From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Sun, 2 Feb 2003 16:35:41 -0500 From: Manuj Dhingra To: Owen Stampflee Cc: linuxppc-dev@lists.linuxppc.org Subject: Re: VGA out/External Monitor on ibook 2 Message-ID: <20030202213541.GC22344@haar.ae.gatech.edu> References: <20030120155921.GA22300@haar.ae.gatech.edu> <1043086974.2456.9.camel@tsunami.lan.stampflee.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset=ISO-8859-1 In-Reply-To: <1043086974.2456.9.camel@tsunami.lan.stampflee.com>; from owen@stampflee.com on Mon, Jan 20, 2003 at 13:22:54 -0500 Sender: owner-linuxppc-dev@lists.linuxppc.org List-Id: Dear Owen, I sent the dumps (directly to you) is a seperate mail. When originally searching for a solution, I had found suggestions as to connecting the VGA out to scope. Recently I did that and found that hsync and vsync frequencies are as they should be (match with the fbset output). However, the relative phase seems to be oscillating. I was also wondering if "mirroring" has worked with the newer ibooks, i.e. ones with the radeon chip. Regards, -manuj On Jan 20, 2003 13:22 Monday Owen Stampflee wrote: > > > case 1: Monitor connected at boot up > > The external monitor is fine at depth 8, resolution 1024x768-8@60Hz. > > Changing the depth (text mode) with fbset makes the font look like the > > wrong depth. It feels like font depth has changed but not the display > > depth. The internal-LCD display stays just fine. > Starting X will screw up the secondary display in this scenario too. > > > Has this been solved? If not, how can I help? > ** Sent via the linuxppc-dev mail list. See http://lists.linuxppc.org/