NAME¶
svgalib.et4000, libvga.et4000 - Information for Tseng ET4000 users
TABLE OF CONTENTS¶
NOTE: The ET4000 register layout changed stepping from svgalib 0.98 to
0.99. See 8. Problems below first
1. Basics of ET4000 cards
2. How to configure
svgalib(7)
3. Creating card dependent register values
4. Defining new modes
5. Redefining standard modes
6. Available examples
7. ET4000/W32 support
8. Problems
9. Using dynamic loading with other cards
1. BASICS OF ET4000 CARDS¶
Basically all ET4000 cards are equal, some are even more equal ...
The Chipset is well documented (by Tseng Labs and eg. the vgadoc2.zip) and all
graphics functions can be used the same way on different cards (including the
ET4000/W32 based ones). There are three important points to be kept in mind:
- a.)
- amount of available, the organisation and timing of video
memory
- b.)
- type and capabilities of the DAC
- c.)
- available oscillator frequencies
svgalib(7) will check the available video memory during startup. This
should work on all DRAM cards. If there are any problems concerning VRAM
equipped cards, please tell us about.
By now we found is no reliable way to detect the memory organisation/ timing and
the DAC type/capabilities. Most modern card use a frequency synthesizer and
provide the following pixel frequencies (in MHz):
50.350 56.644 65.0 72.0 80.0 89.8 63.0
75.0
Checking older ET4000 cards we found a wide spread range of available
frequencies. Since the video timing is based on the pixel frequency, the
required register values are card dependent.
svgalib(7) has a somewhat 'standard' registers set that may work with
modern ET4000 cards. If
svgalib(7) fails on your machine or you have a
HiColor dac, you need to configure your
svgalib(7).
The
svgalib(7) may use hard linked or dynamical linked register values.
If you use hard linked values, the binary will be smaller and start up faster
but might fail on other machines.
Compiling the
svgalib(7) with DYNAMIC defined (see
Makefile.cfg)
will set up dynamic register loading. Otherwise the value from
svgalib/et4000.regs will be hard linked.
The dynamic configuration will be read from
/etc/vga/libvga.et4000 which
is an ASCII file (see
Makefile.cfg for exact naming). If you have a
working et4000.regs for your system just copy this file to
/etc/vga/libvga.et4000 or link
/etc/vga/libvga.et4000 to your
svgalib/et4000.regs file.
The actual scanner/parser will handle the following entries:
- #define DAC_TYPE <integer>
- Overwrite the DAC detection
- #define <MODE1> <MODE2>
- Enable MODE1 using MODE2 registers, eg. 64K modes like 32K
modes
- #define <MODE> DISABLE_MODE
- do not use MODE (eg. from vgadrv)
- char <MODE><strg>[..] = {<integer>,
<integer>, ... };
- register definition
with
<MODE> ::=
'g'<decimal>x<decimal>x<color><ignored>
<integer> ::= <decimal>|<hex>
<hex> ::= '0x'<hexdigit>{<hexdigit>}
<decimal> ::= ['+'|'-']<digit>{<digit>}
<hexdigit>::= <digit>|'a..f'|'A..F'
<digit> ::= '0..9'
<color> ::= '2'|'16'|'256'|'32k'|'32K'|'64k'|'64K'|'16M'
<strg> ::=
<empty>|[(<alpha>|'_'){<digit>|<alpha>|'_'}]
<alpha> ::= 'a..z'|'A..Z'
C style comments will be skipped. See the
et4000/ subdirectory of the
svgalib distribution for examples.
3. CREATING CARD DEPENDENT REGISTER VALUES¶
You may create a
et4000.regs on your own with the tseng3.exe
program. This DOS program and its source is included in the svgalib
distribution.
Just boot MS-DOS and start
tseng3 et4000.reg
The
tseng3.exe will measure the video timing for each available mode.
Check the
et4000.regs file against your monitor documentation and
disable all non conformant modes, eg.
#define g1024x768x256_regs DISABLE_MODE
/*
static unsigned char g1024x768x256_regs[71] = {
...
};
*/
will disable the 1024x768x256 mode. You
mustn't disable the 640x480x256
mode!
Your
et4000.regs must define the following symbols (register
values or
#define ... DISABLE_MODE) for hard linking:
g320x200x32K_regs,
g640x400x256_regs,
g640x480x256_regs,
g640x480x32K_regs,
g640x480x16M_regs,
g800x600x16_regs,
g800x600x256_regs,
g800x600x32K_regs,
g1024x768x16_regs,
g1024x768x256_regs, and
g1280x1024x16_regs.
and all 64K modes handled like 32K modes by the driver:
#define g320x200x64K_regs g320x200x32K_regs
#define g640x480x64K_regs g640x480x32K_regs
#define g800x600x64K_regs g800x600x32K_regs
You may omit every unusable mode in
/usr/lib/libvga.et4000.
4. DEFINING NEW MODES¶
All standard
svgalib(7) modes may be selected by the mode constants
defined in
#include<vga.h> (eg.
G320x200x16). You may
define new modes on your own. Just use dynamic register loading and add the
register definition of the new mode. Your program may determine the related
modenumber by checking the vga_getmodeinfo(1..vga_lastmodenumber()).
Most ET4000 cards provide 640x350 and 640x400 graphics modes. The
tseng3.exe generates the related register sets. You may also use
dumpreg(1) from an X window to grab you favourite X graphics mode. The
X mode normally isn't usable directly. See
cardex.w32 for an example
and
et4000.c for a brief description of et4000 registers (both files
are included in the svgalib distribution).
5. REDEFINING STANDARD MODES¶
Using dynamic register loading you may redefine any standard VGA mode except of
TEXT and 640x480x16. Just add the ET4000 specific register set to
/etc/vga/et4000.regs.
6. AVAILABLE EXAMPLES¶
In the
et4000/ subdir of the svgalib distribution you'll find some sample
register sets:
- cardex.w32
- Cardex ET4000/W32 card, Music TrueColor DAC
- speedstar+
- SpeedSTAR PLUS card, Normal DAC
- orchid.pdII
- Orchid Prodesigner II
7. ET4000/W32 SUPPORT¶
The actual driver seems to be ET4000/W32 compatible. Tell us about any problems
(and solutions). If you've got any information about the ET4000/W32 blitter,
we would be pleased to receive it.
8. PROBLEMS¶
As mentioned before, the DAC detection isn't very reliable.
vgatest(6)
should print equal screens in 256 color and HiColor/TrueColor modes. You may
have to edit your
libvga.et4000 register file by hand to setup the
correct DAC.
The
tseng3.exe may fail due to incompatible mode numbering. You might use
a VESA driver (eg. tlivesa.com from VPIC 6.0) or edit and recompile the
tseng3.exe.
Newer ET4000 chipsets (eg. W32 and W32i) allow up to 32 clock frequencies. Two
additional register values were added just before the old extended register
value. The new registers are CRTC/30h and CRTC/31h. The old register set had
71 values, the new has grown to 73. You may update your old register set by
hand:
- -
- run the dumpreg program, remember the first two values from
last data line.
- -
- edit your libvga:
for each mode
change the number of register values from 71
to 73
add the values from dumpreg output at front of last data line
- -
- run .BR vgatest (6) to check the new register set
9. USING DYNAMIC LOADING WITH OTHER CARDS¶
The dynamical register loading may be used in other drivers. Since hard linked
register values work fine for Cirrus and Trident cards, we didn't include this
feature.
FILES¶
/etc/vga/libvga.config
/etc/vga/libvga.et4000
SEE ALSO¶
svgalib(7),
libvga.config(5).
AUTHOR¶
This documentation for the ET4000 registers was provided by Hartmut Schirmer.
However, it was slightly reformatted by Michael Weller
<eowmob@exp-math.uni-essen.de>.