>(After weeks of worktime wasted we gave up on making Debian/Woody work >with a combine of a quite renowned video card and ditto high-res monitor; >the "commercial" distros - Mandrake, SuSE, RH - hadn't any problem with >that.) Thanks to you both. I am sorry that your efforts were not rewarded. Is there a simple reason why the "commercial distros" are able to do this ? Maybe they are using non-GPL software that we would not wish to see in Debian.
Is the problem only with Woody ? How will other versions of Debian cope with this ?
I haven't myself run into the problem that Heimo describes, but I would predict that other versions of Debian (Sid, anyway) would fare as badly as Woody in this respect. Debian's hardware autodetect capability is close to nonexistant. That's why I suggested bypassing its X setup routines entirely, in favor of creating XF86Config-4 manually, based on the file a SuSE install produces.
Still, whether the problem Heimo described will affect *you* or not remains unknown, since you have not told us what video card you are using. It's been some months since I last did an X install, but as I recall (on Sid, anyway) the video card and monitor get specified separately, not in combination. And anything really unusual about your system is likely to be in the monitor, not the video card, at least from the way you've describef things so far.
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