Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Anne Wilson wrote:
I expect it's because having an xorg.conf is now discouraged, but as
often happens, many of us have hardware that can't really do without
it. I'm sure the day is coming - but it's not here yet :-)
We will get there faster, if people report bugs when autoconfiguration
does not work. It doesn't yet on systems where the hardware reports it
incorrectly, returns junk data or no data at all for instance but we can
still make it work if we knew the hardware details. In a report, you can
file the output of lspci, /var/log/Xorg.log without a custom xorg.conf
and any further information you want to provide.
system-config-display is a bandaid from the time when XFree86 was
stagnating badly but now that Xorg is going rapid development, it makes
sense to fix the underlying issues instead.
The underlying issue is that no one can write software to automate correct
handling of (a) hardware which hasn't been created when you write the software
or (b) people who want something you wouldn't have picked as the default.
Therefore you need an easy way for people to tell the system what they have and
how they want to use it. Any tool which assumes that you have a working
graphical display to run the display configure tool is not going to be a
solution. You must have some way to exchange information with the user using the
hardware you can make work, and that seems to be system-config-display.
--
Bill Davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx>
"We have more to fear from the bungling of the incompetent than from
the machinations of the wicked." - from Slashdot
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