If you run glxinfo, do you get the following warnings at the start?Klavs wrote:I enabled DRI and GLX in xorg.conf, and now xvinfo and glxgears run. glxgears gives me approx 470 FPS- can it be that the graphics driver is that slow?
I suppose you mean "setup xorg to use xorg's i810 driver (interface)"? Or do you also need i810 support into the kernel? This is something I haven't quite clearly understood, I must admitKlavs wrote:VESA does not require i915 module. You need to set it to use i810. Have a look at the xorg.conf I have made available at vsen.dk.
So do you suggest not to use framebuffer consoles at all?Klavs wrote:Your problem with "text-mode" is probably your framebuffer yes.
When my screen blanks (because I've closed the machine) I can always get it back by switching to text mode (ie. ctrl+alt+f1) and then back to X. When you run framebuffer - you're not running text-mode.
Latest XOrg in portage is now 6.8.99. Do you mean emerging that version doesn't require patching the kernel and XOrg with the snapshot? And it works right out of the box?hoschi wrote:Kernel 2.6.12-rc3 with newest Xorg-Release in Portage 6.9.x anything
I runs with Kernel DRM and Kernel i915GM-Driver, but i get this Warning:
I810: No matching Device section for instance (BusID PCI:0:2:1) found
glxinfo says direct rendering is okay
I have installed xorg 6.8.99 (I have nothing more recent than gentoo-sources 2.6.11-r6) and I still get the same problems with video as when I patched X with the snapshot:hoschi wrote:yeah, more than 1000fps in glxgears (24bit) and no warnings with glxinfo (915i drm support is in a hidden intel submenu in the drm section)
i am now merging gnome + quake3...time to bash the stupid wintel newbs
Ah, I see. So the problem I'm experiencing might be due to the kernel video driver?hoschi wrote:First rule for every linux-user - if something goes wrong: take the vanilla-sources
yes, you'll be able to keep your gentoo-source's config with "oldconfig".VinzC wrote:If I install them, I presume I will have to patch the kernel manually? Could you provide details on what you did exactly? Did you emerge vanilla-sources and then go straight with that or did you install patches? Will I be able to make oldconfig with my old configuration file from Gentoo-sources?
Look at http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-30 ... ml#2329485stormer wrote:Any one as been able to get DMA on sata_piix cdrom drive ? Still can't watch DVDs.
I had almost the same problem with i915 snapshot. Copying kernel modules did it wrong and returned error messages. So I commented out the portion of code that copied the module into Gentoo-sources.stormer wrote:p.s. for dri, I killed the script after compilation, and copied kernel stuff by hand, because X stuff does not seem to work, as exemple it creates a i810_drv.o insted of i810_drv.so and it is not corectly linked.

Thank You Very Much! Oh my gosh! Godmode!VinzC wrote:Look at http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-30 ... ml#2329485stormer wrote:Any one as been able to get DMA on sata_piix cdrom drive ? Still can't watch DVDs.
It works, but where is my device (running clean udev system with no tarball)?libata version 1.10 loaded.
ata_piix version 1.03
PCI: Setting latency timer of device 0000:00:1f.2 to 64
ata1: SATA max UDMA/133 cmd 0x1F0 ctl 0x3F6 bmdma 0x1810 irq 14
ata1: dev 0 cfg 49:0f00 82:746b 83:5be9 84:6003 85:f469 86:1849 87:6003 88:203f
ata1: dev 0 ATA, max UDMA/100, 78140160 sectors:
ata1: dev 0 configured for UDMA/100
scsi0 : ata_piix
Vendor: ATA Model: HTS541040G9AT00 Rev: MB2I
Type: Direct-Access ANSI SCSI revision: 05
ata2: SATA max UDMA/133 cmd 0x170 ctl 0x376 bmdma 0x1818 irq 15
ata2: dev 0 cfg 49:0f00 82:4218 83:0000 84:0000 85:0000 86:0000 87:0000 88:0407
ata2: dev 0 ATAPI, max UDMA/33
ata2: dev 0 configured for UDMA/33
scsi1 : ata_piix
Vendor: HL-DT-ST Model: RW/DVD GCC-4241N Rev: 1.04
Type: CD-ROM ANSI SCSI revision: 05
SCSI device sda: 78140160 512-byte hdwr sectors (40008 MB)
SCSI device sda: drive cache: write back
SCSI device sda: 78140160 512-byte hdwr sectors (40008 MB)
SCSI device sda: drive cache: write back
sda: sda1 sda2 sda3 sda4 < sda5 sda6 sda7 sda8 >
Attached scsi disk sda at scsi0, channel 0, id 0, lun 0