Tomasz Chmielewski wrote: >> You can force outputs on in your xorg.conf
I "solved it" by connecting HDMI cable to a HDMI-DVI converter, and connecting that converter to the video card. And I used a fglrx driver, too. I'm not sure if these cards are "too new" for X to handle: 02:00.0 VGA compatible controller: ATI Technologies Inc RV730XT [Radeon HD 4670] 02:00.1 Audio device: ATI Technologies Inc R700 Audio Device [Radeon HD 4000 Series] 03:00.0 VGA compatible controller: ATI Technologies Inc RV730XT [Radeon HD 4670] 03:00.1 Audio device: ATI Technologies Inc R700 Audio Device [Radeon HD 4000 Series] But I had the following problems with free drivers (at least when both cards are in slots, for a multiseat station): - with "radeon" driver, machine is hard freezing whenever I exit X (not even a kernel panic, just a total freeze) - with "radeonhd", it didn't freeze, but I couldn't use both cards at a time - the driver was complaining that it couldn't find BIOS for the second card; also, I had some image corruption in KDE 4.3. But coming back to the HDMI problem, it was not detected by fglrx driver as well. I think the problem is here that I use a HDMI extender (LevelOne HVE-9001, over cat. 5e cable), which does not seem to follow HDMI specs fully. What's interesting, if I start X with HDMI cable connected to the monitor directly, and then changed to HDMI extender, I could still see the video correctly. That's why I thought "forcing" HDMI output would help here (fglrx has such an option, but it can't use it when randr is used, go figure). That's on a DX58SO Intel board with the latest BIOS updates. -- Tomasz Chmielewski http://wpkg.org _______________________________________________ xorg mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/xorg
