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Linux
Display Settings |
by:
Stephen
Bucaro |
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Linux Display Settings
By Stephen Bucaro
After you install Linux you usually find
your display in
a low resolution mode. If you were installing
Windows,
you would then install the driver for your
video card and
use the Display utility in Control Panel
to change to a
higher resolution. Unfortunately, with Linux
things are
not so easy.
Linux uses a free version of the X Window
System called
Xfree86 to control your display. Xfree86
supports VGA,
Super VGA, and some accelerated video adapters.
If you
have a new video card, or new motherboard
with on-board
video, you may want to download the latest
version of
Xfree86 from ftp://ftp.xfree86.org
The configuration for Xfree86 is in a file
named
XF86Config located in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11.
This file is
created and edited by a program called Xconfigurator.
In Windows, the monitor is viewed as a "dumb
box" driven
by a video card which is controlled by a
video driver
program. Xconfigurator seems to think that
video cards
don't exist and it requires you enter all
kinds of obtuse
information about your monitor such as horizontal
sync
range, vertical sync range, the amount of
video memory,
and which clock chip you have.
If you have a no-name monitor like I do,
you may not
know all of these parameters. You may get
stuck in the
display configuration step of Linux installation.
This is
one reason why I say "Linux is not ready
for prime time".
This is how it should work: Linux detects
your video card
and configures itself.
On rare occasion, Xconfigurator does detect
your "monitor",
or you can select your monitor in Xconfigurator's
list.
In most cases you can get through the installation
by
selecting "Generic VGA, 640 x 480 @ 60 Hz".
Then after
completing the installation, you can use
Xconfigurator to
try to set a higher resolution.
To open Xconfigurator, log in as root and
click on the
"Terminal emulation program" button on the
task bar. In
the terminal window that appears, type Xconfigurator.
Xconfigurator will probe for your video
card. If that
fails, you will be presented with a list
of monitors. If
you can't find your monitor in the list,
select one of
the "Generic" options.
You will then have to select a "color depth"
and "video
mode". After making the required selections,
Xconfigurator
will display the message "Can you see this
message?" If
you do not click on the "Yes" button within
ten seconds,
you will be sent back to Xconfigurator's
starting screen.
Then you can select different settings and
try again.
If none of the Generic options work, select
"Custom" and
enter some horizontal sync and vertical
sync numbers.
Ultimately you should find a setting that
works. You may
have to make some adjustments to your monitor
to resize,
reposition, or remove pin cushion.
Sometimes changing your display setting
is not as easy in
Linux as it is in Windows, but the alternative
is to
continue to use Windows and beg for Bill
Gates' permission
to upgrade your hardware (XP product activation).
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