Difference between revisions of "Generic VESA video driver"

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(VESA video driver for Microsoft Windows)
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Discussion of VESA complete standards and the organization is beyond the scope of this document.
 
Discussion of VESA complete standards and the organization is beyond the scope of this document.
 +
 +
In Microsoft Windows 95 the default "compatibility" display resolution was 640x480 using VESA standards.  Later in Windows 98 the new lowest default was 800x600 using VESA standards.  These "safe mode" display resolutions were a fallback if no video driver specific for the system video adapter was installed.  These are the best known VESA display standards.
  
 
== VESA video driver for Microsoft Windows ==
 
== VESA video driver for Microsoft Windows ==
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 +
In Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP or Windows Server 2003 display properties:
 +
*Select Display Adapters from the Select Hardware Type dialog box.
 +
*Select Standard Display Adapter (VGA) from the device list, then click OK.
 +
 +
The video supports vesa many modes.
 +
 +
Mode 011dh    320 x 200    APA        256 colors
 +
Mode 010eh    320 x 200    APA      65536 colors
 +
Mode 0100h    640 x 400    APA        256 colors
 +
Mode 0127h    640 x 400    APA      65536 colors
 +
Mode 0128h    640 x 400    APA  16777216 colors
 +
Mode 0101h    640 x 480    APA        256 colors
 +
Mode 0110h    640 x 480    APA      32768 colors
 +
Mode 0111h    640 x 480    APA      65536 colors
 +
Mode 0112h    640 x 480    APA  16777216 colors
 +
Mode 0102h    800 x 600    APA        16 colors
 +
Mode 0103h    800 x 600    APA        256 colors
 +
Mode 0113h    800 x 600    APA      32768 colors
 +
Mode 0114h    800 x 600    APA      65536 colors
 +
Mode 0115h    800 x 600    APA  16777216 colors
 +
Mode 0105h  1024 x 768    APA        256 colors
  
 
== VESA video driver for Linux ==
 
== VESA video driver for Linux ==
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 +
vesa is an Xorg driver for generic VESA video cards. It can drive most VESA-compatible video cards, but only makes use of the basic standard VESA core that is common to these cards. The driver supports depths 8, 15 16 and 24.
 +
 +
The default graphics driver is vesa (package xf86-video-vesa), which handles a large number of chipsets but does not include any 2D or 3D acceleration. If a better driver cannot be found or fails to load, Xorg will fall back to vesa.
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 +
Here is an example for a GRUB stanza, I grabbed out of my /boot/grub/menu.lst":
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title          Debian GNU/Linux, kernel 2.6.18-4-k7
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root            (hd0,0)
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kernel          /vmlinuz-2.6.18-4-k7 root=/dev/hde2 ro vga=791
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initrd          /initrd.img-2.6.18-4-k7
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 +
You could also have it look like this:
 +
 +
title          Debian GNU/Linux, kernel 2.6.18-4-k7
 +
root            (hd0,0)
 +
kernel          /vmlinuz-2.6.18-4-k7 root=/dev/hde2 ro vga=0x317
 +
initrd          /initrd.img-2.6.18-4-k7

Revision as of 12:32, 1 March 2014

VESA (Video Electronics Standards Association) as it relates to video display on a computer monitor, video card adapter, and display resolutions, produces a universal standard for computer graphics founded in 1989 by NEC Home Electronics and eight other video display adapter manufacturers.

The first VESA standard was for 800×600 SVGA resolution video displays.

The VESA Software Standards Committee was closed down due to a lack of interest resulting from charging high prices for specifications.[2] At that time no VESA standards were available for free. Although VESA now hosts some free standards documents, the free collection does not include newly developed standards. Even for obsolete standards, the free collection is incomplete.

Discussion of VESA complete standards and the organization is beyond the scope of this document.

In Microsoft Windows 95 the default "compatibility" display resolution was 640x480 using VESA standards. Later in Windows 98 the new lowest default was 800x600 using VESA standards. These "safe mode" display resolutions were a fallback if no video driver specific for the system video adapter was installed. These are the best known VESA display standards.

VESA video driver for Microsoft Windows

In Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP or Windows Server 2003 display properties:

  • Select Display Adapters from the Select Hardware Type dialog box.
  • Select Standard Display Adapter (VGA) from the device list, then click OK.

The video supports vesa many modes.

Mode 011dh    320 x 200    APA        256 colors
Mode 010eh    320 x 200    APA      65536 colors
Mode 0100h    640 x 400    APA        256 colors
Mode 0127h    640 x 400    APA      65536 colors
Mode 0128h    640 x 400    APA   16777216 colors
Mode 0101h    640 x 480    APA        256 colors
Mode 0110h    640 x 480    APA      32768 colors
Mode 0111h    640 x 480    APA      65536 colors
Mode 0112h    640 x 480    APA   16777216 colors
Mode 0102h    800 x 600    APA         16 colors
Mode 0103h    800 x 600    APA        256 colors
Mode 0113h    800 x 600    APA      32768 colors
Mode 0114h    800 x 600    APA      65536 colors
Mode 0115h    800 x 600    APA   16777216 colors
Mode 0105h   1024 x 768    APA        256 colors

VESA video driver for Linux

vesa is an Xorg driver for generic VESA video cards. It can drive most VESA-compatible video cards, but only makes use of the basic standard VESA core that is common to these cards. The driver supports depths 8, 15 16 and 24.

The default graphics driver is vesa (package xf86-video-vesa), which handles a large number of chipsets but does not include any 2D or 3D acceleration. If a better driver cannot be found or fails to load, Xorg will fall back to vesa.

Here is an example for a GRUB stanza, I grabbed out of my /boot/grub/menu.lst":

title           Debian GNU/Linux, kernel 2.6.18-4-k7
root            (hd0,0)
kernel          /vmlinuz-2.6.18-4-k7 root=/dev/hde2 ro vga=791 
initrd          /initrd.img-2.6.18-4-k7

You could also have it look like this:

title           Debian GNU/Linux, kernel 2.6.18-4-k7
root            (hd0,0)
kernel          /vmlinuz-2.6.18-4-k7 root=/dev/hde2 ro vga=0x317 
initrd          /initrd.img-2.6.18-4-k7