|
|

楼主 |
发表于 2006-8-9 16:09:05
|
显示全部楼层
2楼法语实在太难看,通过google翻译成英语
ATI Proprietary Linux x86 Display Drivers Version 8.27.10
By Remi, Saturday July 29, 2006 with 17:05:: General:: #176:: rss
English I' ve just tried this. Not really has need, just to satisfy my curiosity.
French I have just tested version 8.27.10 of the pilot owner ATI for Linux. Not really by need, just to appease my curiosity.
1. Context
I used for a long time the RPM of the pilot owner built by Livna because their job facilitated the installation largely. However, if all went well to version 8.24.8 (of memory), the new versions did not function any more for my configuration. During some time I recompilé version 8.24.8, but with the last cores it is not possible any more (finally would be necessary to seek/manufacture corrective measures for an obsolete version).
Thus for soon 2 months I have thus turned with the free pilot provided out of standard by the Fedora project. And it goes rather well for a simple user as me which never plays.
By reading this morning Release Notes (notes of version) of new version 8.27.10 (of July 28) I found this advertisement:
Fedora Core Package Support
This release of the ATI Proprietary Linux driver adds Fedora Core package support one signal of the growing list of per distribution generatable packages. Fedora Core users are encouraged to uses this mechanism to install the ATI Linux Proprietary Driver.
What means (approximate translation):
Support of package for Fedora Core
This version of the pilots propiétaire ATI for Linux adds the support of package for Fedora Core to the growing list of the distributions for which packages can be generated. The users of Fedora Core are encouraged to use this mechanism to install the pilot owner ATI for Linux.
I launched out thus and here a small summary of the step:
2. To download
Since the official site: ATI Driver To install (24 Mo).
3. To generate the RPM
To realize as a simple user.
chmod +x ATI-driver-to install-8.27.10-x86.run
./ati-driver-installer-8.27.10-x86.run \ --buildpkg Fedora/FC5
Result: 4 RPM
* ATI-fglrx-8.27.10-1.fc5.i386.rpm (the pilot)
* ATI-fglrx-control-panel-8.27.10-1.fc5.i386.rpm (the control panel)
* ATI-fglrx-devel-8.27.10-1.fc5.i386.rpm (headings and libraries of development)
* kernel-module-ATI-fglrx-2.6.17-1.2157_FC5-8.27.10-1.fc5.i386.rpm (the module specific to the core used)
Well on one will need renouveller this operation for each update of the core.
4. To install the pilot
To make under the account administrator (root), in text mode
init 3
rpm - Uvh *ATI-fglrx*.rpm
rmmod radeon
rmmod drm
aticonfig --initial
init 5
Another solution consists with simply publishing the /etc/X11/xorg.conf file, replacing “ATI” by “fglrx” and has to start again the PC.
Result:
fglrxinfo display: : 0.0 screen: 0 OpenGL vendor string: ATI Technologies Inc. OpenGL renderer string: RADEON 9250/9200 Series GDR Generic OpenGL version string: 1.3.1091 (X4.3.0-8.27.6)
And for GEARs, a score practically doubled.
5. Conclusion
It is simple and it goes!
One would have liked:
* to be able to rebuild only the module of the core
* to be able to rebuild for a core different from that used (trés useful at the time of the updates)
* to have RPM respecting the standards of Fedora (kmod… and xorg-x11-drv…)
* to have directly a deposit with the format yum |
|