On 06.10.2015 02:21, poma wrote: > 4.1.8-200.fc22.x86_64 dmesg: > [ 11.809467] nouveau [ DEVICE][0000:02:00.0] BOOT0 : 0x098200a2 > [ 11.809493] nouveau [ DEVICE][0000:02:00.0] Chipset: G98 (NV98) > [ 11.809508] nouveau [ DEVICE][0000:02:00.0] Family : NV50 > > > 4.3.0-0.rc4.git0.1.fc24.x86_64 dmesg: > [ 2.483843] nouveau 0000:02:00.0: NVIDIA G98 (098200a2) > > > Where vanished these Chipset & Family super cool lines? >
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/~darktama/nouveau/commit/drm/nouveau/nvkm/engine/device/base.c?id=6cc9e47 commit 6cc9e47f7f574cb3df6b14caebf15b35408b106d Author: Ben Skeggs <[email protected]> Date: Thu Aug 20 14:54:13 2015 +1000 device: switch to dev_printk macros Signed-off-by: Ben Skeggs <[email protected]> drm/nouveau/nvkm/engine/device/base.c | 11 +++-------- ... - nv_info(device, "BOOT0 : 0x%08x\n", boot0); - nv_info(device, "Chipset: %s (NV%02X)\n", - device->cname, device->chipset); - nv_info(device, "Family : NV%02X\n", device->card_type); + nvdev_info(device, "NVIDIA %s (%08x)\n", device->cname, boot0); These lines were useful as basic device information, and as reference to wiki "CodeNames" http://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/CodeNames "This page contains a list of some NVIDIA chip code names and their corresponding official GeForce number. If you're running a recent version nouveau, you can find your chipset by doing dmesg | grep -i chipset. This will always be correct, whereas the lists below are approximate." Notice "dmesg | grep -i chipset" BTW "NVIDIA" is already visible via 'lspci' - lspci | grep VGA So only gain is unnecessary information reduction and redundancy. Please bring Chipset & Family back. _______________________________________________ Nouveau mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/nouveau
