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| Red Hat Linux 7.3: The Official Red Hat Linux Reference Guide |
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| Prev | Chapter 7. X Servers and Clients | Next |
Red Hat Linux uses XFree86 4 as the base X Window System, which includes
the various necessary X libraries, fonts, utilities, documentation,
and development tools. To provide maximum compatibility with older
hardware, as well as hardware that is not currently well supported by
XFree86 4, Red Hat Linux also provides the older XFree86 3 Server packages.
Both XFree86 server versions differ in design methodologies and, as
such, vary in features as well as configuration details.
The primary X server (XFree86 4) includes many cutting edge XFree86
technology enhancements such as hardware 3D acceleration support,
the XRender extension for anti-aliased fonts, a modular driver
based design, support for modern video hardware and input devices,
and many other features.
In contrast, the XFree86 3 server packages are standalone non-modular X
servers, each of which act as a display driver for specific video
hardware. If you are using an XFree86 3 server, you must have
the specific X server for your particular video card installed. These
older servers do not support many features found only in the newer
XFree86 4 servers and are only included for compatibility. The XFree86
3 backward compatibility servers are now deprecated and will eventually
be removed from future releases of Red Hat Linux.
The Red Hat Linux installation program installs the base components of
XFree86, any optional XFree86 packages you may choose to
install, the XFree86 4 X server, and any XFree86 3 X server
packages that may be needed for your hardware.
The X Window System resides primarily in two locations in the
file system.
- /usr/X11R6
A directory containing X client binaries (the
bin directory), assorted header files (the
include directory), libraries (the
lib directory), and manual pages (the
man directory), and various other X
documentation (the /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/doc/
directory).
- /etc/X11
The /etc/X11 directory hierarchy contains
all of the configuration files for the various components that
make up the X Window System. This includes configuration files
for the X server itself, the font server (xfs),
the X Display Manager (xdm), and many other
base components. Display managers such as gdm
and kdm, as well as various window managers,
and other X tools also store their configuration in this
hierarchy.
XFree86 version 4 server is a single binary executable —
/usr/X11R6/bin/XFree86. This server dynamically
loads various X server modules at runtime from the
/usr/X11R6/lib/modules/ directory including video drivers,
font engine drivers, and other modules as needed. Some of these modules
are automatically loaded by the server, whereas some are optional
features that you must specify in the XFree86 4 server's configuration
file /etc/X11/XF86Config-4 before they can be used.
The video drivers for XFree86 4 are located in the
/usr/X11R6/lib/modules/drivers/ directory. The DRI
hardware accelerated 3D drivers are located in the
/usr/X11R6/lib/modules/dri/ directory.
XFree86 version 3 servers are individual X server binaries, each of
which drive a certain range of video hardware. The installed XFree86
server binaries can be found in the /usr/X11R6/bin/
directory with names in the format of
XF86_server-type,
where
server-type is
the name of the server used. There are many different XFree86 3 servers
including the basic XF86_VGA16 and
XF86_SVGA servers, as well as more specialized
accelerated servers such as XF86_Mach64,
XF86_S3, XF86_AGX.
The XFree86 server configuration files are stored in the
/etc/X11/ directory. Since the XFree86 4 and
XFree86 3 servers use a different configuration file syntax which are
incompatible with each other, each has its own separate configuration
file. The XFree86 4 server uses
/etc/X11/XF86Config-4, while XFree86 3 uses
/etc/X11/XF86Config for X server configuration.
When Red Hat Linux is installed, configuration files for both XFree86 versions
are created using information gathered during the installation process.
If you use Xconfigurator to reconfigure a new video
card, both configuration files are regenerated. The configuration files are made up by a collection of sections, each
of which defines a particular aspect of the XFree86 server's operation.
Many of the configuration sections are similar in
both files, however there are many differences also. One notable
difference is that the XF86Config-4 configuration
file used by the XFree86 4 server contains new sections such as
ServerLayout and
Module, that are not found in the
version 3 configuration file. The XFree86 4 server allows the usage of
multiple input devices, such as mice, keyboards, and drawing tablets.
Each input device is presented in its own
InputDevice section, where it is
assigned an identifying name that tells you about the device. The
XFree86 3 server configures the mouse and keyboard via the
directives Keyboard and
Pointer.
While there is rarely a need to manually edit these files, it is
useful to know about the various sections and optional parameters
found in them.
Each section begins with a Section
"<section-name>"
line and ends with an EndSection
line. Within each of the sections, you will find several lines
containing an option name and at least one option value, occasionally
seen in quotes. Given the similarities between the two types of
configuration files, the following list explores the most useful
sections of an XFree86 version 4 file and the roles of various popular
settings.
- Device
Specifies information about the video card used by the
system. You must have at least one
Device section in your
configuration file. You may have multiple
Device sections in the case of
multiple video cards or multiple settings that can run a single
card. The following options are required or widely used:
BusID — Specifies the bus location of
the video card. This option is only necessary for systems
with multiple cards and must be set so that the
Device section will use the
proper settings for the correct card.
Driver — Tells XFree86 which driver to
load in order to use the video card.
Identifier — Provides a unique
name for this video card. Usually, this name is set to the
exact name of the video card used in the
Device section.
Screen — An optional setting used when
a video card has more than one head,
or connector, to go out to a separate monitor. If you have
multiple monitors connected to one video card, separate
Device sections must exist
for each of them with a different Screen
value for each Device
section. The value accepted by this option is a number
starting at 0 and increasing by one for
each head on the video card.
VideoRam — The amount of RAM
available on the video card in kilobytes. This setting is
not normally necessary since the XFree86 server can usually
probe the video card to autodetect the amount of video
RAM. But since there are some video cards XFree86 cannot
correctly autodetect, this option allows you to specify the
amount of video RAM.
- DRI
Direct Rendering Infrastructure (DRI)
is an interface which primarily allows 3D software applications
to take advantage of the 3D hardware acceleration capabilities
on modern supported video hardware. In addition, DRI can
improve 2D hardware acceleration performance when using drivers
that have been enhanced to use the DRI for 2D operations. This
section is ignored unless DRI is enabled in the
Module section.
Since different video cards use DRI in different ways. Before
changing any DRI values, read the
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/doc/README.DRI file for
specific information about your particular video card.
- Files
This section sets paths for services vital to the XFree86
server, such as the font path. Common options include:
FontPath — Sets the locations
where the XFree86 server can find fonts. Different fixed
paths to directories holding font files can be placed here,
separated by commas. By default, Red Hat Linux uses
xfs as the font server and points
FontPath to
unix/:7100. This tells the XFree86 server
to obtain font information by using UNIX-domain sockets for
inter process communication.
See the Section called Fonts for more information
concerning XFree86 and fonts. ModulePath — Allows you to set up
multiple directories to use for storing modules loaded by
the XFree86 server.
RgbPath — Tells the XFree86 server
where the RGB color database is located on the system. This
database file defines all valid color names in XFree86 and
ties them to specific RGB values.
- InputDevice
Configures an input device such as a mouse or keyboard used
to submit information into the system using the XFree86
server. Most systems have at least two
InputDevice sections, keyboard
and mouse. Each section includes these two lines:
Driver — Tells XFree86 the name of
the driver to load to use the device.
Identifier — Sets the name of the
device, usually the name of the device followed by a number,
starting with 0 for the first device. For
example, the first keyboard
InputDevice would have an
Identifier of Keyboard0.
Most InputDevice sections contain lines that
assign specific options to that particular device. Each of these
lines start with Option and contain the name of
the option in quotes, followed by the value to assign to that
option. Mice usually receive options such as
Protocol, such as PS/2, and
Device, which designates the mouse to use for
this section. The InputDevice section is well
commented, allowing you to configure additional options for your
particular devices by uncommenting certain lines.
- Module
Tells the XFree86 server which modules from the
/usr/X11R6/lib/modules/ directory to
load. Modules provide the XFree86 server with additional
functionality. You should not edit these
values.
- Monitor
Refers to the type of monitor used by the system. While one
Monitor section is the minimum, there may
be several Monitor sections, one for each
monitor in use with the machine.
 | Warning |
|---|
| | Be careful when manually editing values in the options of the
Monitor
section. Inappropriate values in this section could damage or
destroy your monitor. Consult the documentation that came with
your monitor for the safe operating parameters available.
|
The following options are usually configured:
HorizSync — Tells XFree86 the
range of horizontal sync frequencies compatible with the
monitor in kHz. These values are used as a guide by the
XFree86 server so that it will know whether to use a
particular Modeline entry's values with
this monitor.
Identifier — Provides a unique
name for this monitor, usually numbering each monitor
starting at 0. The first monitor would be
named Monitor0, the second
Monitor1, and so on.
Modeline — Used to specify the
video modes used by the monitor at particular resolutions,
with certain horizontal sync and vertical refresh
resolutions. Modeline entries are usually
preceded by a comment that explains what the mode line
specifies.
If your configuration file does not include comments for
the various mode lines, you can scan over the values (or
mode descriptions) to uncover what
the mode line is attempting to do. See the
XF86Config man page for detailed
explanations of each mode description section.
ModelName — An optional parameter
that displays the model name of the monitor.
VendorName — An optional
parameter that displays the vendor that manufactured the
monitor.
VertRefresh — Lists the vertical
refresh range frequencies supported by the monitor, in
kHz. These values are used as a guide by the XFree86 server
so that it will know whether to use a particular
Modeline entry's values with this monitor.
- Screen
Binds together a particular
Device and
Monitor that can be utilized as
a pair and contain certain settings. You must have at least one
Screen section in your
configuration file. The following options are common:
DefaultDepth — Tells the
Screen section the default
color depth to try in bits. 8 is the
default, 16 provides thousands of colors,
and 32 displays millions of colors.
Device — Signifies the name of
the Device section to use
with this Screen section.
Identifier — Identifies the
Screen section so that it
can be referred to by a
ServerLayout section and be
utilized.
Monitor — Tells the name of the
Monitor section to be used
with this Screen section.
You may also have a Display
subsection within the Screen
section which tells the XFree86 server the color depth
(Depth) and resolution (Mode)
to try first when using this particular monitor and video card.
- ServerFlags
Contains miscellaneous global XFree86 server settings. These
settings may be overridden by options placed in the
ServerLayout section. Among the
most useful settings:
DontZap — Prevents the use of the
[Ctrl]-[Alt]-[Backspace]
key combination to immediately terminate the XFree86 server.
DontZoom — Prevents cycling
through configured video resolutions using the
[Ctrl]-[Alt]-[Keypad-Plus]
and
[Ctrl]-[Alt]-[Keypad-Minus]
key combinations.
- ServerLayout
Binds together a Screen
section with the necessary
InputDevice sections and
various options to create a unified collection of preferences
used by the XFree86 server as it starts. If you have more than
one ServerLayout section, and
the one to use is not specified on the command line when
bringing up the XFree86 server, the first
ServerLayout section in the
configuration file is used.
The following options are used in a
ServerLayout section:
Identifier — A unique name used
to describe this
ServerLayout section.
InputDevice — The names of any
InputDevice sections to be
used with the XFree86 server. Most users will only have two
lines here, Keyboard0 and
Mouse0, the first keyboard and mouse
configured for the system. The options
CoreKeyboard and
CorePointer refer to the fact that these
are the preferred keyboard and mouse, respectively, to use
with the XFree86 server.
Screen — The name of the
Screen section to use. The
number to the left of the name of the
Screen section refers to
the particular screen number to use in a multi-head
configuration. For standard single-head video cards, this
value is 0. The numbers to the right give
the X and Y absolute coordinates for the upper-left corner
of the screen, by default 0 0.
Below is an example of a typical screen entry:
For more information, refer to the XF86Config man
page.
To review the current configuration of your XFree86 server, type the
xset -q command. This provides you with
information about your keyboard, pointer, screen saver, and font
paths.
| Prev | Home | Next | | X Servers and Clients | Up | Desktop Environments and Window Managers |
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Disclaimer: For authoritative source or latest update to this
documentation, please refer to http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/linux/ |
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Quotes: Tact is the ability to close your mouth before someone else wants to.
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