This section describe framebuffer options on Atari platforms
Table 2. Atari modes
Depth | 320x200 | 320x480 | 640x200 | 640x400 | 640x480 | 896x608 | 1280x960 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 bit | sthigh | vga2 | falh2 | tthigh | |||
2 bits | stmid | vga4 | |||||
4 bits | stlow | ttmid/vga16 | falh16 | ||||
8 bits | ttlow | vga256 |
ttlow, ttmid and ttmhigh are only used on the TT, whilst vga2, vga4, vga16, vga256, falh3 and falh16 are only used on the Falcon.
When used with the kernel option video=xxx, and no suboption is given, the kernel will probe for the modes in the following order until it finds a mode that is possible with the given hardware:
ttmid
tthigh
vga16
sthigh
stmid
You may specify the particular mode you wish to use, if you don't wish to auto-probe for the modes you desire. For example, video=vga16 gives you a 4 bit 640x480 display.
There are a number of suboptions available with the video=xxx parameter:
inverse - inverts the display so that the background/foreground colours are reversed. Normally the background is black, but with this suboption, it gets sets to white.
font - sets the font to use in text modes. Currently you can only select VGA8x8, VGA8x16, PEARL8x8. The default is to use the VGA8x8 only if the vertical size of the display is less than 400 pixels, otherwise it defaults to VGA8x16.
internal - a very interesting option. See the next section for information.
external - as above.
monitorcap - describes the capabilities for multisyncs. DON'T use with a fixed sync monitor!
Syntax: internal:(xres);(yres)[;(xres_max);(yres_max);(offset)]
This option specifies the capabilities of some extended internal video hardware, i.e OverScan modes. (xres) and (yres) gives the extended dimensions of the screen.
If your OverScan mode needs a black border, you'll need to write the last three arguments of the internal: suboption. (xres_max) is the maximum line length that the hardware allows, (yres_max) is the maximum number of lines, and (offset) is the offset of the visible part of the screen memory to its physical start, in bytes.
Often extended internal video hardware has to be activated, for this you will need the "switches=*" options. [Note: Author would like extra information on this, please. The m68k documentation in the kernel isn't clear enough on this point, and he doesn't have an Atari! Examples would be helpful too]
Syntax: external:(xres);(yres);(depth);(org);(scrmem)[;(scrlen)[;(vgabase)[;(colw)[;(coltype)[;(xres_virtual)]]]]]
This is quite complicated, so this document will attempt to explain as clearly as possible, but the Author would appreciate if someone would give this a look over and see that he hasn't fscked something up! :o)
This suboption specifies that you have an external video hardware (most likely a graphic board), and how to use it with Linux. The kernel is basically limited to what it knows of the internal video hardware, so you have to supply the parameters it needs in order to be able to use external video hardware. There are two limitations; you must switch to that mode before booting, and once booted, you can't change modes.
The first three parameters are obvious; gives the dimensions of the screen as pixel height, width and depth. The depth supplied should be the number of colours is 2^n that of the number of planes required. For example, if you desire to use a 256 colour display, then you need to give 8 as the depth. This depends on the external graphic hardware, though so you will be limited by what the hardware can do.
Following from this, you also need to tell the kernel how the video memory is organised - supply a letter as the (org) parameter
n - use normal planes, i.e one whole plane after another
i - use interleaved planes, i.e. 16 bits of the first plane, then the 16 bits of the next plane and so on. Only built-in Atari video modes uses this - and there are no graphic card that supports this mode.
p - use packed pixels, i.e consecutive bits stands for all planes for a pixel. This is the most common mode for 256 colour displays on graphic cards.
t - use true colour, i.e this is actually packed pixels, but does not require a colour lookup table like what other packed pixel modes uses. These modes are normally 24 bit displays, and provides 16.8 million colours.
However, for monochrome modes, the (org) parameter has a different meaning:
n - use normal colours, i.e. 0 = white, 1 = black
i - use inverted colours, i.e. 0 = black, 1 = white
The next important item about the video hardware is the base address of the video memory. That is given by the (scrmem) parameter as a hexadecimal number with an 0x prefix. You will need to find this out from the documentation that comes with your external video hardware.
The next paramter (scrlen) tells the kernel about the size of the video memory. If it's missing, this is calculated from the (xres), and (depth) parameters. It's not useful to write a value here these days anyway. To leave this empty, give two consecutive semicolons if you need to give the (vgabase) parameter, otherwise, just leave it.
The (vgabase) parameter is optional. If it isn't given, the kernel can't read/write any colour registers of the video hardware, and thus you have to set up the appropriate colours before you boot Linux. But if your card is VGA compatible, you can give it the address where it can locate the VGA register set so it can change the colour lookup tables. This information can be found in your external video hardware documentation. To make this clear, (vgabase) is the base address, i.e a 4k aligned address. For reading/writing the colour registers, the kernel uses the address range between (vgabase) + 0x3c7 and (vgabase) + 0x3c9. This parameter is given in hexadecimal and must have a 0x prefix, just like (scrmem). (colw) is only meaningful, if the (vgabase) parameter is specified. It tells the kernel how wide each of the colour register is, i.e the number of bits per single colour (red/green/blue). Default is usually 6 bits, but it is also common to specify 8 bits.
(xres_virtual) is only required for the ProMST/ET4000 cards where the physical linelength differs from the visible length. With ProMST, you need to supply 2048, whilst for ET4000, it depends on the initialisation of the video board.
This section describes the options for Amigas, which are quite similar to those of the Atari platform
This depends on the chipset used in the Amiga. There are three main ones; OCS, ECS and AGA which all uses the colour frame buffers.
NTSC modes
ntsc - 640x200
ntsc-lace - 640x400
PAL modes
pal - 640x256
pal-lace - 640x512
ECS modes - 2 bit colours on ECS chipsets, 8 bit colours on AGA chipsets only
multiscan - 640x480
multiscan-lace - 640x960
euro36 - 640x200
euro36-lace - 640x400
euro72 - 640x480
euro72-lace - 640x800
super72 - 800x300
super72-lace - 800x400
dblntsc - 640x200
dblpal - 640x256
dblntsc-ff - 640x400
dblntsc-lace - 640x800
dblpal-ff - 640x512
dblpal-lace - 640x1024
VGA modes - 2 bit colours on ECS chipsets, 8 bit colours on AGA chipsets
vga - 640x480
vga70 - 640x400
These are similar to the Atari suboptions. They are:
depth - specifies the pixel bit depth
inverse - does the same thing as the Atari suboption
font - does the same thing as the Atari suboption, although the PEARL8x8 font is used instead of the VGA8x8 font if the display size is less than 400 pixels wide.
monitorcap - specifies the capabilities of the multisync monitor. Do not use with fixed sync monitors
Phase5 CyberVision 64 (S3 Trio64 chipset)
Phase5 CyberVision 64 3D (S3 ViRGE chipset)
MacroSystems Retina Z3 (NCR 77C32BLT chipset)
Helfrich Piccolo, SD64, GVP ECS Spectrum, Village Tronic Picasso II / II+ and IV (Cirrus Logic GD542x / 543x chipsets)
Currently, the framebuffer device implemented only supports the mode selected in MacOS before booting into Linux, and also supports 1, 2, 4 and 8 bit colours modes.
Framebuffer suboptions are selected using the following syntax:
video=macfb:<font>:<inverse>
You can select fonts such as VGA8x8, VGA8x16 and 6x11 etc. The inverse option allows you to use reverse video.