Problems With OEM ATI Cards And ATI's Linux Driver 248
Doug Bostrom writes "Over at FlightGear.org, Andy Ross describes how ATI's new Linux drivers only seem to work with "official" ATI cards (made by ATI), why that does not make sense, and a possible fix that unfortunately would mean booting Windows, if only for a few minutes."
Summary is wrong (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Summary is wrong (Score:1)
Re:Summary is wrong (Score:1)
Re:Summary is wrong (Score:1)
Wrong (Score:2)
I've flashed a Ricoh DVD/CDRW using their Windows flashing utility.
Re:Summary is wrong (Score:2)
Yes, FreeDOS is perfect for this. Just boot the system disk, break out to the shell, and delete CONFIG.SYS so you won't get the install menu any more. Empty out AUTOEXEC.BAT so you won't get prompted for a date, while you're at it. Heh, don't you just love DOS.
Then clear off a few more files/directories (obvious install cruft) to make room for the reflashing utility, a copy of the new bios, and space to save the old one. Now you've got a single-floppy, instant-booting bios flashing tool.
Clearly, DOS isn't quite dead yet, neither are floppies.
Why not use Linux instead of DOS? (Score:5, Insightful)
The GPL'd FreeDOS project deserves kudos for providing legacy support alright, but Linux also provides additional reliability (no lockups during BIOS flashing...), choices between CLI or various GUIs, continued cutting-edge development of the environment with support for USB, FireWire or whatever media peripherals might be available and even support for hardware platforms other than x86 (e.g. Mac peripherals have BIOSes as well), to mention some advantages off the top of my head.
Since hardware manufacturers can't continue relying on DOS much longer now that MS is pulling the plug, the obvious choice for boot-time tools is really the freely-distributable Linux. It would be a tragedy for everyone but Microsoft if Windows became the successor of DOS as the *required* hardware maintenance platform.
Re:Why not use Linux instead of DOS? (Score:2)
Re:Why not use Linux instead of DOS? (Score:2)
Re:Why not use Linux instead of DOS? (Score:2)
Heck, Gigabyte has a Microsoft® Windows-only(TM) tool that updates the BIOS on their latest motherboards over the internet! [216.239.33.100] (that's Google's html translation of Gigabyte's pfd file)
Some Linux developers have already been dabbling with such a "hardware update" (aka BIOS flasher) tool but perhaps there should be a concerted effort to build a development kit that the OEMs would find simple to tailor for their purposes. Opening direct hardware access under Microsoft® Windows(TM) over the internet sounds like the thing for gonzos to do, but at least under Linux it could be done relatively securely and by root only.
What difference does M$'s "DOS support" make?? (Score:2)
Just because something is "unsupported" doesn't mean it magically stops working. It'll continue to work just as well as it ever did.
What would be a problem is if hardware manufacturers only provided Windows-flashable BIOSs.. but I don't think that will happen, if not because of the obvious technical issues, simply because of the hassle factor -- their own techs will scream bloody murder, along with the rest of the clone system world (40% of all PC sales in the U.S.)
Re:Summary is wrong (Score:2)
Hey, if I did that I'd never get asked for a date at all!
Official ATI cards? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Official ATI cards? (Score:3, Interesting)
'powered by'/'built by' built in the same place (Score:2)
Mind you some OEMs do manufacture their own 'built by' ATI boards on their own lines using their own designs
Re:Official ATI cards? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Official ATI cards? (Score:2)
Not everyone has *dual boot (Score:1, Troll)
Now, I did click on the "fix" link, but the website was not responding, so the only thing I'm going off of is that line. The author says that windows needs to be booted, and so I'm assuming that this windows is going to be on the same system, right? If so, this could present a problem since though many linux users also have windows installed on their computer, it's a good guess that many do not. So, what do these people do then, hmm?
*dual boot, referring to two or more operating systems (as many people have many more than just two)
Re:Not everyone has *dual boot (Score:5, Informative)
He didn't have windows/dos/fat partitions at all. he downloaded freedos and used a ramdrive to flash his videocard's bios. thats all that was wrong. the ATI driver checks to make sure the videocard is an ATI card. It should just check for an ATI chipset. Sounds like a problem ATI will pacth in the next release.
Isn't it right (Score:1)
They are by default not guaranteed to be able to work for anything else.
Re:Isn't it right (Score:5, Insightful)
ATI makes cards with its own Chipset but they also let other companies (such as Sapphire) makes their own boards with ATI GPU's, and they are supposed to use the same drivers.
Incase anyone is wondering, Sapphires cards are way cheaper and sometimes (in the 8500's case) they outperform ati's own cards.
Reference Drivers are for Chipsets (Score:2)
Really - I don't read it that way at all. Looking at the notes about LINUX and XFree86 support [ati.com] It just refers to product families.
Now granted that ATI tends to sell a "RADEON 8500" and so there is confusion between the chipset and the product. But nowhere can I see and assertion that the drivers in question are either for or not for ATI Chipsets.
Now if they were released (to the public, reference drivers are almost always released to OEMs under NDAs) as reference drivers then that is a different thing. Reference drivers are for the chipset, if the OEM has correctly implemented the hardware, they will work, these drivers are used for reference, hence the name. The downside is that these may not use all the optional features of the chipset. Remember that one chipset can support a number of functions, and some of these are dependant on the OEM fitting the right support chips, the right speed memmory, the right connectors. If they differentiate in price the may choose not to do this.
If it doesn't say reference driver, then its not. Its made some assumptions about the hardware above and beyond the chipset. Depending on how close this is to the original reference drivers it might work, it might be flakey, it might just lock up.
So if you want performance you will need to look for a driver for the specific hardware, if you want stability then you should try and obtain reference drivers - thats why NVidia stuff is reasonably stable.
Remember the OEM manufactures the card for its own reasons - if it doesn't say 'supported by ' when you buy it you have no right to expect it to. Many cars are powered by Ford engines, I would not expect Ford to be able to fix the crash damage on my non-Ford car, but I would expect them to be able to service the engine. If you buy a Sapphire card for your Linux system, then make sure Sapphire provide the driver you need.
At what level does company X have an obligation to support its product sold through the OEM channel - after all you choose it, your supplier sold it, the distributer shipped it - all of these people all 'added value' to the supply chain. Many video card memory chips are made by Samsung, but clearly they will not be expected to provide a driver.
Yes the ATI logo is used - but it says 'Powered by ATI' - it does not say 'Compatible with ATI' although that is the assumption many consumers will make. Perhaps the fault there is shared.
Now be clear I'm not defending ATI here - this discussion is applicable to any hardware drivers. ATI is at fault here for the whole confusion about what this driver does and doesn't do, and what its logos do and don't mean. NVidia are much clearer, and feel it better to provide wider ranging support.
But it is important to understand that just becase hardware X uses chipset Y, then its not reasonable to expect a driver for Y to work with X - there is more differences between hardware than the name on the front of the box.
Explanations... (Score:5, Interesting)
I know this is rumor-mongering, but I can't help but notice that the *Windows* drivers dont' perform such a check, and neither do the Linux Retail drivers...
Consider this: Microsoft or some other party requests unofficially that ATi *not* support Linux in its OEM hardware, just for the sake of not having OEM desktop vidcard support for Linux...this could explain things like the OEM/Retail check that occurs in Linux, but not Windows. Interesting stuff..I want to see what ATI's reaction on this is.
Naw (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Explanations... (Score:1)
Re:Explanations... (Score:1)
Re:Explanations... (Score:4, Insightful)
From: Roman Stepanov
Subject: [Dri-devel] Re: New ATI FireGL drivers announced
To: Alexander Stohr
Cc: dri-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
Date: Fri, 22 Nov 2002 15:02:31 +0300
Hi, Alexander!
[ snip ]
At first I attempted to set up SuSE's xfglrx package to get 3D acceleration
for my Gigabyte AP64D board (actually it is a R200 QL with 64 Mb DDR RAM).
After generating XF86Config and typing startx in command prompt X server
failed to start. I found in system logs that 2D driver refused to
work with third party boards. It's nearly impossible to buy "build by ATI"
board in Moscow, so I was forced to apply my assembly skills to modify board
vendor id in 2D driver (fglrx_drv.o). After replacing ATI's id (0x1002) with
Gigabyte (0x1458) I was able to start XFree but I saw my text consoles
(vga=791) broken. Next thing I've tried is to start Tux Racer game. After 2
minutes of pretty smooth gameplay it hung and my box locked up completely.
I decided it's enough to uninstall this package and I started to look around
for any alternative driver. I've downloaded official ATI driver version
2.4.0 and tried to install it. After install script built kernel drm modules
installation stopped because depmod complained about unresolved symbols in
module fglrx.o That was my last attempt to use official ATI drivers
Now I have installed driver from dri trunk, it works pretty well, but I have
very slow gameplay with Loki's Rune. Maybe today I will try to install
official ATI driver again, this time version 2.4.3. I hope it finally going
to work.
******** FIN du premier mail ********
Reponse:
From: Alexander Stohr
Subject: RE: [Dri-devel] Re: New ATI FireGL drivers announced
To: Roman Stepanov
Cc: dri-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
Date: Fri, 22 Nov 2002 13:43:31 +0100
[snip]
for completeness its: R200/RV250/R300/some-Mobility
[snip les quotes qui parle du drivers qui se lance pas]
That's Intentional. On the list you can find several references to
problems with the multiple OEM BIOS variants even with the DRI drivers.
Since this must be considered as third party software and hardware,
you should consider calling the respective vendor for support.
(Having a broken BIOS checksum is the least problem in that area...)
[snip quotes qui parlent du changement du code hexa]
This might be a BIOS problem. Current drivers are using the
XFre86 Int10 module for doing mode switches. Thanks for another
reason for not letting that drivers run on third party boards.
[snip]
Stability of a specifc grafics board is mainly due to its
clock rate, its RAM bus interface clock an signal quality
plus misc power supply parameters (mainboard abilities to
drive that board, PCB design to ensure the voltage does not
drop critical in any operation thermal and electrical condtion).
I know that ATI is ensuring this for the "Built by ATI" boards
with much effort, but i have no idea how intense those third
party vendors do that. The second unknown thing is your hosting
PC system. You should verify it with a secondary operating system.
[snip]
> Now I have installed driver from dri trunk, it works pretty
> well, but I have very slow gameplay with Loki's Rune.
Thats the best and only drivers that should use for your adapter.
> Maybe today I will try to install official ATI driver again,
> this time version 2.4.3. I hope it finally going to work.
What you were doing is "unsupported" and "not recommended".
This is meaning that it is on your own risk if you do it.
Maybe there are legal reasons why you shouldn't be allowed
to do that, but i dont know this myselves.
-Alex.
Re:Explanations... (Score:2)
Source Drivers (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been hearing about bad ATI drivers... (Score:4, Funny)
I've been hearing about bad ATI drivers since the days of the 80386. I've had some severe problems with ATI drivers myself, and needed to call ATI tech support. My impression is that the company should not allow receptionists to write drivers when they are not answering phones.
My answer: For business use, buy Matrox.
Re:I've been hearing about bad ATI drivers... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I've been hearing about bad ATI drivers... (Score:2)
If cheapy-generic video chip makers like SiS, S3, and Trident can make drivers that are easily installed - and don't make the system as stable as a house built on a swamp - why in the Eff can't ATI manage to do the same?
Granted, nVidia's beta drivers have made a fair share of Win'** systems unstable, but again, they're beta drivers. ATI manages to press and ship a million CDs of unstable drivers.
Re:I've been hearing about bad ATI drivers... (Score:5, Interesting)
I was wondering how far down I'd have to scroll before I found another Matrox supporter. My G400 has run flawlessly on three different distros, and about 5 different XFree86 versions. It may be getting a bit long in the tooth, but I still haven't found a compelling reason to upgrade, and especially not to change GPU sets. I had an Nvidia system sitting alongside the Matrox box for several months, and both had identical monitors. The Matrox box was very easy on the eyes while the Nvidia always looked fuzzy. The Matrox white backgrounds were solid white while the Nvidia painted rainbows and shifting Moire patterns.
As to gaming, I'm playing X-Plane on the Matrox box using the latest Wine RPM. The frame rates are the same as they are on the Nvidia in Linux - I don't know how the two cards compare under Windows since I don't use Windows for anything else other than to supply Wine some DLLs. So with frame rates being equal, the Matrox wins for clarity of display, better drivers, and a more open philosophy. One possible drawback for some - Matrox's OpenGL drivers for Windows are not very good, but that doesn't affect me. YMMV and all that....
Re:I've been hearing about bad ATI drivers... (Score:2)
I'm curious as to what Matrox card (if any) folks would recommend for P4-class systems??
For my business clients who wanted to save a buck and only needed a decent 2D card, I used to buy S3 cards (pre-Diamond merger), because they had good performance for the price and had good stable drivers. Nothing fancy but perfectly fine for office work. But at the time we were talking $25 for an S3 and $200 for a Matrox.
Re:I've been hearing about bad ATI drivers... (Score:2)
I wish more people complained about this, something might get done about it then. The prime reason for this difference is that the Matrox uses a nice filter after their DAC(s) while Nvidia doesn't, in the reference design. Any of the graphics card manufacturers using nVidia chipset in their cards could add a filter for less than $1 in components and a few days of an analog engineer's time. None do, even though I have to recommend Matrox cards to all my non-gamer friends and have overheard computer neophites talk about nVidia cards as inferior because of the fuzzys. It's just baffling, I can only think they want to hide aliasing with blur, but then nVidia must realize people use the same video card to read text, esp with their GeForce series.
Re:For business use, buy Matrox. (Score:2)
Anyhow, the Matrox stuff was rock solid for business apps. Had a mystique, then millennium, added a rainbow runner, then a G400 Marvel and a RT2000 at work. Yup, an early adopter... the trusting kind...
The Marvel is what really what blew my faith in Matrox. Spent $300 when that was a serious amount of cash for a PC video card, found out there were no win2k or nt capture drivers... Dropped a box back to win98se and waited for the glorious 'over 2g' files and a bit more stability. Years pass, they release a new version of the card (the G450 without hardware acceleration) before a win2k driver was released. Finally, they delivered something. They turned the win2k version into nothing more than a TV tuner card! No capture.
Insult to injury, Matrox offered to give me $50 off a G450 if I bought it direct - not even enough to let them compete with other vendors selling the retail box with the 'rebate'.
The RT2000 was ok once it worked, the RT2500 much more forgiving.... but the trust is gone for me. (not including my trusty millennium card, that is...)
Sales gimmick (Score:2)
The support for a second monitor seems to be a sales gimmick more than a serious initiative. It is certainly poorly supported by Matrox.
Re:Sales gimmick (Score:2)
I've found it very useful. Sure, a second montior is useless when you are using virtual desktops. BUT, it's great for MONITORING. I've used dual monitors to allow Call Center people to monitor ACD stats. I've used it to allow people to monitor security cameras from their desk.
The second output can also be a TV out. So at home when I use Windows Media Player, or Real Player, or the DivX player, that video is automatically redirected to my TV. No more watching movies on a dinky monitor.
At the time I bought my G400, it was on par with all the other technology. That was like 3 years ago, and I haven't found a reason to upgrade.
ATI, OTOH, has always had shit. They can't make decent drivers, and they sell parts of their product to OEMS, which means that you can't always easily get a driver for a complete reinstall (I inherited Gateways with ATI's at my current job).
I've ALWAYS had some sort of issue with ATI cards. I remember an ATI card crashing MS Windows because I was also using a Parallel Quickcam. WTF? (While I think GNU-Linux is silly, MS Windows - vs windows - actually makes sense) Sure, they're eventually figured out, and usually fixed with a new driver or video BIOS, but IMHO, ThinkGeek needs a 'I will not upgrade your ATI driver' T-Shirt. It's too much of a PITA, for something that should 'just work'.
ATI, in my experience, has always... (Score:1)
For instance, on my mulitmonitor system I used to have the Radeon VE (Win2k). I installed Wolfenstein and Jedi Knight. Wolfenstein would crash all the time, but Jedi Knight was okay. So I upgraded drivers. Then Jedi Knight didn't work, and Wolfenstein did. Bah.
Not to mention going from TV out to Monitor out and back again was a terrifying ordeal because their saveable settings "themes" don't work. Or at least didn't work up until the time I took out my *last* ATI card.
mmmmmm Parhelia....
Why not patch the drivers instead? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why not patch the drivers instead? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why not patch the drivers instead? (Score:2)
Re:Why not patch the drivers instead? (Score:3, Informative)
It makes perfect sense (Score:3, Interesting)
Not so, not so, not so. ATI has a reason for ensuring that their drivers function properly only with authorized hardware. ATI's marketing strategy centers around the company being recognized for making the top-quality graphics cards on the market. This definition includes all components from circuit boards to microchips. ATI's primary market is those consumers who need or want top-of-the-line video cards for personal or professional reasons. The ATI brand's image of exclusivity and quality plays a viutal role in the company's marketing strategy.
Having taken this into account, consider the Linux user community's reputation for using "hacked" or "modded" hardware for all sorts of reasons from saving money to illegally circumventing copyright restrictions. It follows that it is totally in ATI's interest to release drivers that work with their hardware exculsively. To do otherwise would be to associate the ATI brand with all matter of hacked, downscale, and jerry-rigged hardware, a move which would ultimately prove a detriment to ATI's profits.
Re:It makes perfect sense (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It makes perfect sense (Score:2)
One set for the Built by ATI, the other set for the Powered by ATI.
They've apparently chosen not to build a Reference driver for Linux.
Re:It makes perfect sense (Score:5, Insightful)
The boards the drivers don't work with are boards built by 3rd party board manufacturers, using chips that ATI sold to them. (ie not reverse engineered, not stolen, not illegal or immoral in any way) These boards, while not made by ATI themselves, are as legal and sanctioned as the ones made by ATI. They are not jerry-ridded, hacked or downscaled in any way. In fact, ATI lets these manufacturers use the logo "powered by ATI". If any manufacturer was making cards that ATI was not happy with, ATI would simply refuse to sell the Radeon chipsets to them.
This driver incomaptibility is a silly restriction, probably due to a rushed release schedual or poor foresight from the driver writers. It could be simply because the driver has not been tested with "powered by ATI" hardware yet. I expect that this will be fixed.
Re:It makes perfect sense (Score:2)
Oh yes, and I run a true ATI Radeon, and a OEM GeForce... guess which one ran better out of the box (or ever with driver updates, for that matter)
OEM Drivers (Score:2)
'powered by'/'built by' built in the same place (Score:2)
Mind you some OEMs do manufacture their own 'built by' ATI boards on their own lines using their own designs.
nonsense (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Nobody, Linux hacker or otherwise, builds cards in their basement with modern surface mounted chips, it would cost dozens of times more than the card itself does.
2, They still have to buy the chips from ATI (if they have some other chips that ATI's drivers are useful for then ATI is in much worse trouble that from from your fantasy Linux hardware builder.)
3. The fix for the other cards was simple enough to be totally trivial for anybody capable of building the card from scratch.
You have to do better than this nonsense to try to insult Linux users. Go back to school.
mmh, maybe wine will work (Score:1)
This isn't just Linux! (Score:5, Interesting)
to stop the video card locking up my Win2K system. The original drivers seem to be buggy.
When it is working fine (like now), it is a damned fine graphics card, its just such a
bitch to get going.
Re:This isn't just Linux! (Score:2, Informative)
In any case, in Windows at least, you could benefit from downloading the latest drivers. Of all the things I own, video cards is the one category where upgrading the drivers can improve things...a lot.
While ATI has been known to have shitty drivers in the past (r128, R100, and early R200 days mostly), they have been working hard to fix this problem. The latest driver set is CATALYST 02.4 (win2k and xp [instacontent.net] win9x [instacontent.net] required control panel [instacontent.net]). ATI's even gone as far as producing a PDF that describes exactly what was fixed [instacontent.net] in the release.
1st Party support for linux drivers have been new to them (this is only their first official release) so give them some time before they mature.
Re:This isn't just Linux! (Score:2)
I downloaded the PDF file (twice now), but got an error when trying to view the PDF.
I'll try again later
Clueless (Score:5, Insightful)
Then flash it with an ATI firmware. FYI the GPU & RAM clock speed are... in the firmware.
That means his card is "overclocked" an probably instable as well, else they wouldn't sell it a LE.
Then, test some drivers, and make a flame report about it, and then get it posted on
So, instead of encouraring the company to make competitive drivers (binary, not binary, who cares: we want drivers THIS YEAR) lets do the contrary and flame them.
Re:Clueless (Score:2)
Re:Clueless (Score:2)
Come to think of it.. I have an older ATI card (PCI, OEM) that has the weirdest problem: even with NO driver loaded (in plain DOS and regardless of motherboard) it continually makes system speed go up and down by about 50% (and yes, you can see it happen with a realtime benchmark util like QAPlus). ATI scratched their heads and pronounced themselves clueless. But on reading your post and its first reply, I begin to wonder if it simply has an unstable clock -- internal voltage fluctuation or some such causing the issue??
All /. editors must have NVIDIA Stock (Score:5, Insightful)
I have been in the computer game for a long time and have been threw every component and its manufacturer under the sun.
ATI gets a bad rap because it sold a buncha crappy cards with crappy drivers a while back. But they hired the Apple PR team to pimp them and a lotta people bought these cards and got screwed. The ads were better than the actual performance.
NVIDIA came along with a couple of nice 16 meg cards that worked well with Open GL and Direct X, and were fairly cheap.
ATI retaliates and does the Original Radeon. Pretty much junk except for the 3d performance. But ATI had been a traditionally OEM supplier anyway. Not a lot of experience for the high end commercial product. Remember the day of 3d cards? You would see STB and VooDoo, and that was about it.
The Geforce is a great product, sold a helluva lot, did the job become popular. But ATI revamped and started with the 8500, cleaned its driver act up and their cards kick ass.
I have an 8500 64 meg I grabbed from NewEGg and am perfectly happy with it, all 3d games in windows and it works well in Linux. My other box has a geforce 3 and it works well two. Though for web stuff, 2d, the ATI hands it its ass.
Problem with most people is they buy the bargain basement, OEM, close out, and it doesn't work to expectations. Well, GEE, musta been a reason for the closeout sale for all that white box shit. Oh yeah, paid 74 bucks 2 months ago for the 8500, tv out and all.
AS for those drivers from ATI, there are for ATI cards. In the day there were many problems with NVIDIAs reference drivers not working with third party manufacturers.
I understand we are all cheap computer people, and we conserve where we can. Between pricewatch and EBAY. But I learned a long time ago. Spend that extra 20 dollars for the retail CPU, get the 3 year warranty. Get that name brand motherboard. Cause it never fails, you buy something cheap and it burns out and you gotta buy again.
I think ATI and NVIDIA are par with each other and I am glad. Good competition. I understand the loyalty to NVIDIA, they were the reigning champions. ATI is kicking ass too. IT is better for all of us. And as for you guys who bought that 64 meg 20 dollar Radeon 7000(cause it said 64 meg) sorry dudes, shoulda ponied up some more cash/
Puto
Re:All /. editors must have NVIDIA Stock (Score:2, Insightful)
This is misleading. Yes, ATI's drivers and cards got much better with the 8500, but it was still a far cry from GeForce 4. Nvidia's drivers are simply superior to ATI's. If you don't believe me look at how well the Geforce 4 performs against the 9700. It is a testament to its drivers and architecture that it hangs as close as it does (if you look at the hardware of both). Now ATI is in the lead with th 9700. Is it faster than what nvidia has? Yeah. Are it's drivers better? Hello no. Not to bash ATI. They have done a great job getting back frame game, but they still lack in an important area!
Built by ATI vs Powered by ATI (Score:3, Informative)
There is a difference between "Built by ATI" and "Powered by ATI". The problem you're seeing with OEM and non-ATI manufactured cards (aka "Powered by ATI") is in the BIOS -- the driver expects an official ATI BIOS (which would be a on "Built by ATI" card) and doesn't see it, so it won't work. The "Powered by" cards use reference drivers which aren't tweaked to any particular iteration of the card. "Built by" drivers won't install on non-ATI cards.
Solutions: Flash the BIOS as some have been suggesting, or buy an official card. Or just yell at ATI enough until they release a reference driver.
Reminds me of Quake III (Score:2)
For those who don't remember. ATI released drivers that gave high frame per second scores in Quake III. QIII being a common bench mark this made their cards appear to run very fast. It turns out that the driver looked for the Quake3.exe file and reduced the video quality to up the frame rate. If you changed the name of the file to something like Quack3.exe and ran it. The video quality improved while the frame rate dropped.
It's not that ATI has bad hardware, just horrible drivers and poor judgement.
Earlier Windows Drivers from ATI were the same! (Score:2, Interesting)
This problem in the older driver sets was removed (aain I cna't confirm) when ATI went to the unified driver "Catalyst series"
Maybe this set of drivers has been ported from the old code base? Now according to the press release the Linux build is a "unified driver". So I expect it is ported from the newer code base...
If you go to the ati site and click on the "powered by ATI" drivers, there is no option for a linux driver. It only appears under the "Built by ATI" drivers section. This would suggest to me that it is very deliberate. All of us can assume why... but none of us know for sure.
My gut feeling is they can't be sure how the OEM cards are set up (eg mem speed etc) and therefore can't guarantee the driver will work. ATI don't have the resources to field calls from every man and his dog world wide for 100 variants of the same card. Then again like I said this is only speculation. We should probably find out the reason before everyone shoots off at the hip and accuse ATI of all sorts of things.
Back to windows for a second. The solution to work around the windows install was a simple modify of an inf file....
Mybe it is just as simple for the linux xfree drivers, but I don't want to start pulling rpm's apart and looking at whats inside.
Here's another good reason for ATI to do this (Score:2, Interesting)
As a side note, the "SoundBlaster Live!" that was suppose to be included has an Ensonique Audio PCI chipset instead of the EMU10K chips it was suppose to have. OEMs suck.
OEM's not happy (Score:5, Informative)
I also get the impression that this was not a conspiracy. The drivers use the INT10 support in the card's video BIOS. The OEM video BIOS's vary slightly from card to card depending on what features they implemented (2 DAC vs 1, etc). The driver needs to be adjusted for each of the various BIOS. That's why flashing the ATI BIOS works. ATI just made it work on their cards first and will be filling in support for OEM cards ASAP.
DRI CVS or ATI for a mobility? (Score:2)
don't buy cards with closed source drivers (Score:3, Insightful)
What are some of the other reasons?
Re:don't buy cards with closed source drivers (Score:4, Interesting)
True, but they are not general purpose computers. They are designed to do one thing only - perform operations relevant to rendering 3D scenes. More than that, in fact - they are built to accelerate Direct3D and OpenGL operations specifically. Modifying the drivers might well allow you to do other cool things, but you'd almost certainly be better off doing those things with a normal CPU.
Other than that, while I sympathise with your sentiments, and to some extent agree with them, we don't really have much choice. The only fully working Linux drivers for modern graphics cards are closed source. By "fully working", I mean with complete, stable, fast suppot for all of the card's features. I'm pragmatic; if I've spent £200 on a new card, I want it to work properly. If that means using a close-source driver, so be it.
Finally, you seem not to realise that it isn't always up to the card/chipset manufacturers to open their driver source. NVidia, for example, is under NDA with several third parties over technology used in their cards and drivers. That means that they can't open the source to their drivers.
Re:don't buy cards with closed source drivers (Score:2)
I didn't say that they were "general purpose" computers. But there are plenty of operations that occur in scientific computing that they can speed up. And people may well want to try building alternative 3D graphics systems.
Other than that, while I sympathise with your sentiments, and to some extent agree with them, we don't really have much choice. The only fully working Linux drivers for modern graphics cards are closed source. By "fully working", I mean with complete, stable, fast suppot for all of the card's features.
Sure, we do. Not everything needs the absolute latest features.
Finally, you seem not to realise that it isn't always up to the card/chipset manufacturers to open their driver source. NVidia, for example, is under NDA with several third parties over technology used in their cards and drivers. That means that they can't open the source to their drivers.
It is completely irrelevant what the reason is for keeping the driver source closed, the consequences of it being closed remain the same.
Re:don't buy cards with closed source drivers (Score:2)
Oh, puhleeeze, can we please be done with that one now? Do you think if nVidia or ATI were forced to open source their chip designs we'd get anything like the rate of progress we've seen over the last three years?
C'mon. The drivers have a lot of intellectual property in them, nVidia ones in particular (ironically, considering how much better they run under Linux).
Dave
Re:don't buy cards with closed source drivers (Score:2)
Who says anything about "forcing"? All I'm saying is: don't use closed source drivers. In fact, most people get ATI or nVidia cards and don't even use the 3D features.
we'd get anything like the rate of progress we've seen over the last three years?
Open sourcing their drivers would not slow down the development of their current Direct3D or OpenGL implementations. But it would enable and encourage the development of alternative graphics systems, as well as other applications for those cards. You have fallen into the Microsoft trap of thinking that "innovation" just means doing the same old stuff a little better. Sorry, but there are other kinds of innovation.
C'mon. The drivers have a lot of intellectual property in them, nVidia ones in particular (ironically, considering how much better they run under Linux).
What's your point? Bell Labs UNIX or Solaris also had a lot of intellectual property in them, and that didn't keep people from creating open source equivalents that work better than the original. There is nothing that makes graphics drivers any different.
Besides, the graphics cards manufacturers don't need to open source their drivers; a full documentation of the hardware and GPU would be sufficient. Open source developers can and will do the rest, probably better than the original proprietary drivers.
Re:don't buy cards with closed source drivers (Score:2)
You actually seem to be suggesting that the progress would have been slower! What on Earth makes you think that?
The drivers have a lot of intellectual property in them, nVidia ones in particular
So? Why would third party drivers prevent me from buying an nvidia card? Is it not more likely to encourage me to buy an nvidia card, especially if I'm not using an intel chip?
TWW
Bitten by that (Score:2, Insightful)
That's funny, yesterday I've been bitten by this f**ing thing and now I see it on Slashdot.
I saw the hype about new driver and since I needed a new graphics card I thought it would be nice to show appreciation. I was a little disappointed that it took several hours to debianize their crappy RPM packages, but I guess that's the price of using the best distribution [debian.org]. And then when I'm done I get this stupid message about my non-cheap, non-no-name 8500 card being unsupported. I was about to kill someone. If the computer case wasn't closed already, I would probably have ripped the card off and thrown it out of the window.
ATI Nameing, an LE is 3rd party (Score:2, Interesting)
specificaly:
The difference between the 8500, 8500 LE, and the 8800 is clockspeed. The 8500 LE is made by third party manufacturers.
I have always used ATI cards, but at the moment I only have a ATI Radeon, so I can't try ATI's new drivers. I will probably upgrade for ut2003 and DeusEx 2. But any way I have a lot of confidence in the DRI people.
Another workaround (without Windows) (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.rage3d.com/board/showthread.php?s=&t
How to get the ATi drivers working with ANY card. (Score:5, Informative)
(--) fglrx(0): Chipset: "Radeon RV250 If" (Chipset = 0x4966)
(--) fglrx(0): (PciSubVendor = 0x148c, PciSubDevice = 0x2039)
(--) fglrx(0): board vendor info: third party grafics adapter - NOT original ATI
(--) fglrx(0): Linear framebuffer (phys) at 0xd8000000
(--) fglrx(0): MMIO registers at 0xe9000000
(--) fglrx(0): ChipRevID = 0x00
(--) fglrx(0): VideoRAM: 131072 kByte (64-bit DDR SDRAM)
(EE) fglrx(0): board/chipset is not supported by this driver (third party board)
I quickly came to the conclusion that the ATi drivers don't like non-ATi cards. I did a bit of searching and I found a solution - I did not find this myself!
Install and configure the drivers as per normal. Also, I suggest you download "hexedit" from freshmeat.net as you'll need it. You'll then need to hexedit this file:
To let it accept non-ATi boards, hexedit the file at offset 0x626e and alter "74 44" to "90 90" and save changes and away you go. Since making this change only, my 9000 PRO now works fine under RH 8.
This means no Vesa drivers! It means no more 60Hz screen refreshes! It means for GL acceleration. Run "glxinfo" for some information on the status of OpenGL and maybe "glx_gears" to actually test it. It should run very quickly.
Enjoy!
Re:How to get the ATi drivers working with ANY car (Score:2)
Half-Arsed Linux Support (Score:2)
ATI's support of Linux users is half-arsed at best.
Their own binary-only drivers only work on newer boards (8x00 and 9x00) so I can't use them. They're not interested in covering the DRI drivers to use S3 Texture Compression (which is patented) so I can't play UT-2003 (hence my brother's Geforce). The have requested that people not work on the TV-out features of the Radeons because it is patented, so I am stuck with VESA framebuffer tv-out or a very buggy hack of a thing for X that hasn't been developed for a year.
They aren't giving out information to the DRI team on how to use the more advanced features of the Radeons so the DRI drivers will fall further behind soon their closed source drivers (in feature set anyway).
I don't think I'll be buying another ATI card. I'll go back to nVidia and hope they stabalise their drivers. But at least the features are there and they 'just work'. ATI are starting to remind be of 3dfx
Re:Half-Arsed Linux Support (Score:2)
Remote OpenGL apps (Score:2, Interesting)
Currently most Linux graphic card drivers (X servers) do not support hardware-accelerated GLX/OpenGL for remote applications. They do support hardware acceleration for local applications. The effect is that remotely started OpenGL applications are hardly starting at all and are really slow. An exception are the closed source NVidia drivers. They have a direct rendering interface which supports indirect rendering for remote applications.
I use a central server to run my applications and then use X to display them remotely. Is the above excerpt out of date or do any other board manufacturers plan to incorporate the ability to run OpenGL apps from a server?
Brian.
Do they work anyway? (Score:2, Informative)
The xfree86 firegl side drivers leave the console looking like it went through a potato masher.
It's really sad that I bought an ATI card specifically because I knew ATI had open source drivers for their Radeon cards. Well, I waited over a year for drivers for the 8500 that don't work...
Wow, what loyalty to the linux community.
Closed source drivers maybe just PR, but at least nVidia has a reason why their closed source (The SGI contract or whatever). AFAIK (and corect me if I'm wrong) ATI has no real reason for closed source drivers.
DRI != source code. (Score:2)
Fixed by ATI in release 2.5.1 (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Luckily... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Luckily... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Luckily... (Score:5, Insightful)
A mindset more graphics cards companies should adopt.
Re:Luckily... (Score:2)
No, that's because Matrox doesn't have any decent knowledge locked up in their code. If they did, they'd have just given away a good part of their company to the competition and their officers should be sued by the stockholders.
And no, GPL protects *code*. It doesn't protect ideas, and that's what the competition is looking for with a fine tooth comb.
Now, having said that, it's the right thing to do if your expertise is in hardware, not in drivers.
I love choice! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Luckily... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Luckily... (Score:1)
Re:Luckily... (Score:2)
Re:Luckily... (Score:2)
Re:Luckily... (Score:2)
Puto
Re:Luckily... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Advice please help (Score:5, Informative)
Presuming you already have Linux installed, you should look in the various /usr/doc/whatever
directories belonging to the XFree86 stuff (there
will probably be a whole load of different packages
required for X, I don't know about Redhat/Mandrake
as I use Debian) and look for a file like README.DRI,
which might be gzipped (it is for me). The file also
tells you how to make sure that X will try to use
OpenGL (not difficult, may already be done for you!)
Alternatively, the actual DRI [sourceforge.net] webpages are more up to date, and more thorough about which versions of cards they support - look for the "status" page for a start!
Configuring stuff, heh, I forget! If you have X set up to use your card, and tell it to use OpenGL, it will know whether your card can do it or not, and will try to load the appropriate kernel module. In my case, using a G400 card, it doesn't manage this, as it wants to have the agpgart module installed before the mga module, but doesn't realise to do this, so when my machine's booted, I normally modprobe the agpgart module myself, and then the mga module, and then the OpenGL works fine. Really, I should set up the modules.conf files to do this automatically, but I can't be bothered.
Bear in mind, that the mga module is only right for using G400/G200 cards, and the other cards would want other kernel modules! Also, those other kernel modules might not have those same requirements. In short, your mileage may vary.
But to return to the point in hand: If you don't want to be downloading binary-only drivers, then nVidia based cards are NOT what you want; they have no opensource 3d drivers at all that I know of. Some of the ATi cards are supported out of the box (I don't know how well!!) and some are only supported by ATi's driver so far, the one in the article.
Re:Advice please help (Score:2, Informative)
Nonsense. You must be using Debian, or some other distro from the stoneage. When installing Mandrake (and presumably RedHat and SuSE) you are presented with a list of X-servers compatible to your card (the card is autodetected) and simply allowed to pick which option you want.
For me, with my Matrox G550 these options included XFree-3.3.6 with or without hardware 3D-acceleration, and XFree-4.2.1 again with or without 3D-acceleration. (why anyone would explicitly select "without" I don't know)
This has been the state of affairs atleast since Mandrake 8.0 released a year and a half ago.
Re:Advice please help (Score:2)
Re:Sad (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sad (Score:3, Insightful)
It's even worse for us linux guys. My home computer has an uptime of 23 days right now, i NEVER close my mozilla window, i NEVER close my consoles, i never stop XMMS (mp3 player). I have 4 desktops full of windows. I get up, work, go for a walk, work, go to work sometimes, back, work...
If i suddenly have to reboot to read a crappy word file that openoffice can't import correctly... my reaction is naturally "unfortunatelly" !
I'm used to to have a desktop that is just there. ALL the time. It's not much to redo everything but it's not something i want to do.
To sum up, for me it would be "unfortunate" if i had to boot a different linux distro as well.
And i did say MOST of the times. Sometimes, it's just bashing microsoft of course
IN SOVIET RUSSIA (Score:2, Funny)