savage(4)


NAME

   savage - S3 Savage video driver

SYNOPSIS

   Section "Device"
     Identifier "devname"
     Driver "savage"
     ...
   EndSection

DESCRIPTION

   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)

CONFIGURATION DETAILS

   Please refer to xorg.conf(5) 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 "AccelMethod" "string"
          Chooses  between  available  acceleration  architectures.  Valid
          options are XAA and EXA.  XAA is  the  traditional  acceleration
          architecture  and support for it is very stable.  EXA is a newer
          acceleration architecture with better performance for the Render
          and Composite extensions, but the rendering code for it is newer
          and possibly unstable.  The default is XAA.

   Option "Rotate" "CW"

   Option "Rotate" "CCW"
          Rotate the desktop 90  degrees  clockwise  or  counterclockwise.
          This   option  forces  the  ShadowFB  option  on,  and  disables
          acceleration and the RandR extension.  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 "IgnoreEDID" "boolean"
          Do  not use EDID data for mode validation, but DDC is still used
          for monitor detection. This is different from NoDDC option.
          The default value is off.

   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.  On  some
          combinations of chipsets and video players, BCI formatting might
          actually be slower than software  formatting  ("AGPforXv"  might
          help  in  this  case).  BCI formatting can only be used on video
          data with a width that is a multiple of 16 pixels (which is  the
          vast  majority  of  videos).   Other  widths are handled through
          software formatting. Default: on for prosavage and twister  (use
          BCI for Xv); off for savage4 (do not use the BCI for Xv).

   Option "AGPforXv" "boolean"
          Instructs  the  BCI  Xv  pixel  formatter to use AGP memory as a
          scratch buffer.  Ordinarily the BCI formatter uses a an area  in
          framebuffer  memory to hold YV12 planar data to be converted for
          display. This requires a somewhat expensive upload of YV12  data
          to  framebuffer  memory.  The  "AGPforXv"  option causes the BCI
          formatter to place the YV12 data in AGP  memory  instead,  which
          can  be uploaded faster than the framebuffer. Use of this option
          cuts upload overhead by 25% according to benchmarks. This option
          also smooths out most of the shearing present when using BCI for
          pixel conversion. Currently this option is experimental  and  is
          disabled  by  default.  Video  width  restrictions that apply to
          "BCIforXv" also apply here. Only valid when "DRI" and "BCIforXv"
          are both active, and only on AGP chipsets. Default: "off".
          If "AccelMethod" is set to "EXA" and "AGPforXv" is enabled, then
          the driver will also attempt to reuse the AGP scratch buffer for
          UploadToScreen acceleration.

   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)
          AGP    -- AGP bus
          "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".

   Option "DRI" "boolean"
          Enable DRI support.  This option allows you to enable or disable
          the DRI.  Default: "on" (enable DRI).

FILES

   savage_drv.o

SEE ALSO

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

AUTHORS

   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.





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