Yeap, that's the handoff issue indeed. It was fixed in the current 12.10 daily build.
The poulsbo situation isn't really that bad with the current kernel. For my device, it still doesn't turn off the monitor correctly, but it at least lets me lower the brightness of it, while still allowing for displaying at native resolution. That's all only in the daily build, however.
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Years Later, Intel Poulsbo Remains A Bloody Mess
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Originally posted by lucazade View PostThe splitted screen is due to a bug of Ubuntu, not to gma500_gfx driver.
There is a solution but still not integrated in ubuntu backports packages:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+s...ts/+bug/914311
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I bought the Fit-PC2 when it was brand spanking new and to be honest I was very disappointed (and a bit pissed) when I realized there was a black box GPU inside. I don't blame Intel for this, it's clearly PVR's fault.
I've fixed many of the pieces (SDVO, connector / encoder abstractions, vblank support, hardware cursor, bug fixes, etc...) in gma500_gfx that makes the Fit-PC2 tick. I have done this in my spare time (and I'm no GPU expert) on hardware I've paid for myself. There are still things that can be worked upon such as hooking up the 2D bits to a DDX driver, SDVO hotplug support, overlay support (If I can figure out how to reach it) but it starts to feel rather pointless.
What makes me sad is the total lack of interest shown by the community and vendors for this driver. On my box the driver is working fine but every now and then I stumble across forum posts with people complaining about bugs I had no idea about. We need bug reports in order to fix bugs. Maybe there just isn't enough users with Poulsbo hardware and it's probably a lost cause since the hardware is obsolete anyways.
It seems about time to retire my Poulsbo hardware and find something else to contribute to.
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blacklisting the vt.handoff=7 (provided only in Ubuntu) solves the splitted screen at least here on my acer751h.
When the handoff feauture is enabled the KMS and the framebuffer are not correctly initializated...
Alan Cox is aware of the incompatibility with handoff but it is not on top of his todo list (he uses fedora, not ubuntu!)
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Originally posted by lucazade View PostThe splitted screen is due to a bug of Ubuntu, not to gma500_gfx driver.
There is a solution but still not integrated in ubuntu backports packages:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+s...ts/+bug/914311
Leave a comment:
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I was experiencing the screen split on Fedora 17 beta. Reset the x server (ctrl-alt-backspace) and the screen will unsplit. Problem seems to be fixed with kernel 3.4, its now 100%. Try running Fedora 17 fully updated and in fallback mode or with something lighter than gnome3. Guaranteed to work perfect with that hardware.
I am now fully satisfied with that machine. Acceleration with that graphics chip is irrelevant, the CPU isn't strong enough to run anything heavy enough to benefit from acceleration anyway. Nice portable little netbook/tablet, fully working suspend/resume, 32GB SSD, really nice now.
Only shame is that it took so long to get to this stage. Because of that, I will never buy another system with intel cpu or gpu.Last edited by droidhacker; 19 June 2012, 09:09 AM.
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The splitted screen is due to a bug of Ubuntu, not to gma500_gfx driver.
There is a solution but still not integrated in ubuntu backports packages:
When using a gma500 based netbook with psb_gfx driver (shipped by default with kernel => 3.x) if the option "vt.handoff=7" is enabled (by default) the psb_gfx driver cannot initialize itself correctly ending up in a blank screen instead of X. I believe the KMS part of psb_gfx is not able to create the framebuffer and use it on VT7 with the fbdev xorg driver. + tried nightly iso image and already tried mainline kernels. WORKAROUND: Removing vt.handoff=7 settings from grub (temporary or by e...
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Years Later, Intel Poulsbo Remains A Bloody Mess
Phoronix: Years Later, Intel Poulsbo Remains A Bloody Mess
While Intel's original GMA500 "Poulsbo" hardware is now more than four years old, this Intel Atom platform with PowerVR graphics continues to be a bloody mess under Linux...
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