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author | Greg KH <gregkh@suse.de> | 2005-09-12 12:45:04 -0700 |
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committer | Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de> | 2005-09-12 12:45:04 -0700 |
commit | d58dde0f552a5c5c4485b962d8b6e9dd54fefb30 (patch) | |
tree | d9a7e35eb88fea6265d5aadcc3d4ed39122b052a /Documentation/fb/modedb.txt | |
parent | 877599fdef5ea4a7dd1956e22fa9d6923add97f8 (diff) | |
parent | 2ade81473636b33aaac64495f89a7dc572c529f0 (diff) |
Merge ../torvalds-2.6/
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/fb/modedb.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/fb/modedb.txt | 73 |
1 files changed, 72 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/fb/modedb.txt b/Documentation/fb/modedb.txt index e04458b319d5..4fcdb4cf4cca 100644 --- a/Documentation/fb/modedb.txt +++ b/Documentation/fb/modedb.txt @@ -20,12 +20,83 @@ in a video= option, fbmem considers that to be a global video mode option. Valid mode specifiers (mode_option argument): - <xres>x<yres>[-<bpp>][@<refresh>] + <xres>x<yres>[M][R][-<bpp>][@<refresh>][i][m] <name>[-<bpp>][@<refresh>] with <xres>, <yres>, <bpp> and <refresh> decimal numbers and <name> a string. Things between square brackets are optional. +If 'M' is specified in the mode_option argument (after <yres> and before +<bpp> and <refresh>, if specified) the timings will be calculated using +VESA(TM) Coordinated Video Timings instead of looking up the mode from a table. +If 'R' is specified, do a 'reduced blanking' calculation for digital displays. +If 'i' is specified, calculate for an interlaced mode. And if 'm' is +specified, add margins to the calculation (1.8% of xres rounded down to 8 +pixels and 1.8% of yres). + + Sample usage: 1024x768M@60m - CVT timing with margins + +***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** + +What is the VESA(TM) Coordinated Video Timings (CVT)? + +From the VESA(TM) Website: + + "The purpose of CVT is to provide a method for generating a consistent + and coordinated set of standard formats, display refresh rates, and + timing specifications for computer display products, both those + employing CRTs, and those using other display technologies. The + intention of CVT is to give both source and display manufacturers a + common set of tools to enable new timings to be developed in a + consistent manner that ensures greater compatibility." + +This is the third standard approved by VESA(TM) concerning video timings. The +first was the Discrete Video Timings (DVT) which is a collection of +pre-defined modes approved by VESA(TM). The second is the Generalized Timing +Formula (GTF) which is an algorithm to calculate the timings, given the +pixelclock, the horizontal sync frequency, or the vertical refresh rate. + +The GTF is limited by the fact that it is designed mainly for CRT displays. +It artificially increases the pixelclock because of its high blanking +requirement. This is inappropriate for digital display interface with its high +data rate which requires that it conserves the pixelclock as much as possible. +Also, GTF does not take into account the aspect ratio of the display. + +The CVT addresses these limitations. If used with CRT's, the formula used +is a derivation of GTF with a few modifications. If used with digital +displays, the "reduced blanking" calculation can be used. + +From the framebuffer subsystem perspective, new formats need not be added +to the global mode database whenever a new mode is released by display +manufacturers. Specifying for CVT will work for most, if not all, relatively +new CRT displays and probably with most flatpanels, if 'reduced blanking' +calculation is specified. (The CVT compatibility of the display can be +determined from its EDID. The version 1.3 of the EDID has extra 128-byte +blocks where additional timing information is placed. As of this time, there +is no support yet in the layer to parse this additional blocks.) + +CVT also introduced a new naming convention (should be seen from dmesg output): + + <pix>M<a>[-R] + + where: pix = total amount of pixels in MB (xres x yres) + M = always present + a = aspect ratio (3 - 4:3; 4 - 5:4; 9 - 15:9, 16:9; A - 16:10) + -R = reduced blanking + + example: .48M3-R - 800x600 with reduced blanking + +Note: VESA(TM) has restrictions on what is a standard CVT timing: + + - aspect ratio can only be one of the above values + - acceptable refresh rates are 50, 60, 70 or 85 Hz only + - if reduced blanking, the refresh rate must be at 60Hz + +If one of the above are not satisfied, the kernel will print a warning but the +timings will still be calculated. + +***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** oOo ***** + To find a suitable video mode, you just call int __init fb_find_mode(struct fb_var_screeninfo *var, |