xenocara/distrib/notes/README.i386

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Post-installation instructions for X.Org on OpenBSD/i386
--------------------------------------------------------
Conventions used in this document:
- somename(1) implies that "somename" is a program, and there is a
manual page available in section 1 of the manual pages for further
reading, viewed by typing "man 1 somename".
1. Make sure your system has support for X enabled:
You must have "option APERTURE" in your kernel configuration and
uncomment the line that says:
machdep.allowaperture=2
in /etc/sysctl.conf. See xf86(4) for more details about security
issues related to this. After changing this variable in sysctl.conf,
you will need to reboot for the change to take effect.
2. Start either xdm(1) or startx(1).
a. Start xdm(1), the X display manager by activating the xdm_flags option
in /etc/rc.conf(r8) or /etc/rc.conf.local(8).
b. Start startx(1) from a console shell. It is the X script that starts
the X server and a few X applications, including a window manager.
3. If needed, Create the configuration file for your server.
For many users of X.Org's servers, an xorg.conf file is not needed,
X, will automatically detect and use your hardware.
For the few cases where your hardware is not properly autodetected
or supported or not supported as you wish, you will have to create
a configuration file.
Report to http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq11.html#amd64i386 for details.
See also Xorg(1), xorg.conf(5).
3.1. Note about Radeon cards.
OpenBSD provides two versions of the X.Org driver for ATI Radeon cards.
- radeonold(4) is an older version of the driver, which is known to
work on most of the Radeon cards, except the newer ones. It is
robust and also works in "ZapHod" mode (one X screen per physical
screen). It is selected by default.
- radeon(4) is the current X.Org driver. It has more support for
recent hardware, but unfortunately also exposes a few regressions,
leading to screen corruption on some hardware, and is known not
to work in ZapHod mode. It needs to be enabled explicitly by
creating a simple /etc/X11/xorg.conf file containing:
Section "Device"
Identifier "Radeon"
Driver "radeon"
EndSection
4. With X.Org XOrgVersion, you can use anti-aliased fonts in many applications.
visit http://www.openbsd.org/faq/truetype.html for more information.
problem_blurb
$OpenBSD: README.i386,v 1.4 2012/07/22 19:12:13 matthieu Exp $