Priority | medium |
---|---|
Bug ID | 80868 |
Assignee | dri-devel@lists.freedesktop.org |
Summary | Support screen scaling modes for external monitors |
Severity | enhancement |
Classification | Unclassified |
OS | All |
Reporter | kamil.paral@gmail.com |
Hardware | Other |
Status | NEW |
Version | XOrg CVS |
Component | DRM/Radeon |
Product | DRI |
As we steadily progress into the year of Linux gaming, there will be many requests regarding games. This is one of them :) Currently, it is possible to set scaling mode for a monitor only if the monitor is internal (LVDS, eDP). This is done through xrandr: $ xrandr --prop Screen 0: minimum 320 x 200, current 1680 x 1050, maximum 8192 x 8192 LVDS1 connected primary 1680x1050+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 331mm x 207mm <snip> scaling mode: Full aspect supported: None, Full, Center, Full aspect <snip> $ xrandr --output LVDS1 --set "scaling mode" "Center" However, it is not possible to do this for external panels (VGA, DVI, HDMI, DP). The "scaling mode" property is not exported for these panels (this was confirmed to me by ckoenig and agd5f on the #radeon irc channel, many thanks). Please allow users to set scaling mode even for external panels. There are many use cases for it, mainly related to gaming. Note: Many panels provide options to do the scaling on their own, however, only the very expensive ones provide good options. For example, the majority of "mainstream" panels don't provide the "center" scaling mode - however, that is very useful when playing older lower-resolution games when you prefer smaller and sharp image instead of larger and blurry. Second example are certain panels which support "full aspect" mode only for a small selection or resolutions, otherwise they simply scale to "full" ignoring image aspect ratio. For these panels, GPU scaling is essential if the user doesn't want to see distorted aspect ratio image. My personal use case is buying BenQ BL2411PT 1920x1200 panel, which *can not* display 1920x1080 resolution with correct aspect ratio - it always stretches it vertically. Yes, it's very dumb, yet that's how modern panels commonly work (and not just the cheap ones). This hasn't been a large issue in the past, because we had no games and opensource drivers were hardly able to run them anyway. Both things are changing rapidly. The proprietary AMD and NVIDIA drivers have been offering GPU scaling functionality for a long time, both on Linux and Windows. Here's an example of their GUI configuration: https://www.codeweavers.com/support/wiki/linux/faq/43_game_stretch Please allow us to use GPU scaling even with radeon driver. Thank you. There has been some technical details on the IRC, it is linked here: http://paste.fedoraproject.org/115407/ It seems to me that this functionality could be implemented in a simple and straightforward way: a) provide a single configuration option - "scaling mode" b) on internal panels default to "Full aspect" (which you already do) - that is reasonable default, because these panels have no control buttons c) on external panels default to "None" - that allows the user to easily configure scaling through the panel. Only if the user is dissatisfied, he/she can enable GPU scaling through xrandr. And here's one more user seconding my thoughts on the IRC: AbortRetryFail: 1:1 unscaled output for LCDs would be awesome. AbortRetryFail: 1280x720 looks horrible scaled up to fit a 1366x768 LCD Thanks.
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