Config

Revision 7 as of 2008-04-29 17:47:41

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Once upon a time, long long ago, Linux users had to manually configure their X Window System in order to use graphical programs. Then came Linux distributions which provided install scripts that (most of the time) created a basic configuration file for the user, that they could then customize. Today, we are transitioning towards a "config-less" X, that figures out everything those install scripts used to, but all inside X itself.

Of course, such a transition is not without some rough patches, and it's possible users may find themselves in a spot where they may still need to do some manual configuration in /etc/X11/xorg.conf. And that is what this page is for.

Display Configuration

Setting up dual-screen in xorg.conf using XRandR 1.2

If you have an ATI, Intel, or Nvidia video card with two outputs (such as a VGA + DVI) you can set up a dual screen configuration using the X Resize, Rotate and Reflection Extension (XRandR 1.2).

The easiest way to do this is using the Screen Resolution GNOME applet under System > Preferences. This tool doesn't modify your xorg.conf, but rather applies the changes dynamically during GNOME startup. To customize your dual-head setup, simply drag and drop where you want your displays.

Unfortunately, for creating dual-screen layouts there is still one manual configuration step required, which is to add a Virtual framebuffer size. The size needs to be equal or greater than the maximum combined size of your displays. For example, if you have two 1920x1200 monitors you wish to put side-by-side, you would add a Virtual line like this:

Section "Screen"
        Identifier      "Default Screen"
        Device          "Configured Video Device"
        DefaultDepth    24
        SubSection "Display"
            Depth           24
            Virtual         3840 1200
        EndSubSection
EndSection

Note that setting Virtual to larger than 2048x2048 disables 3d acceleration (i.e., no Compiz). This is why the default maximum is set to 2048x2048 and why it requires manual configuration to increase. A new memory management system (TTM) is being worked on to make this setting dynamic; see New DRM / TTM in [X/KernelWishlist] for details.

Manual Configuration

An alternative is to set it up manually in xorg.conf. You might want to do this if you're not running GNOME, or if you want it to take effect earlier on in the bootup sequence, or if you want to trick things out beyond what the GUI tool is capable of.

Here is an example xorg.conf setting up dual-head with XRandR in Ubuntu Hardy:

Section "InputDevice"
        Identifier      "Generic Keyboard"
        Driver          "kbd"
        Option          "XkbRules"      "xorg"
        Option          "XkbModel"      "pc105"
        Option          "XkbLayout"     "us"
        Option          "XkbOptions"    "lv3:ralt_switch"
EndSection

Section "InputDevice"
        Identifier      "Configured Mouse"
        Driver          "mouse"
        Option          "CorePointer"
        Option          "Emulate3Buttons"       "true"
EndSection

Section "Device"
        Identifier      "Configured Video Device"
        BusID           "PCI:1:0:0"
        Option          "Monitor-VGA-0" "Left Monitor"
        Option          "Monitor-DVI-0" "Right Monitor"
EndSection

Section "Monitor"
        Identifier      "Left Monitor"
EndSection

Section "Monitor"
        Identifier      "Right Monitor"
        Option          "Right Of" "Left Monitor"
EndSection

Section "Screen"
        Identifier      "Default Screen"
        Device          "Configured Video Device"
        DefaultDepth    24
        SubSection "Display"
            Depth           24
            Virtual         3840 1200
        EndSubSection
EndSection

Section "ServerLayout"
        Identifier      "Default Layout"
        Screen          "Default Screen"
        InputDevice     "Generic Keyboard"
        InputDevice     "Configured Mouse"
EndSection

There are three important things to note that you may have to alter.

The first is the BusID; look at the output of lspci | grep VGA to see what Bus ID your video card is on. You may even be able to omit this entirely.

The second is the Virtual setting in the Display SubSection. In general, this should be set to the total size of your combined screen. So if you have two 1920x1200 monitors you plan to put side by side, this would be (1920*2) x 1200 = 3840 x 1200.

The third is the name of your device's output name. In the above, it is "Monitor-VGA-0", but it could be "Monitor-VGA0" or something. Look at the output of xrandr to see what name your graphics driver uses.

One important note: X has a limitation on Virtual size for 3D acceleration. If you set Virtual to larger than 2048x2048, you won't be able to use 3D acceleration - which means no Compiz Desktop Effects. So you may have to trade off between having vast expanses of screen real estate, vs. having nifty 3D effects.

Setting up S-Video

Most drivers aren't able to correctly detect when stuff is attached to the S-Video port, so to avoid problems it's shipped off by default for most cases. There's several ways to enable it:

Option A. Turn load detection back on:

xrandr --output S-video --set load_detection 1

Option B. To turn load detection back on permanently in xorg.conf so it persists between reboots, add this to your xorg.conf:

# /etc/X11/xorg.conf
Section "Device"
        ...
        Option "TVDACLoadDetect" "TRUE"
EndSection

Option C. Force S-Video on:

xrandr --addmode S-video 800x600

References