On Monday, August 15, 2011 06:07:09 PM Alex Deucher did opine:

> 2011/8/15 gene heskett <ghesk...@wdtv.com>:
> > On Monday, August 15, 2011 04:20:49 PM Mark Wagner did opine:
> >> On Sat, Aug 13, 2011 at 05:50, gene heskett <ghesk...@wdtv.com> wrote:
> >> > Greetings all;
> >> > 
> >> > One of the problems that was confusing me recently is that I had
> >> > replaced the old samsung crt monitor with a much newer cheap AOC
> >> > lcd that runs at 1360x724 at best, but under the vesa driver on an
> >> > ati x1650 video card, it apparently is running in 1024x768. آ This
> >> > results in a pixel that is far from square unless I use a button
> >> > on the monitor which shrinks the display sideways, leaving 2" wide
> >> > black stripes on the sides.
> >> > 
> >> > From Xorg.0.log:
> >> > 
> >> > (II) VESA(0): SAMSUNG: Using hsync range of 30.00-81.00 kHz
> >> > (II) VESA(0): SAMSUNG: Using vrefresh range of 55.00-75.00 Hz
> >> > (II) VESA(0): SAMSUNG: Using maximum pixel clock of 90.00 MHz
> >> > (II) VESA(0): Not using mode "1360x768" (no mode of this name)
> >> > <---native
> >> 
> >> Looks to me like the server is telling you it doesn't know how to
> >> generate a resolution of 1360x768.  If this was a CRT, I'd say to
> >> provide a custom modeline in the xorg.conf file.  Since you've got a
> >> LCD, I don't know if this is the correct solution or not.
> > 
> > None of my machines have an xorg.conf with a sample modeline for that.
> > 
> > Could someone post an example I could try please?
> > 
> > Or even better, are there docs someplace that would describe how to do
> > that?  I just looked at the modeline description in a man xorg.conf,
> > and that lacks the specifics I'd need to make a quasi-intelligent
> > first guess.
> 
> The problem with vesa is that you are limited to standard vesa modes
> that are implemented in the vbios.  You cannot define arbitrary modes.
>  For that you need to use a real driver specific to your video chip.
> 
> Alex

I was afraid of that Alex.  And I tried some Modelines suggested on the EMC 
mailing list & got thrown under the bus just as it was leaving.  This 
application that must run, is a realtime application with a base loop of 
its i/o running every 20-40 u-secs.  _NO_ "real" driver allows that, 
wrecking carving of parts in wholesale numbers because the IRQ's that drive 
this apps base thread can be locked out by the "real" driver for intervals 
in excess of 100 milliseconds.  The 'vesa' driver is the only driver that 
allows the base thread to keep some semblance of a steady beat.

This particular card is an ATI X1650.  Does it perchance have an available 
vesa bios update that would add some of the 16x9 modes like this?

Cheers, gene
-- 
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
 soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
Guns don't kill people.  It's those damn bullets.  Guns just make them go
really really fast.
        -- Jake Johanson
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