Mercurial > mplayer.hg
changeset 22684:00b7b3d4181e
wording/spelling/grammar/updates/cosmetics
author | diego |
---|---|
date | Sat, 17 Mar 2007 17:53:00 +0000 |
parents | 5bfd5bd0ef80 |
children | eb1e8b907a9d |
files | drivers/radeon/README |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 37 insertions(+), 41 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/drivers/radeon/README Sat Mar 17 15:53:30 2007 +0000 +++ b/drivers/radeon/README Sat Mar 17 17:53:00 2007 +0000 @@ -14,18 +14,18 @@ make make install -Anyway you should have 'Frame buffer support' compiled into linux-kernel -and at least '8bpp packed pixel support' compiled and installed as module. -(But if you plan to use this module with mplayer you also should have -16bpp, 24bpp and 32bpp pixel support compiled as modules). +Anyway you should have 'framebuffer support' compiled into linux-kernel +and at least '8bpp packed pixel support' compiled and installed as module. +(But if you plan to use this module with MPlayer you also should have +16bpp, 24bpp and 32bpp pixel support compiled as modules). Radeon video overlay ==================== - -Was designed for mplayer and currently can be used only by mplayer. -It's RGB-YUV BES for radeon cards (althrough there is experimental -support for rage128 / rage128pro chips). + +It was designed for MPlayer and currently can be used only by MPlayer. +It's RGB-YUV BES for Radeon cards (althrough there is experimental +support for Rage128 / Rage128pro chips). rage128_vid is contained within radeon_vid.c. As for a Rage128 framebuffer - use the one from your Linux distribution. @@ -36,13 +36,11 @@ Simply type two commands in this directory: make make install -If you install it first time then type also: -make nodes -Using with mplayer: +Using with MPlayer: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -Currently there is only way to use ATI's drivers: +Currently there is only one way to use ATI's drivers: mplayer -vo vesa:lvo:/dev/radeon_vid -<your vesa's options> filename or mplayer -vo vesa:lvo:/dev/rage128_vid -<your vesa's options> filename @@ -56,33 +54,32 @@ Configuring: ~~~~~~~~~~~~ -You can tune up some parameters with using following trick: -echo "parameter=value">/dev/radeon_vid +You can tune some parameters with the following trick: +echo "parameter=value" > /dev/radeon_vid Example (disables adaptive deinterlacing): -echo "deinterlace=off">/dev/radeon_vid +echo "deinterlace=off" > /dev/radeon_vid -To know more about these parameters - try read /dev/radeon_vid file ;) +To know more about these parameters - try reading the /dev/radeon_vid file ;) For example: cat /dev/radeon_vid List of parameters: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -if you have rage128 chip: +If you have Rage128 chip: brightness=decval (-64:+63) changes brightness -saturation=decval (0:+31) changes saturation 0 == grayscaled mode -else - if you have radeon: -brightness=decval (-1000:+1000) -1000 == black screen +saturation=decval (0:+31) changes saturation 0 == grayscale mode +else - if you have Radeon: +brightness=decval (-1000:+1000) -1000 == black screen saturation=decval (-1000:+1000) -1000 == grayscaled mode contrast=decval (-1000:+1000) -1000 == black screen hue=decval (-1000:+1000) -1000 == +1000 (full circle) all other values are within this range -Note: 0 is default value for every parameter on radeons -WARNING: This driver violates rule: "no float in the kernel". -So if you have problems then don't use color correction and -tell me about these problems. +Note: 0 is the default value for every parameter on Radeons. +WARNING: This driver violates the rule: "no float in the kernel". +So if you have problems then don't use color correction. double_buff=on/off enables/disables double buffering -deinterlace=on/off enables/disables adaprive deinterlacing +deinterlace=on/off enables/disables adaptive deinterlacing deinterlace_pattern=hexval defines deinterlacing pattern Driver parameters: @@ -92,34 +89,33 @@ Example: modprobe radeon_vid swap_fourcc=1 -List of driver's parameters: -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -mtrr=1/0 configures MTRR (if available) default = 1 -swap_fourcc=1/0 performs byte swapping of passed fourcc. - (It's required for compatibility with -vo mga) - -To know more about driver's parameters execute: +List of driver parameters: +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +mtrr=1/0 Configures MTRR (if available), default = 1. +swap_fourcc=1/0 Performs byte swapping of passed fourcc. + (It's required for compatibility with -vo mga.) + +To know more about driver parameters execute: modinfo radeon_vid or modinfo rage128_vid - + Note: ~~~~~ -For command line of mplayer: +For command line of MPlayer: You can pass only options with can be recognized by vo_vesa driver. -(Indeed radeon_vid and rage128_vid are stupid things and can create -video overlay only. But mode switching and other adjustement performs -vo_vesa driver. This mean that they use VESA BIOS as graphics server). +(Indeed radeon_vid and rage128_vid are stupid things and can only create +video overlay. Mode switching and other adjustments are performed by the +vo_vesa driver. This mean that they use the VESA BIOS as graphics server.) -Conslusion: +Conclusion: ~~~~~~~~~~~ This stuff (radeon(rage128)_vid) currently doesn't support any standards. -So after implementing linux standards I'll fully rewrite this driver. Full example: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ modprobe radeon_vid mtrr=1 -echo "deinterlace_pattern=F0055555">/dev/radeon_vid +echo "deinterlace_pattern=F0055555" > /dev/radeon_vid mplayer -vo vesa:lvo:/dev/radeon_vid -fs -zoom -bpp 32 filename -Enjoy! \ No newline at end of file +Enjoy!