Does anyone know how, or had any success on installing the latest ATI proprietary drivers with this agp card on Debian etch? For a 2 weeks now I've been trying to get this card to have 3D acceleration but to no avail. So far nothing on Debian etch 4.0r2, Ubuntu gutsy, Slackware current, Fedora 8, Linux Mint, Mepis, Mandriva, and Gentoo. All of which were fresh installs/updates or boot from a Live CD. Both Gentoo and Mandriva crashed when trying to boot the Live Cd's so that was as far as I had gotten with those two. So I'm back to a fresh install of Debian. Roughly the process I've followed for Debian and Ubuntu are...
Download the installer, currently "ati-driver-installer-8-01-x86.x86_64.run"
cd to the download directory
# apt-get install module-assistant build-essential fakeroot dh-make debconf libstdc++5 gcc-3.3-base linux-headers-$(uname -r) gcc autoconf automake1.9 libtool flex bison cvs
# chmod +x ati-driver-installer-8-01-x86.x86_64.run
# ./ati-driver-installer-8-01-x86.x86_64.run --buildpkg Debian/etch
# dpkg -i *.deb
# cd /usr/src
# m-a build fglrx
# m-a install fglrx (also tried it in one command #m-a a-i fglrx)
#aticonfig --initial
I've tried a few variations of that list of commands which include adding symlinks and not using module assistant but compiling and moving the fglrx.ko manually. Some guides I've tried..
I gave Envy a go with the same results. That was the only method I tried that had errors, but those were md5 mismatch errors when downloading the ati installer. So far no matter what install method I try, when I type "fglrxinfo" I get..
display: :0.0 screen: 0
OpenGL vendor string: Mesa project: www.mesa3d.org
OpenGL renderer string: Mesa GLX Indirect
OpenGL version string: 1.2 (1.5 Mesa 6.5.1)
This is an entry from the xorg.0.log
(II) fglrx(0): driver needs X.org 7.1.x.y with x.y >= 0.0
(II) fglrx(0): detected X.org 7.1.1.0
(EE) fglrx(0): atiddxDriScreenInit failed, GPS not been initialized.
(WW) fglrx(0): ***********************************************
(WW) fglrx(0): * DRI initialization failed! *
(WW) fglrx(0): * (maybe driver kernel module missing or bad) *
(WW) fglrx(0): * 2D acceleraton available (MMIO) *
(WW) fglrx(0): * no 3D acceleration available *
(WW) fglrx(0): ********************************************* *
That entry is from Debian, the other distributions just hard lock.
Upon searching more I found a post here that boasts a solution..
However that solution does not work with Ubuntu gutsy or Debian etch. With gutsy I got the hard locked black screen, for both repository drivers and the current ones from ATI, and Debian just defaults to mesa. I think Lolo Uila is on the right track of bypassing the recognition of the R570 chip as a PCIe bus. This past few weeks I've read alot of into about the ati proprietary drivers, compiling a kernel with agp support (CONFIG_AGP), and native PCIe gpu's that use adapters for the AGP bus. But I've found nothing that can help me so far.
Some spec's on my system... ASUS p4c800e-deluxe, p4 3.2Ghz, 1024mb DDR, 8x AGP Sapphire x1950Pro 512mb GDDR3.
Does anyone have any ideas of how blacklisting fools the Mint clone into recognizing the card correctly? Or how I can have the same effect on Debian, or Ubuntu if necessary?
Any help on this is GREATLY appreciated.
THANKS in advance!
Download the installer, currently "ati-driver-installer-8-01-x86.x86_64.run"
cd to the download directory
# apt-get install module-assistant build-essential fakeroot dh-make debconf libstdc++5 gcc-3.3-base linux-headers-$(uname -r) gcc autoconf automake1.9 libtool flex bison cvs
# chmod +x ati-driver-installer-8-01-x86.x86_64.run
# ./ati-driver-installer-8-01-x86.x86_64.run --buildpkg Debian/etch
# dpkg -i *.deb
# cd /usr/src
# m-a build fglrx
# m-a install fglrx (also tried it in one command #m-a a-i fglrx)
#aticonfig --initial
I've tried a few variations of that list of commands which include adding symlinks and not using module assistant but compiling and moving the fglrx.ko manually. Some guides I've tried..
I gave Envy a go with the same results. That was the only method I tried that had errors, but those were md5 mismatch errors when downloading the ati installer. So far no matter what install method I try, when I type "fglrxinfo" I get..
display: :0.0 screen: 0
OpenGL vendor string: Mesa project: www.mesa3d.org
OpenGL renderer string: Mesa GLX Indirect
OpenGL version string: 1.2 (1.5 Mesa 6.5.1)
This is an entry from the xorg.0.log
(II) fglrx(0): driver needs X.org 7.1.x.y with x.y >= 0.0
(II) fglrx(0): detected X.org 7.1.1.0
(EE) fglrx(0): atiddxDriScreenInit failed, GPS not been initialized.
(WW) fglrx(0): ***********************************************
(WW) fglrx(0): * DRI initialization failed! *
(WW) fglrx(0): * (maybe driver kernel module missing or bad) *
(WW) fglrx(0): * 2D acceleraton available (MMIO) *
(WW) fglrx(0): * no 3D acceleration available *
(WW) fglrx(0): ********************************************* *
That entry is from Debian, the other distributions just hard lock.
Upon searching more I found a post here that boasts a solution..
However that solution does not work with Ubuntu gutsy or Debian etch. With gutsy I got the hard locked black screen, for both repository drivers and the current ones from ATI, and Debian just defaults to mesa. I think Lolo Uila is on the right track of bypassing the recognition of the R570 chip as a PCIe bus. This past few weeks I've read alot of into about the ati proprietary drivers, compiling a kernel with agp support (CONFIG_AGP), and native PCIe gpu's that use adapters for the AGP bus. But I've found nothing that can help me so far.
Some spec's on my system... ASUS p4c800e-deluxe, p4 3.2Ghz, 1024mb DDR, 8x AGP Sapphire x1950Pro 512mb GDDR3.
Does anyone have any ideas of how blacklisting fools the Mint clone into recognizing the card correctly? Or how I can have the same effect on Debian, or Ubuntu if necessary?
Any help on this is GREATLY appreciated.
THANKS in advance!
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