| rjw | 1f88458 | 2022-01-06 17:20:42 +0800 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | .. include:: <isonum.txt> | 
 | 2 |  | 
 | 3 | ================================= | 
 | 4 | Video Mode Selection Support 2.13 | 
 | 5 | ================================= | 
 | 6 |  | 
 | 7 | :Copyright: |copy| 1995--1999 Martin Mares, <mj@ucw.cz> | 
 | 8 |  | 
 | 9 | Intro | 
 | 10 | ~~~~~ | 
 | 11 |  | 
 | 12 | This small document describes the "Video Mode Selection" feature which | 
 | 13 | allows the use of various special video modes supported by the video BIOS. Due | 
 | 14 | to usage of the BIOS, the selection is limited to boot time (before the | 
 | 15 | kernel decompression starts) and works only on 80X86 machines. | 
 | 16 |  | 
 | 17 | .. note:: | 
 | 18 |  | 
 | 19 |    Short intro for the impatient: Just use vga=ask for the first time, | 
 | 20 |    enter ``scan`` on the video mode prompt, pick the mode you want to use, | 
 | 21 |    remember its mode ID (the four-digit hexadecimal number) and then | 
 | 22 |    set the vga parameter to this number (converted to decimal first). | 
 | 23 |  | 
 | 24 | The video mode to be used is selected by a kernel parameter which can be | 
 | 25 | specified in the kernel Makefile (the SVGA_MODE=... line) or by the "vga=..." | 
 | 26 | option of LILO (or some other boot loader you use) or by the "vidmode" utility | 
 | 27 | (present in standard Linux utility packages). You can use the following values | 
 | 28 | of this parameter:: | 
 | 29 |  | 
 | 30 |    NORMAL_VGA - Standard 80x25 mode available on all display adapters. | 
 | 31 |  | 
 | 32 |    EXTENDED_VGA	- Standard 8-pixel font mode: 80x43 on EGA, 80x50 on VGA. | 
 | 33 |  | 
 | 34 |    ASK_VGA - Display a video mode menu upon startup (see below). | 
 | 35 |  | 
 | 36 |    0..35 - Menu item number (when you have used the menu to view the list of | 
 | 37 |       modes available on your adapter, you can specify the menu item you want | 
 | 38 |       to use). 0..9 correspond to "0".."9", 10..35 to "a".."z". Warning: the | 
 | 39 |       mode list displayed may vary as the kernel version changes, because the | 
 | 40 |       modes are listed in a "first detected -- first displayed" manner. It's | 
 | 41 |       better to use absolute mode numbers instead. | 
 | 42 |  | 
 | 43 |    0x.... - Hexadecimal video mode ID (also displayed on the menu, see below | 
 | 44 |       for exact meaning of the ID). Warning: rdev and LILO don't support | 
 | 45 |       hexadecimal numbers -- you have to convert it to decimal manually. | 
 | 46 |  | 
 | 47 | Menu | 
 | 48 | ~~~~ | 
 | 49 |  | 
 | 50 | The ASK_VGA mode causes the kernel to offer a video mode menu upon | 
 | 51 | bootup. It displays a "Press <RETURN> to see video modes available, <SPACE> | 
 | 52 | to continue or wait 30 secs" message. If you press <RETURN>, you enter the | 
 | 53 | menu, if you press <SPACE> or wait 30 seconds, the kernel will boot up in | 
 | 54 | the standard 80x25 mode. | 
 | 55 |  | 
 | 56 | The menu looks like:: | 
 | 57 |  | 
 | 58 | 	Video adapter: <name-of-detected-video-adapter> | 
 | 59 | 	Mode:    COLSxROWS: | 
 | 60 | 	0  0F00  80x25 | 
 | 61 | 	1  0F01  80x50 | 
 | 62 | 	2  0F02  80x43 | 
 | 63 | 	3  0F03  80x26 | 
 | 64 | 	.... | 
 | 65 | 	Enter mode number or ``scan``: <flashing-cursor-here> | 
 | 66 |  | 
 | 67 | <name-of-detected-video-adapter> tells what video adapter did Linux detect | 
 | 68 | -- it's either a generic adapter name (MDA, CGA, HGC, EGA, VGA, VESA VGA [a VGA | 
 | 69 | with VESA-compliant BIOS]) or a chipset name (e.g., Trident). Direct detection | 
 | 70 | of chipsets is turned off by default (see CONFIG_VIDEO_SVGA in chapter 4 to see | 
 | 71 | how to enable it if you really want) as it's inherently unreliable due to | 
 | 72 | absolutely insane PC design. | 
 | 73 |  | 
 | 74 | "0  0F00  80x25" means that the first menu item (the menu items are numbered | 
 | 75 | from "0" to "9" and from "a" to "z") is a 80x25 mode with ID=0x0f00 (see the | 
 | 76 | next section for a description of mode IDs). | 
 | 77 |  | 
 | 78 | <flashing-cursor-here> encourages you to enter the item number or mode ID | 
 | 79 | you wish to set and press <RETURN>. If the computer complains something about | 
 | 80 | "Unknown mode ID", it is trying to tell you that it isn't possible to set such | 
 | 81 | a mode. It's also possible to press only <RETURN> which leaves the current mode. | 
 | 82 |  | 
 | 83 | The mode list usually contains a few basic modes and some VESA modes.  In | 
 | 84 | case your chipset has been detected, some chipset-specific modes are shown as | 
 | 85 | well (some of these might be missing or unusable on your machine as different | 
 | 86 | BIOSes are often shipped with the same card and the mode numbers depend purely | 
 | 87 | on the VGA BIOS). | 
 | 88 |  | 
 | 89 | The modes displayed on the menu are partially sorted: The list starts with | 
 | 90 | the standard modes (80x25 and 80x50) followed by "special" modes (80x28 and | 
 | 91 | 80x43), local modes (if the local modes feature is enabled), VESA modes and | 
 | 92 | finally SVGA modes for the auto-detected adapter. | 
 | 93 |  | 
 | 94 | If you are not happy with the mode list offered (e.g., if you think your card | 
 | 95 | is able to do more), you can enter "scan" instead of item number / mode ID.  The | 
 | 96 | program will try to ask the BIOS for all possible video mode numbers and test | 
 | 97 | what happens then. The screen will be probably flashing wildly for some time and | 
 | 98 | strange noises will be heard from inside the monitor and so on and then, really | 
 | 99 | all consistent video modes supported by your BIOS will appear (plus maybe some | 
 | 100 | ``ghost modes``). If you are afraid this could damage your monitor, don't use | 
 | 101 | this function. | 
 | 102 |  | 
 | 103 | After scanning, the mode ordering is a bit different: the auto-detected SVGA | 
 | 104 | modes are not listed at all and the modes revealed by ``scan`` are shown before | 
 | 105 | all VESA modes. | 
 | 106 |  | 
 | 107 | Mode IDs | 
 | 108 | ~~~~~~~~ | 
 | 109 |  | 
 | 110 | Because of the complexity of all the video stuff, the video mode IDs | 
 | 111 | used here are also a bit complex. A video mode ID is a 16-bit number usually | 
 | 112 | expressed in a hexadecimal notation (starting with "0x"). You can set a mode | 
 | 113 | by entering its mode directly if you know it even if it isn't shown on the menu. | 
 | 114 |  | 
 | 115 | The ID numbers can be divided to those regions:: | 
 | 116 |  | 
 | 117 |    0x0000 to 0x00ff - menu item references. 0x0000 is the first item. Don't use | 
 | 118 | 	outside the menu as this can change from boot to boot (especially if you | 
 | 119 | 	have used the ``scan`` feature). | 
 | 120 |  | 
 | 121 |    0x0100 to 0x017f - standard BIOS modes. The ID is a BIOS video mode number | 
 | 122 | 	(as presented to INT 10, function 00) increased by 0x0100. | 
 | 123 |  | 
 | 124 |    0x0200 to 0x08ff - VESA BIOS modes. The ID is a VESA mode ID increased by | 
 | 125 | 	0x0100. All VESA modes should be autodetected and shown on the menu. | 
 | 126 |  | 
 | 127 |    0x0900 to 0x09ff - Video7 special modes. Set by calling INT 0x10, AX=0x6f05. | 
 | 128 | 	(Usually 940=80x43, 941=132x25, 942=132x44, 943=80x60, 944=100x60, | 
 | 129 | 	945=132x28 for the standard Video7 BIOS) | 
 | 130 |  | 
 | 131 |    0x0f00 to 0x0fff - special modes (they are set by various tricks -- usually | 
 | 132 | 	by modifying one of the standard modes). Currently available: | 
 | 133 | 	0x0f00	standard 80x25, don't reset mode if already set (=FFFF) | 
 | 134 | 	0x0f01	standard with 8-point font: 80x43 on EGA, 80x50 on VGA | 
 | 135 | 	0x0f02	VGA 80x43 (VGA switched to 350 scanlines with a 8-point font) | 
 | 136 | 	0x0f03	VGA 80x28 (standard VGA scans, but 14-point font) | 
 | 137 | 	0x0f04	leave current video mode | 
 | 138 | 	0x0f05	VGA 80x30 (480 scans, 16-point font) | 
 | 139 | 	0x0f06	VGA 80x34 (480 scans, 14-point font) | 
 | 140 | 	0x0f07	VGA 80x60 (480 scans, 8-point font) | 
 | 141 | 	0x0f08	Graphics hack (see the CONFIG_VIDEO_HACK paragraph below) | 
 | 142 |  | 
 | 143 |    0x1000 to 0x7fff - modes specified by resolution. The code has a "0xRRCC" | 
 | 144 | 	form where RR is a number of rows and CC is a number of columns. | 
 | 145 | 	E.g., 0x1950 corresponds to a 80x25 mode, 0x2b84 to 132x43 etc. | 
 | 146 | 	This is the only fully portable way to refer to a non-standard mode, | 
 | 147 | 	but it relies on the mode being found and displayed on the menu | 
 | 148 | 	(remember that mode scanning is not done automatically). | 
 | 149 |  | 
 | 150 |    0xff00 to 0xffff - aliases for backward compatibility: | 
 | 151 | 	0xffff	equivalent to 0x0f00 (standard 80x25) | 
 | 152 | 	0xfffe	equivalent to 0x0f01 (EGA 80x43 or VGA 80x50) | 
 | 153 |  | 
 | 154 | If you add 0x8000 to the mode ID, the program will try to recalculate | 
 | 155 | vertical display timing according to mode parameters, which can be used to | 
 | 156 | eliminate some annoying bugs of certain VGA BIOSes (usually those used for | 
 | 157 | cards with S3 chipsets and old Cirrus Logic BIOSes) -- mainly extra lines at the | 
 | 158 | end of the display. | 
 | 159 |  | 
 | 160 | Options | 
 | 161 | ~~~~~~~ | 
 | 162 |  | 
 | 163 | Some options can be set in the source text (in arch/i386/boot/video.S). | 
 | 164 | All of them are simple #define's -- change them to #undef's when you want to | 
 | 165 | switch them off. Currently supported: | 
 | 166 |  | 
 | 167 | CONFIG_VIDEO_SVGA - enables autodetection of SVGA cards. This is switched | 
 | 168 | off by default as it's a bit unreliable due to terribly bad PC design. If you | 
 | 169 | really want to have the adapter autodetected (maybe in case the ``scan`` feature | 
 | 170 | doesn't work on your machine), switch this on and don't cry if the results | 
 | 171 | are not completely sane. In case you really need this feature, please drop me | 
 | 172 | a mail as I think of removing it some day. | 
 | 173 |  | 
 | 174 | CONFIG_VIDEO_VESA - enables autodetection of VESA modes. If it doesn't work | 
 | 175 | on your machine (or displays a "Error: Scanning of VESA modes failed" message), | 
 | 176 | you can switch it off and report as a bug. | 
 | 177 |  | 
 | 178 | CONFIG_VIDEO_COMPACT - enables compacting of the video mode list. If there | 
 | 179 | are more modes with the same screen size, only the first one is kept (see above | 
 | 180 | for more info on mode ordering). However, in very strange cases it's possible | 
 | 181 | that the first "version" of the mode doesn't work although some of the others | 
 | 182 | do -- in this case turn this switch off to see the rest. | 
 | 183 |  | 
 | 184 | CONFIG_VIDEO_RETAIN - enables retaining of screen contents when switching | 
 | 185 | video modes. Works only with some boot loaders which leave enough room for the | 
 | 186 | buffer. (If you have old LILO, you can adjust heap_end_ptr and loadflags | 
 | 187 | in setup.S, but it's better to upgrade the boot loader...) | 
 | 188 |  | 
 | 189 | CONFIG_VIDEO_LOCAL - enables inclusion of "local modes" in the list. The | 
 | 190 | local modes are added automatically to the beginning of the list not depending | 
 | 191 | on hardware configuration. The local modes are listed in the source text after | 
 | 192 | the "local_mode_table:" line. The comment before this line describes the format | 
 | 193 | of the table (which also includes a video card name to be displayed on the | 
 | 194 | top of the menu). | 
 | 195 |  | 
 | 196 | CONFIG_VIDEO_400_HACK - force setting of 400 scan lines for standard VGA | 
 | 197 | modes. This option is intended to be used on certain buggy BIOSes which draw | 
 | 198 | some useless logo using font download and then fail to reset the correct mode. | 
 | 199 | Don't use unless needed as it forces resetting the video card. | 
 | 200 |  | 
 | 201 | CONFIG_VIDEO_GFX_HACK - includes special hack for setting of graphics modes | 
 | 202 | to be used later by special drivers (e.g., 800x600 on IBM ThinkPad -- see | 
 | 203 | ftp://ftp.phys.keio.ac.jp/pub/XFree86/800x600/XF86Configs/XF86Config.IBM_TP560). | 
 | 204 | Allows to set _any_ BIOS mode including graphic ones and forcing specific | 
 | 205 | text screen resolution instead of peeking it from BIOS variables. Don't use | 
 | 206 | unless you think you know what you're doing. To activate this setup, use | 
 | 207 | mode number 0x0f08 (see section 3). | 
 | 208 |  | 
 | 209 | Still doesn't work? | 
 | 210 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
 | 211 |  | 
 | 212 | When the mode detection doesn't work (e.g., the mode list is incorrect or | 
 | 213 | the machine hangs instead of displaying the menu), try to switch off some of | 
 | 214 | the configuration options listed in section 4. If it fails, you can still use | 
 | 215 | your kernel with the video mode set directly via the kernel parameter. | 
 | 216 |  | 
 | 217 | In either case, please send me a bug report containing what _exactly_ | 
 | 218 | happens and how do the configuration switches affect the behaviour of the bug. | 
 | 219 |  | 
 | 220 | If you start Linux from M$-DOS, you might also use some DOS tools for | 
 | 221 | video mode setting. In this case, you must specify the 0x0f04 mode ("leave | 
 | 222 | current settings") to Linux, because if you don't and you use any non-standard | 
 | 223 | mode, Linux will switch to 80x25 automatically. | 
 | 224 |  | 
 | 225 | If you set some extended mode and there's one or more extra lines on the | 
 | 226 | bottom of the display containing already scrolled-out text, your VGA BIOS | 
 | 227 | contains the most common video BIOS bug called "incorrect vertical display | 
 | 228 | end setting". Adding 0x8000 to the mode ID might fix the problem. Unfortunately, | 
 | 229 | this must be done manually -- no autodetection mechanisms are available. | 
 | 230 |  | 
 | 231 | If you have a VGA card and your display still looks as on EGA, your BIOS | 
 | 232 | is probably broken and you need to set the CONFIG_VIDEO_400_HACK switch to | 
 | 233 | force setting of the correct mode. | 
 | 234 |  | 
 | 235 | History | 
 | 236 | ~~~~~~~ | 
 | 237 |  | 
 | 238 | =============== ================================================================ | 
 | 239 | 1.0 (??-Nov-95)	First version supporting all adapters supported by the old | 
 | 240 | 		setup.S + Cirrus Logic 54XX. Present in some 1.3.4? kernels | 
 | 241 | 		and then removed due to instability on some machines. | 
 | 242 | 2.0 (28-Jan-96)	Rewritten from scratch. Cirrus Logic 64XX support added, almost | 
 | 243 | 		everything is configurable, the VESA support should be much more | 
 | 244 | 		stable, explicit mode numbering allowed, "scan" implemented etc. | 
 | 245 | 2.1 (30-Jan-96) VESA modes moved to 0x200-0x3ff. Mode selection by resolution | 
 | 246 | 		supported. Few bugs fixed. VESA modes are listed prior to | 
 | 247 | 		modes supplied by SVGA autodetection as they are more reliable. | 
 | 248 | 		CLGD autodetect works better. Doesn't depend on 80x25 being | 
 | 249 | 		active when started. Scanning fixed. 80x43 (any VGA) added. | 
 | 250 | 		Code cleaned up. | 
 | 251 | 2.2 (01-Feb-96)	EGA 80x43 fixed. VESA extended to 0x200-0x4ff (non-standard 02XX | 
 | 252 | 		VESA modes work now). Display end bug workaround supported. | 
 | 253 | 		Special modes renumbered to allow adding of the "recalculate" | 
 | 254 | 		flag, 0xffff and 0xfffe became aliases instead of real IDs. | 
 | 255 | 		Screen contents retained during mode changes. | 
 | 256 | 2.3 (15-Mar-96)	Changed to work with 1.3.74 kernel. | 
 | 257 | 2.4 (18-Mar-96)	Added patches by Hans Lermen fixing a memory overwrite problem | 
 | 258 | 		with some boot loaders. Memory management rewritten to reflect | 
 | 259 | 		these changes. Unfortunately, screen contents retaining works | 
 | 260 | 		only with some loaders now. | 
 | 261 | 		Added a Tseng 132x60 mode. | 
 | 262 | 2.5 (19-Mar-96)	Fixed a VESA mode scanning bug introduced in 2.4. | 
 | 263 | 2.6 (25-Mar-96)	Some VESA BIOS errors not reported -- it fixes error reports on | 
 | 264 | 		several cards with broken VESA code (e.g., ATI VGA). | 
 | 265 | 2.7 (09-Apr-96)	- Accepted all VESA modes in range 0x100 to 0x7ff, because some | 
 | 266 | 		  cards use very strange mode numbers. | 
 | 267 | 		- Added Realtek VGA modes (thanks to Gonzalo Tornaria). | 
 | 268 | 		- Hardware testing order slightly changed, tests based on ROM | 
 | 269 | 		  contents done as first. | 
 | 270 | 		- Added support for special Video7 mode switching functions | 
 | 271 | 		  (thanks to Tom Vander Aa). | 
 | 272 | 		- Added 480-scanline modes (especially useful for notebooks, | 
 | 273 | 		  original version written by hhanemaa@cs.ruu.nl, patched by | 
 | 274 | 		  Jeff Chua, rewritten by me). | 
 | 275 | 		- Screen store/restore fixed. | 
 | 276 | 2.8 (14-Apr-96) - Previous release was not compilable without CONFIG_VIDEO_SVGA. | 
 | 277 | 		- Better recognition of text modes during mode scan. | 
 | 278 | 2.9 (12-May-96)	- Ignored VESA modes 0x80 - 0xff (more VESA BIOS bugs!) | 
 | 279 | 2.10(11-Nov-96) - The whole thing made optional. | 
 | 280 | 		- Added the CONFIG_VIDEO_400_HACK switch. | 
 | 281 | 		- Added the CONFIG_VIDEO_GFX_HACK switch. | 
 | 282 | 		- Code cleanup. | 
 | 283 | 2.11(03-May-97) - Yet another cleanup, now including also the documentation. | 
 | 284 | 		- Direct testing of SVGA adapters turned off by default, ``scan`` | 
 | 285 | 		  offered explicitly on the prompt line. | 
 | 286 | 		- Removed the doc section describing adding of new probing | 
 | 287 | 		  functions as I try to get rid of _all_ hardware probing here. | 
 | 288 | 2.12(25-May-98) Added support for VESA frame buffer graphics. | 
 | 289 | 2.13(14-May-99) Minor documentation fixes. | 
 | 290 | =============== ================================================================ |