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svgalib.et4000(7)	      Svgalib User Manual	     svgalib.et4000(7)

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.

2. HOW TO CONFIGURE SVGALIB
       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   sv-
       galib/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  sv-
       galib/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 distribu-
       tion.

       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 dis-
       able 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 de-
       fined 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 mod-
       enumber 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 sam-
       ple 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  frequen-
       cies. Two additional register values were added just before the old ex-
       tended 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 <eow-
       mob@exp-math.uni-essen.de>.

Svgalib	(>= 1.2.11)		 31 July 1997		     svgalib.et4000(7)

NAME | TABLE OF CONTENTS | 1. BASICS OF ET4000 CARDS | 2. HOW TO CONFIGURE SVGALIB | 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 | FILES | SEE ALSO | AUTHOR

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