I128



I128

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
SUPPORTED HARDWARE
CONFIGURATION DETAILS
SEE ALSO
AUTHORS

NAME

i128 − Number 9 I128 Xorg video driver

SYNOPSIS

Section "Device"
Identifier "
devname"
Driver "i128"   

...
EndSection

DESCRIPTION

i128 is an Xorg driver for Number 9 I128 video cards. The driver is accelerated and provides support for all versions of the I128 chip family, including the SGI flatpanel configuration. Multi-head configurations are supported.

SUPPORTED HARDWARE

The i128 driver supports PCI and AGP video cards based on the following I128 chips:

I128 rev 1

(original)

I128-II

I128-T2R

Ticket 2 Ride

I128-T2R4

Ticket 2 Ride IV

CONFIGURATION DETAILS

Please refer to xorg.conf(5) for general configuration details. This section only covers configuration details specific to this driver.

The driver auto-detects the chipset type and may not be overridden.

The driver auto-detects the amount of video memory present for all chips and may not be overridden.

The following driver Options are supported:
Option "HWCursor" "
boolean"

Enable or disable the HW cursor. Default: on.

Option "NoAccel" "boolean"

Disable or enable acceleration. Default: acceleration is enabled.

Option "SyncOnGreen" "boolean"

Enable or disable combining the sync signals with the green signal. Default: off.

Option "Dac6Bit" "boolean"

Reduce DAC operations to 6 bits. Default: false.

Option "Debug" "boolean"

This turns on verbose debug information from the driver. Default: off.

SEE ALSO

Xorg(1), xorg.conf(5), Xserver(1), X(7)

AUTHORS

Authors include: Robin Cutshaw (driver), Galen Brooks (flatpanel support).






Opportunity


Personal Opportunity - Free software gives you access to billions of dollars of software at no cost. Use this software for your business, personal use or to develop a profitable skill. Access to source code provides access to a level of capabilities/information that companies protect though copyrights. Open source is a core component of the Internet and it is available to you. Leverage the billions of dollars in resources and capabilities to build a career, establish a business or change the world. The potential is endless for those who understand the opportunity.

Business Opportunity - Goldman Sachs, IBM and countless large corporations are leveraging open source to reduce costs, develop products and increase their bottom lines. Learn what these companies know about open source and how open source can give you the advantage.





Free Software


Free Software provides computer programs and capabilities at no cost but more importantly, it provides the freedom to run, edit, contribute to, and share the software. The importance of free software is a matter of access, not price. Software at no cost is a benefit but ownership rights to the software and source code is far more significant.


Free Office Software - The Libre Office suite provides top desktop productivity tools for free. This includes, a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation engine, drawing and flowcharting, database and math applications. Libre Office is available for Linux or Windows.





Free Books


The Free Books Library is a collection of thousands of the most popular public domain books in an online readable format. The collection includes great classical literature and more recent works where the U.S. copyright has expired. These books are yours to read and use without restrictions.


Source Code - Want to change a program or know how it works? Open Source provides the source code for its programs so that anyone can use, modify or learn how to write those programs themselves. Visit the GNU source code repositories to download the source.





Education


Study at Harvard, Stanford or MIT - Open edX provides free online courses from Harvard, MIT, Columbia, UC Berkeley and other top Universities. Hundreds of courses for almost all major subjects and course levels. Open edx also offers some paid courses and selected certifications.


Linux Manual Pages - A man or manual page is a form of software documentation found on Linux/Unix operating systems. Topics covered include computer programs (including library and system calls), formal standards and conventions, and even abstract concepts.