Troubleshooting – HP xw4400 Workstation User Manual

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In addition to the Catalyst Control Center application, the /usr/bin/aticonfig application can

configure the following features:

Xinerama/Xrandr— Xinerama is a X.org/XFree86 extension that supports continuous

display technology on the X server. When enabled, it changes independent displays to continuous

displays. Xinerama is configured with a ServerFlags option or enabled with a command-line

option. Recent releases of the X server support the Xrandr extension in preference to Xinerama. If

version 1.2 or later of Xrandr is available in the server, additional display features may be

configurable via Catalyst Control Center.

ATI Big Desktop– An ATI-specific driver configuration mode that supports Xinerama-like

functionality across the two video ports of a single ATI graphics card. When configured, it allows

the X server to manage dual video ports as one independent display. User windows can traverse

the entire graphics card framebuffer.

NOTE:

This mode is configurable only with the aticonfig configuration tool provided by ATI.

ATI Overdrive— Enables you to change core or memory clock values.

NOTE:

Use of this feature may reduce the life of the graphics card.

Framelock/ Genlock— Genlock is commonly used in video post-production, nonlinear editing

(NLE), and broadcast studios. Its ensures that workstation graphics output is locked (LOCK) to an

externally generated (GEN) signal. This guarantees that the studio’s devices (cameras, videotape

recorders, or character or title generators) work together effectively.

Frame lock uses hardware to synchronize the frames on each display in a connected system.

When graphics and video are displayed across multiple monitors, framelocked systems help

maintain image continuity to create a virtual canvas. Frame lock is especially critical for stereo

viewing, where the left and right fields must be in sync across all displays.

Troubleshooting

When editing an xorg.conf or XF86Config X server configuration file, know that each time the X server

is started it writes out the /var/log/Xorg.0.log or /var/log/XFree86.0.log log file. If the
results are not as expected, or the X server fails to start, check this log file. The X server and OEM

accelerated drivers write configuration confirmations, warnings, and errors to this file.

Most often you can resolve configuration issues based simply on output in the log file. If you want

additional X server debugging output, start the X server manually with a request for verbose logging:

X -logverbose 6 -s -ac 0 :0

This example outputs a level 6 detailed set of messages into the /var/log/Xorg.0.log file.

For technical support of NVIDIA drivers, use the /usr/bin/nvidia-bug-report.sh system profiling utility.

This utility generates nvidia-bug-report.log—a comprehensive report to further diagnose configuration

issues.

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Chapter 4 Linux graphics for HP workstations

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