Table of Contents
savage - S3 Savage video driver
Section "Device"
Identifier "devname"
Driver "savage"
...
EndSection
savage is an Xorg driver for the S3 Savage family video accelerator
chips. 2D, 3D, and Xv acceleration is supported on all chips except the
Savage2000 (2D only). Dualhead operation is supported on MX, IX, and SuperSavage
chips. The savage driver supports PCI and AGP boards with the following
chips:
- Savage3D
- (8a20 and 8a21) (2D, 3D)
- Savage4
- (8a22) (2D, 3D)
- Savage2000
- (9102) (2D only)
- Savage/MX
- (8c10 and 8c11) (2D, 3D, Dualhead)
- Savage/IX
- (8c12 and 8c13) (2D, 3D, Dualhead)
- SuperSavage/MX
- (8c22, 8c24, and 8c26)
(2D, 3D, Dualhead)
- SuperSavage/IX
- (8c2a, 8c2b, 8c2c, 8c2d, 8c2e, and 8c2f)
(2D, 3D, Dualhead)
- ProSavage PM133
- (8a25) (2D, 3D)
- ProSavage KM133
- (8a26)
(2D, 3D)
- Twister (ProSavage PN133)
- (8d01) (2D, 3D)
- TwisterK (ProSavage
KN133)
- (8d02) (2D, 3D)
- ProSavage DDR
- (8d03) (2D, 3D)
- ProSavage DDR-K
- (8d04)
(2D, 3D)
Please refer to xorg.conf(5x)
for general
configuration details. This section only covers configuration details specific
to this driver.
The following driver Options are supported:
- Option "HWCursor"
"boolean"
- Option "SWCursor" "boolean"
- These two options interact to specify
hardware or software cursor. If the SWCursor option is specified, any HWCursor
setting is ignored. Thus, either "HWCursor off" or "SWCursor on" will force
the use of the software cursor. On Savage/MX and Savage/IX chips which
are connected to LCDs, a software cursor will be forced, because the Savage
hardware cursor does not correctly track the automatic panel expansion
feature. Default: hardware cursor.
- Option "NoAccel" "boolean"
- Disable or
enable acceleration. Default: acceleration is enabled.
- Option "Rotate" "CW"
- Option "Rotate" "CCW"
- Rotate the desktop 90 degrees clockwise or counterclockwise.
This option forces the ShadowFB option on, and disables acceleration.
Default: no rotation.
- Option "ShadowFB" "boolean"
- Enable or disable use
of the shadow framebuffer layer. This option disables acceleration. Default:
off.
- Option "LCDClock" "frequency"
- Override the maximum dot clock. Some
LCD panels produce incorrect results if they are driven at too fast of
a frequency. If UseBIOS is on, the BIOS will usually restrict the clock
to the correct range. If not, it might be necessary to override it here.
The frequency parameter may be specified as an integer in Hz (135750000),
or with standard suffixes like "k", "kHz", "M", or "MHz" (as in 135.75MHz).
- Option "CrtOnly" "boolean"
- This option disables output to the LCD and enables
output to the CRT port only. It is useful on laptops if you only want
to use the CRT port or to force the CRT output only on desktop cards that
use mobile chips. Default: auto-detect active outputs
- Option "UseBIOS" "boolean"
- Enable or disable use of the video BIOS to change modes. Ordinarily, the
savage driver tries to use the video BIOS to do mode switches. This generally
produces the best results with the mobile chips (/MX and /IX), since the
BIOS knows how to handle the critical but unusual timing requirements of
the various LCD panels supported by the chip. To do this, the driver searches
through the BIOS mode list, looking for the mode which most closely matches
the xorg.conf mode line. Some purists find this scheme objectionable. If
you would rather have the savage driver use your mode line timing exactly,
turn off the UseBios option. Note: Use of the BIOS is required for dualhead
operation. Default: on (use the BIOS).
- Option "ShadowStatus" "boolean"
- Enables
the use of a shadow status register. There is a chip bug in the Savage
graphics engine that can cause a bus lock when reading the engine status
register under heavy load, such as when scrolling text or dragging windows.
The bug affects about 4% of all Savage users without DRI and a large fraction
of users with DRI. If your system hangs regularly while scrolling text
or dragging windows, try turning this option on. This uses an alternate
method of reading the engine status which is slightly more expensive, but
avoids the problem. When DRI is enabled then the default is "on" (use shadow
status), otherwise the default is "off" (use normal status register).
- Option
"DisableCOB" "boolean"
- Disables the COB (Command Overflow Buffer) on savage4
and newer chips. There is supposedly a HW cache coherency problem on certain
savage4 and newer chips that renders the COB useless. If you are having
problems with 2D acceleration you can disable the COB, however you will
lose some performance. 3D acceleration requires the COB to work. This
option only applies to Savage4 and newer chips. Default: "off" (use COB).
- Option "BCIforXv" "boolean"
- Use the BCI to copy and reformat Xv pixel data.
Using the BCI for Xv causes graphics artifacts on some chips. This option
only applies to Savage4 and prosavage/twister chips. Default: on for prosavage
and twister (use BCI for Xv); off for savage4 (do not use the BCI for
Xv).
- Option "AGPMode" "integer"
- Set AGP data transfer rate. (used only when
DRI is enabled)
1 -- x1 (default)
2 -- x2
4 -- x4
others -- invalid
- Option "AGPSize" "integer"
- The amount of AGP memory that
will allocated for DMA and textures in MB. Valid sizes are 4, 8, 16, 32,
64, 128 and 256. The default is 16MB.
- Option "DmaMode" "string"
- This option
influences in which way DMA (direct memory access) is used by the kernel
and 3D drivers.
Any -- Try command DMA first, then vertex DMA (default)
Command -- Only use command DMA or don't use DMA at all
Vertex -- Only use vertex DMA or don't use DMA at all
None -- Disable DMA
Command and vertex DMA cannot be enabled at the same time. Which DMA mode
is actually used in the end also depends on the DRM version (only >= 2.4.0
supports command DMA) and the hardware (Savage3D/MX/IX doesn't support command
DMA).
- Option "DmaType" "string"
- The type of memory that will be used by
the 3D driver for DMA (direct memory access).
PCI -- PCI memory (default on PCI cards)
AGP -- AGP memory (default on AGP cards)
"AGP" only works if you have an AGP card.
- Option "BusType" "string"
- The
bus type that will be used to access the graphics card.
PCI -- PCI bus (default on PCI cards)
AGP -- AGP bus (default on AGP cards)
"AGP" only works if you have an AGP card. If you choose "PCI" on an AGP
card the AGP bus speed is not set and no AGP aperture is allocated. This
implies DmaType "PCI".
savage_drv.o
Xorg(1x)
, xorg.conf(5x)
,
xorgconfig(1x)
, Xserver(1x)
, X(7)
Authors include Tim Roberts (timr@probo.com)
and Ani Joshi (ajoshi@unixbox.com) for this version, and Tim Roberts and
S. Marineau for the original driver from which this was derived.
Table of Contents