Mercurial > mplayer.hg
view drivers/README @ 2168:21a8f158d19f
bugfixes: last 3 lines not brightness/contrast corrected
brightness statistics messed up with initial black pic
changed initial values of the brightness statistics
C++ -> C conversation
QP range question solved (very likely 1<=QP<=32 according to arpi)
new experimental vertical deblocking filter
RK filter has 3dNow support now (untested)
author | michael |
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date | Thu, 11 Oct 2001 22:35:45 +0000 |
parents | 3b5f5d1c5041 |
children | 6d257bd87fce |
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mga_vid - MGA G200/G400 YUV Overlay kernel module Author: Aaron Holtzman <aholtzma@ess.engr.uvic.ca>, Oct 1999 Contributions by: Fredrik Vraalsen <vraalsen@cs.uiuc.edu> Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk> WARNING ----- WARNING This code messes with your video card and your xserver. It will probably lock up your box, format your hard drive, and cause your brand new g400 MAX to spout 6 inch flames. You have been warned. WARNING ----- WARNING What does this code do? mga_vid is a kernel module that utilitizes the Matrox g200/g400 video scaler/overlay unit to perform YUV->RGB colorspace conversion and arbitrary video scaling. mga_vid is also a monster hack. How does mga_vid work? This kernel module sets up the BES (backend scaler) with approriate values based on parameters supplied via ioctl. It also maps a chunk of video memory into userspace via mmap. This memory is stolen from X (which may decide to write to it later). The application can then write image data directly to the frame buffer (if it knows the right padding, etc). How do I know if mga_vid works on my system? There are test applications called mga_vid_test_g400 and mga_vid_test_g200. Use the appropriate one for your card. This test code should draw some nice 256x256 images for you if all is working well.