanking, in character clocks. .TP .B ehb end horizontal blanking, in character clocks. .TP .B ht horizontal total, in character clocks. .TP .B vrs vertical refresh start, in character clocks. .TP .B vre vertical refresh end, in character clocks. .TP .B vt vertical total, in character clocks. .TP .B hsync horizontal sync polarity. Value must be .B + or .BR - . .TP .B vsync vertical sync polarity. Value must be .B + or .BR - . .TP .B interlace interlaced mode. Only value .B v is recognized. .TP .B alias continue, replacing the .B alias line by the contents of the entry whose attribute is given as .IR value . .TP .B include continue, replacing this .B include line by the contents of the previously defined .B include monitor type with matching .IR value . (See the examples.) Any non-zero attributes already set will not be overwritten. This is used to save duplication of timing information. Note that .I value is not parsed, it is only used as a string to identify the previous .BI include= value monitor type entry. .PD .PP The values given for .BR shb , .BR ehb , .BR ht , .BR vrs , .BR vre , .BR vt , .BR hsync , and .B vsync are beyond the scope of this manual page. See the book by Ferraro for details. .SH EXAMPLES Basic .B ctlr entry for a laptop with a Chips and Technology 65550 controller: .EX ctlr # NEC Versa 6030X/6200MX 0xC0090="CHIPS 65550 PCI & VL Accelerated VGA BIOS" link=vga ctlr=hiqvideo linear=1 hwgc=hiqvideohwgc .EE A more complex entry. Note the extensions on the .BR clock , .BR ctlr , and .B ramdac attributes. The order here is important: the RAMDAC clock input must be initialized before the RAMDAC itself. The clock frequency is selected by the .B ET4000 chip. .EX ctlr # Hercules Dynamite Power 0xC0076="Tseng Laboratories, Inc. 03/04/94 V8.00N" link=vga clock=ics2494a-324 ctlr=et4000-w32p ramdac=stg1702-135 .EE Monitor entry for type .B vga (the default monitor type used by .IR vga (8)) and resolution 640x480x[18]. .EX include = 640x480@60Hz # 60Hz, 31.5KHz clock=25.175 shb=664 ehb=760 ht=800 vrs=491 vre=493 vt=525 vga = 640x480 # 60Hz, 31.5KHz include=640x480@60Hz .EE Entries for multisync monitors with video bandwidth up to 65MHz. .EX # # Multisync monitors with video bandwidth up to 65MHz. # multisync65 = 1024x768 # 60Hz, 48.4KHz include=1024x768@60Hz multisync65 = 1024x768i # 87Hz, 35.5KHz (interlaced) include=1024x768i@87Hz multisync65 alias=vga .EE Note how this builds on the existing .B vga entries. .SH FILES .TP .B /lib/vgadb .SH "SEE ALSO" .IR ndb (2), .IR vga (3), .IR ndb (6), .IR vga (8) .br Richard E. Ferraro, .I Programming Guide to the EGA, VGA and Super VGA Cards, Third Edition .SH BUGS The database should provide a way to use the PCI bus as well as BIOS memory to identify cards. .SH "ADDING A NEW MONITOR" Adding a new monitor is usually fairly straightforward, as most modern monitors are multisync and the only interesting parameter is the maximum video bandwidth. Once the timing parameters are worked out for a particular maximum video bandwidth as in the example above, an entry for a new monitor with that limit is simply .EX # # Sony CPD-1304 # Horizontal timing: # Allowable frequency range: 28-50KHz # Vertical timing: # Allowable frequency range: 50-87Hz # cpd-1304 alias=multisync65 .EE Even this is not necessary, as the monitor type could simply be given as .BR multisync65 . .SH "ADDING A NEW VGA CONTROLLER" While the use of this database formalizes the steps needed to program a VGA controller, unless you are lucky and all the important components on a new VGA controller card are interconnected in the same way as an existing entry, adding a new entry requires adding new internal types to .IR vga (8). Fortunately, the unit of variety has, for the most part, shifted from individual components to entire video chipsets. Thus in lucky cases all that is necessary is the addition of another .B 0xNNNNN= line to the entry for the controller. This is particularly true in the case of the ATI Mach 64 and the S3 Virge. .PP If you need to actually add support for a controller with a different chipset, you will need the data sheets for the VGA controller as well as any RAMDAC or clock generator (these are commonly integrated into the controller). You will also need to know how these components interact. For example, a common combination is an S3 86C928 VGA chip with an ICD2061A clock generator. The ICD2061A is usually loaded by clocking a serial bit-stream out of one of the 86C928 registers. Similarly, the RAMDAC may have an internal clock-doubler and/or pixel-multiplexing modes, in which case both the clock generator and VGA chip must be programmed accordingly. Hardware acceleration for rectangle fills and block copies is provided in the kernel; writing code to handle this is necessary to achieve reasonable performance at high pixel depths.