Chapter 6. The X Window System
99
Device
Specifies information about the video card used by the system. You must have at least one
De
vice
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 sys
tems 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 ap
plications to take advantage of the 3D hardware acceleration capabilities on modern supported
video hardware. In addition, DRI can improve 2D hardware acceleration performance when us
ing 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 (IPC).
See Section 6.5 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.
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