Provided by: xserver-xorg-video-sis_0.10.7-0ubuntu6_amd64 bug

NAME

       sis - SiS and XGI video driver

SYNOPSIS

       Section "Device"
         Identifier "devname"
         Driver "sis"
         ...
       EndSection

DESCRIPTION

       sis is an Xorg driver for SiS (Silicon Integrated Systems) and XGI video chips. The driver is accelerated
       and  provides  support  for  colordepths  of  8,  16  and 24 bpp. XVideo, Render and other extensions are
       supported as well.

SUPPORTED HARDWARE

       The sis driver supports PCI, AGP and PCIe video cards based on the following chipsets:

       SiS5597/5598  SiS530/620  SiS6326/AGP/DVD  SiS300/305  SiS540  SiS630/730  SiS315/E/H/PRO  SiS550/551/552
       SiS650/651/661/741 SiS330 (Xabre) SiS760/761 XGI Volari V3/V5/V8 XGI Volari Z7

       In the following text, the following terms are used:

       old series for SiS5597/5598, 530/620 and 6326/AGP/DVD

       300 series for SiS300/305, 540 and 630/730

       315/330/340  series  for SiS315, 55x, 330, 661/741/76x (plus M, FX, MX, GX variants thereof), 340 and all
       XGI chips.

CONFIGURATION DETAILS

       Please refer to xorg.conf(5) for general configuration details.  This section only  covers  configuration
       details specific to this driver.

       Detailed      information      on      all      supported      options     can     be     obtained     at
       http://www.winischhofer.eu/linuxsisvga.shtml

       This manpage only covers a subset of the supported options.

       1. For all supported chipsets

       The following driver options are supported on all chipsets:

       Option "NoAccel" "boolean"
              Disable or enable 2D acceleration. Default: acceleration is enabled.

       Option "HWCursor" "boolean"
              Enable or disable the HW cursor. Default: HWCursor is on.

       Option "SWCursor" "boolean"
              The opposite of HWCursor. Default: SWCursor is off.

       Option "Rotate" "string"
              Rotate the display clockwise ("CW") or counter-clockwise  ("CCW").  This  mode  is  unaccelerated.
              Using  this  option  disables  XVideo  and  the  Resize and Rotate extension (RandR). Rotation and
              reflection (see below) are mutually exclusive.  Default: no rotation.

       Option "Reflect" "string"
              Reflect (mirror) the display horizontally ("X"), vertically ("Y") or both  ("XY").  This  mode  is
              unaccelerated.  Using  this  option  disables  XVideo and the Resize and Rotate extension (RandR).
              Rotation (see above) and reflection are mutually exclusive.  Default: no reflection.

       Option "CRT1Gamma" "boolean"
              Enable or disable gamma correction. (On the 300 and 315/330/340 series, this option  only  affects
              CRT1 output).  Default: Gamma correction is enabled.

       2. Old series specific information

       The  driver  will  auto-detect the amount of video memory present for all these chips, but in the case of
       the 6326, it will limit the memory size to 4MB. This is because the 6326's 2D  engine  can  only  address
       4MB.  The remaining memory seems to be intended for 3D texture data, since only the 3D engine can address
       RAM above 4MB. However, you can override this limitation  using  the  "VideoRAM"  option  in  the  Device
       section  if your board has more than 4MB and you need to use it. However, 2D acceleration, XVideo and the
       HWCursor will be disabled in this case.

       For the 6326, the driver has two built-in modes for high resolutions which you should use instead of  the
       default  ones. These are named "SIS1280x1024-75" and "SIS1600x1200-60" and they will be added to the list
       of default modes. To use these modes, just place them in your Screen section. Example:

       Modes "SIS1600x1200-60" "SIS1280x1024x75" "1024x768" ...

       Of these modes, 1280x1024 is only available at 8, 15 and 16bpp. 1600x1200 is available at 8bpp only.

       TV support for the 6326

       TV output is supported for the 6326. The driver will auto detect a connected TV and in this case add  the
       following   display   modes  to  the  list  of  available  display  modes:  "PAL800x600",  "PAL800x600U",
       "PAL720x540", "PAL640x480", "NTSC640x480", "NTSC640x480U" and "NTSC640x400".  Use these  modes  like  the
       hi-res modes described above.

       The following driver Options are supported on the old series:

       Option "TurboQueue" "boolean"
              Enable or disable TurboQueue mode.  Default: off for SIS530/620, on for the others

       Option "FastVram" "boolean"
              Enable  or  disable  FastVram mode.  Enabling this sets the video RAM timing to one cycle per read
              operation instead of two cycles. Disabling this will set two cycles for read and write operations.
              Leaving this option out uses the default, which varies depending on the chipset.

       Option "NoHostBus" "boolean"
              (SiS5597/5598 only). Disable CPU-to-VGA host  bus  support.  This  speeds  up  CPU  to  video  RAM
              transfers. Default: Host bus is enabled.

       Option "NoXVideo" "boolean"
              Disable XV (XVideo) extension support. Default: XVideo is on.

       Option "NoYV12" "boolean"
              Disable  YV12  Xv support. This might me required due to hardware bugs in some chipsets. Disabling
              YV12 support forces Xv-aware applications to use YUV2 or XShm for  video  output.   Default:  YV12
              support is on.

       Option "TVStandard" "string"
              (6326 only) Valid parameters are PAL or NTSC.  The default is set by a jumper on the card.

       Option "TVXPosOffset" "integer"
              (6326  only)  This  option  allows  tuning the horizontal position of the image for TV output. The
              range is from -16 to 16. Default: 0

       Option "TVYPosOffset" "integer"
              (6326 only) This option allows tuning the vertical position of the image for TV output. The  range
              is from -16 to 16. Default: 0

       Option "SIS6326TVEnableYFilter" "boolean"
              (6326 only) This option allows enabling/disabling the Y (chroma) filter for TV output.

       Option "SIS6326TVAntiFlicker" "string"
              (6326 only) This option allow enabling/disabling the anti flicker facility for TV output. Possible
              parameters  are OFF, LOW, MED, HIGH or ADAPTIVE.  By experience, ADAPTIVE yields the best results,
              hence it is the default.

       2. 300 and 315/330/340 series specific information

       The 300 and 315/330/340 series, except the XGI Z7, feature two CRT controllers and very often come with a
       video bridge for controlling LCD and TV output. Hereinafter, the term CRT1 refers to the  VGA  output  of
       the chip, and CRT2 refers to either LCD, TV or secondary VGA. Due to timing reasons, only one CRT2 output
       can  be  active  at  the same time. But this limitation does not apply to using CRT1 and CRT2 at the same
       time which makes it possible to run the driver in dual head mode.

       The driver supports the following video bridges:

       SiS301 SiS301B(-DH) SiS301C SiS301LV SiS302(E)LV

       Instead of a video bridge, some machines have a third party  LVDS  transmitter  to  control  LCD  panels,
       and/or a Chrontel 7005 or 7019 for TV output. All these are supported as well.

       About TV output

       The  driver fully supports standard (PAL, NTSC, PAL-N, PAL-M) S-video or composite output as well as high
       definition TV (HDTV) output via YPbPr plugs.  For more information on HDTV, please consult  the  author's
       website.

       As  regards  S-video  and  CVBS  output,  the SiS301 and the Chrontel 7005 only support resolutions up to
       800x600. All others support resolutions up to 1024x768. However, due to a hardware bug, Xvideo  might  be
       distorted on SiS video bridges if running NTSC or PAL-M at 1024x768.

       About XVideo support

       XVideo  is  supported  on  all  chipsets  of both families (except the XGI Volari Z7 which lacks hardware
       support for video overlays). However, there  are  some  differences  in  hardware  features  which  cause
       limitations.   The  300 series as well as the SiS55x, M650, 651, 661FX, M661FX, M661MX, 741, 741GX, M741,
       76x, M76x support two video overlays. The SiS315/H/PRO, 650/740, 330, 340 and the XGI Volari V3,  V5  and
       V8  chips  support  only  one such overlay. On chips with two overlays, one overlay is used for CRT1, the
       other for CRT2. On the other chipsets, the option "XvOnCRT2" can be used to  select  the  desired  output
       device (CRT1 or CRT2).

       About Merged Framebuffer support

       Merged  framebuffer  mode is similar to dual head/Xinerama mode (for using two output devices of one card
       at the same time), but has a few advantages which make me recommend it strongly over Xinerama. Please see
       http://www.winischhofer.eu/linuxsisvga.shtml for detailed information.

       About dual-head support

       Dual head mode with or without Xinerama is fully supported, be it with one card driving two  outputs,  be
       it  two  cards.  Note  that  colordepth  8 is not supported in dual head mode if run on one card with two
       outputs.

       The following driver Options are supported on the 300 and 315/330/340 series:

       Option "NoXVideo" "boolean"
              Disable XV (XVideo) extension support.  Default: XVideo is on.

       Option "XvOnCRT2" "boolean"
              On chipsets with only one video overlay, this option can used to bind the overlay to CRT1 (  if  a
              monitor  is  detected  and  if  this  option is either unset or set to false ) or CRT2 ( if a CRT2
              device is detected or forced, and if this option is set to true ). If either only CRT1 or CRT2  is
              detected,  the  driver  decides automatically. In Merged Framebuffer mode, this option is ignored.
              Default: overlay is used on CRT1

       Option "ForceCRT1" "boolean"
              Force CRT1 to be on of off. If a monitor is connected, it will be detected  during  server  start.
              However,  some  old monitors are not detected correctly. In such cases, you may set this option to
              on in order to make the driver initialize CRT1 anyway.  If this option is set to off , the  driver
              will switch off CRT1.  Default: auto-detect

       Option "ForceCRT2Type" "string"
              Force  display  type  to one of: NONE , TV , SVIDEO , COMPOSITE , SVIDEO+COMPOSITE , SCART , LCD ,
              VGA ; NONE will disable CRT2. The SVIDEO, COMPOSITE, SVIDEO+COMPOSITE and SCART parameters are for
              SiS video bridges only and can be used to force the driver to use a specific TV  output  connector
              (if present). For further parameters, see the author's website.  Default: auto detect.

       Option "CRT2Gamma" "boolean"
              Enable  or disable gamma correction for CRT2. Only supported for SiS video bridges. Default: Gamma
              correction for CRT2 is on.

       Option "TVStandard" "string"
              Force the TV standard to either PAL or NTSC.  On some machines with 630, 730 and  the  315/330/340
              series, PALM , PALN and NTSCJ are supported as well. Default: BIOS setting.

       Option "TVXPosOffset" "integer"
              This  option  allows  tuning the horizontal position of the image for TV output. The range is from
              -32 to 32. Not supported on the Chrontel 7019. Default: 0

       Option "TVYPosOffset" "integer"
              This option allows tuning the vertical position of the image for TV output. The range is from  -32
              to 32. Not supported on the Chrontel 7019. Default: 0

       Option "SISTVXScale" "integer"
              This  option selects the horizontal zooming level for TV output. The range is from -16 to 16. Only
              supported on SiS video bridges. Default: 0

       Option "SISTVYScale" "integer"
              This option selects the vertical zooming level for TV output  in  the  following  modes:  640x480,
              800x600.  On the 315/330/340 series, also 720x480, 720x576 and 768x576. The range is from -4 to 3.
              Only supported on SiS video bridges. Default: 0

       Option "CHTVOverscan" "boolean"
              On machines with a Chrontel TV encoder, this can be used to force  the  TV  mode  to  overscan  or
              underscan.  on means overscan, off means underscan.  Default: BIOS setting.

       Option "CHTVSuperOverscan" "boolean"
              On  machines  with  a Chrontel 7005 TV encoder, this option enables a super-overscan mode. This is
              only supported if the TV standard is PAL. Super overscan will produce an image on the TV which  is
              larger than the viewable area.

       The  driver  supports many more options. Please see http://www.winischhofer.eu/linuxsisvga.shtml for more
       information.

       3. 300 series specific information

       DRI is supported on the 300 series only. On Linux, prior to kernel 2.6.3, DRI requires the  kernel's  SiS
       framebuffer driver ( sisfb ). The SiS DRM kernel driver as well as the SiS DRI client driver are required
       in any case.

       Sisfb,  if  installed  and running, takes care of memory management for texture data. In order to prevent
       the X Server and sisfb from overwriting each other's data, sisfb reserves an amount of video  memory  for
       the X driver.  This amount can either be selected using sisfb's mem parameter, or auto-selected depending
       on the amount of total video RAM available.

       Sisfb  can  be  used  for memory management only, or as a complete framebuffer driver. If you start sisfb
       with a valid mode (ie you gain a graphical console), the X driver can communicate with sisfb and  doesn't
       require any manual configuration for finding out about the video memory it is allowed to use.

       However,  if you are running a 2.4 series Linux kernel and use sisfb for video memory management only, ie
       you started sisfb with mode=none and still have a text mode console, there is  no  communication  between
       sisfb and the X driver. For this purpose, the

       Option "MaxXFBMem" "integer"

       exists.  This  option must be set to the same value as given to sisfb through its "mem" parameter, ie the
       amount of memory to use for X in kilobytes.

       If you started sisfb without the mem argument, sisfb will reserve

       12288KB if more than 16MB of total video RAM is available,

       8192KB if between 12 and 16MB of video RAM is available,

       4096KB in all other cases.

       If you intend to use DRI on an integrated chipset (540, 630, 730), I recommend setting  the  total  video
       memory in the BIOS setup utility to 64MB.

       PLEASE  NOTE:  As of Linux 2.6.3 and under *BSD, sisfb is not required for memory management. Hence, this
       option is mandatory on such systems not running sisfb to decide how much memory X should reserve for DRI.
       If the option is omitted, DRI will have no memory assigned, and  all  DRI  applications  will  quit  with
       errors like "failed to allocate Z-buffer" or the like.

       Option "DRI" "boolean"
              This option allows enabling or disabling DRI. By default, DRI is on.

       Option "AGPSize" "integer"
              This  option  allows  selecting  the amount of AGP memory to be used for DRI.  The amount is to be
              specified in megabyte, the default is 8.

KNOWN BUGS

       none.

SEE ALSO

       Xorg(1), xorg.conf(5), Xserver(1), X(7)

       http://www.winischhofer.eu/linuxsisvga.shtml for more information and updates

AUTHORS

       Author: Thomas Winischhofer. Formerly based on code by Alan Hourihane, Mike Chapman,  Juanjo  Santamarta,
       Mitani Hiroshi, David Thomas, Sung-Ching Lin, Ademar Reis.

X Version 11                                  xf86-video-sis 0.10.7                                       SIS(4)