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rworkman: Do you have the sources for the Mesa package you're shipping somewhere? They don't seem to be in the stuff you've put up, only the final package is.
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Eeek, yes. Sorry for the oversight -- they're in a directory above the x11 sources. I've added an "EXTERNAL" directory in ./x11/src/ with links to mesa, libdrm, and xterm sources. Thanks for the heads-up.
For anyone who is vaguely interested in Evergreen - rworkman's packages above will give you working modesetting, but that's it.
If you want acceleration, you need to build the evergreen_accel branch of xf86-video-ati - the 6.13 series will only allow you to do modesetting.
Some caveats:
1) Not sure how stable it is - I managed to get an X crash in EXA within a few minutes of using it (though I'm still running on it now)
2) I've not been brave enough to re-enable compositing yet.
3) I'm running with 2.6.36-rc7 - you might be able to get away with 2.6.35, but the whole DRM area for these cards still seems to be going through a lot of churn, so probably better to stick with something quite recent.
As per the bug, you'll either need the drm-radeon-next branch of the drm-2.6 git tree, wait for 2.6.37 to start, or wait for patches to be backported to older releases to stop the segfaulting.
Last edited by cathectic; 10-10-2010 at 10:20 AM.
Reason: Updates
My CPU/GPU is intel i3. After using the new xorg, glxgears returned only about 60FPS, please refer to the following:
bash-4.1# glxgears
Running synchronized to the vertical refresh. The framerate should be
approximately the same as the monitor refresh rate.
303 frames in 5.0 seconds = 60.443 FPS
300 frames in 5.0 seconds = 59.978 FPS
300 frames in 5.0 seconds = 59.978 FPS
Repeating myself from the post above, I have a Fujitsu T900. It has a synaptics touchpad. Under Slack 13.1 (using various kernels, including the huge one) I get reports of unhappyness from Xorg.0.log. (Here is the output of grep Synapt /var/log/Xorg.0.log .)
Looks about right - in the past we had HAL doing this for us, so Slackware probably does need to provide a pre-populated /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d to do some of this.
It seems mesa 7.9 depends on talloc as a new requirement. Slackware provides it bundled with samba, but that's a rather large dep. to get opengl working out of the box (I'd also guess there are a few people who don't install, or wouldn't think to, for desktop use).
Any thoughts on splitting this out for l/ , and building samba against it? It seems most distros use this approach already. Installing it here makes opengl work again on my intel card ( where prior, "glxinfo | grep -i direct" showed a nasty error).
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