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intel(4)							      intel(4)

NAME
       intel - Intel integrated graphics chipsets

SYNOPSIS
       Section "Device"
	 Identifier "devname"
	 Driver "intel"
	 ...
       EndSection

DESCRIPTION
       intel  is  an  Xorg driver for Intel integrated graphics chipsets.  The
       driver supports depths 8, 15, 16 and 24.	 All  visual  types  are  sup‐
       ported  in  depth  8.  For the i810/i815 other depths support the True‐
       Color and DirectColor visuals.  For the i830M and later, only the True‐
       Color  visual  is supported for depths greater than 8.  The driver sup‐
       ports hardware accelerated 3D via the Direct  Rendering	Infrastructure
       (DRI),  but only in depth 16 for the i810/i815 and depths 16 and 24 for
       the 830M and later.

SUPPORTED HARDWARE
       intel supports the i810, i810-DC100, i810e, i815, i830M,	 845G,	852GM,
       855GM,  865G,  915G,  915GM,  945G,  945GM,  965G,  965Q, 946GZ, 965GM,
       945GME, G33,  Q33,  Q35,	 G35,  GM45,  G45,  Q45,  G43,	G41  chipsets,
       Pineview-M  in  Atom  N400 series, Pineview-D in Atom D400/D500 series,
       Intel(R) HD Graphics, Intel(R) Iris(TM) Graphics, Intel(R) Iris(TM) Pro
       Graphics.

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

       The Intel 8xx and 9xx families of integrated graphics chipsets  have  a
       unified memory architecture meaning that system memory is used as video
       RAM.  For the i810 and i815 family of chipsets, operating  system  sup‐
       port  for  allocating  system  memory  is required in order to use this
       driver.	For the 830M and later, this is	 required  in  order  for  the
       driver  to  use more video RAM than has been pre-allocated at boot time
       by the BIOS.  This is usually achieved with an "agpgart" or "agp"  ker‐
       nel  driver.   Linux,  FreeBSD,	OpenBSD, NetBSD, and Solaris have such
       kernel drivers available.

       By default, the i810/i815 will use 8 MB of system memory	 for  graphics
       if  AGP	allocable  memory  is  < 128 MB, 16 MB if < 192 MB or 24 MB if
       higher. Use the VideoRam option to change the default value.

       For the 830M and later, the driver will automatically size  its	memory
       allocation  according  to the features it will support.	Therefore, the
       VideoRam option, which in the past had been  necessary  to  allow  more
       than some small amount of memory to be allocated, is now ignored.

       The following driver Options are supported

       Option "ColorKey" "integer"
	      This sets the default pixel value for the YUV video overlay key.

	      Default: undefined.

       Option "DRI" "string"
	      Disable  or enable DRI support. A driver name to use can be pro‐
	      vided instead of simple boolean value, which will be  passed  to
	      the  GL  implementation  for it to load the appropriate backend.
	      Alternatively the maximum level of DRI to enable (e.g. "1",  "2"
	      or "3") can be specified.

	      Default:	All levels of DRI are enabled for configurations where
	      it is supported.

       The following driver Options  are  supported  for  the  i810  and  i815
       chipsets:

       Option "CacheLines" "integer"
	      This  allows  the	 user  to change the amount of graphics memory
	      used for 2D acceleration and  video  when	 XAA  acceleration  is
	      enabled.	 Decreasing  this  amount leaves more for 3D textures.
	      Increasing it can improve 2D performance at the  expense	of  3D
	      performance.

	      Default:	depends	 on the resolution, depth, and available video
	      memory.  The driver attempts to allocate space for at 3  screen‐
	      fuls of pixmaps plus an HD-sized XV video.  The default used for
	      a specific configuration can be found by examining the Xorg  log
	      file.

       Option "DDC" "boolean"
	      Disable or enable DDC support.

	      Default: enabled.

       Option "Dac6Bit" "boolean"
	      Enable or disable 6-bits per RGB for 8-bit modes.

	      Default: 8-bits per RGB for 8-bit modes.

       Option "XvMCSurfaces" "integer"
	      This  option  enables XvMC.  The integer parameter specifies the
	      number of surfaces to use.  Valid values are 6 and 7.

	      Default: XvMC is disabled.

       VideoRam integer
	      This option specifies the amount of system  memory  to  use  for
	      graphics, in KB.

	      The  default  is 8192 if AGP allocable memory is < 128 MB, 16384
	      if < 192 MB, 24576 if higher. DRI require at least  a  value  of
	      16384.  Higher values may give better 3D performance, at expense
	      of available system memory.

       Option "Accel" "boolean"
	      Enable or disable acceleration.

	      Default: acceleration is enabled.

       The following driver Options are	 supported  for	 the  830M  and	 later
       chipsets:

       Option "Accel" "boolean"
	      Enable or disable acceleration.

	      Default: acceleration is enabled.

       Option "Present" "boolean"
	      Enable use of hardware counters and flow control for the Present
	      extension.

	      Default: Enabled

       Option "AccelMethod" "string"
	      Select acceleration method.  There  are  a  couple  of  backends
	      available	 for accelerating the DDX. "UXA" (Unified Acceleration
	      Architecture) is the mature backend that was introduced to  sup‐
	      port  the GEM driver model. It is in the process of being super‐
	      seded by "SNA"  (Sandybridge's  New  Acceleration).  Until  that
	      process  is complete, the ability to choose which backend to use
	      remains for backwards compatibility.  In addition, there	are  a
	      pair of sub-options to limit the acceleration for debugging use.
	      Specify "off" or "none" to disable all acceleration, or "blt" to
	      disable render acceleration and only use the BLT engine.

	      Default: use SNA (render acceleration)

       Option "TearFree" "boolean"
	      Disable or enable TearFree updates. This option forces X to per‐
	      form all rendering to a backbuffer prior to updating the	actual
	      display. It requires an extra memory allocation the same size as
	      a framebuffer, the occasional extra copy,	 and  requires	Damage
	      tracking.	 Thus  enabling	 TearFree  requires more memory and is
	      slower (reduced throughput) and introduces  a  small  amount  of
	      output latency, but it should not impact input latency. However,
	      the update to the screen is then	performed  synchronously  with
	      the vertical refresh of the display so that the entire update is
	      completed before the display starts its refresh.	That  is  only
	      one  frame is ever visible, preventing an unsightly tear between
	      two visible and differing frames. Note that this replicates what
	      the  compositing	manager should be doing, however TearFree will
	      redirect the compositor updates (and those of fullscreen	games)
	      directly on to the scanout thus incurring no additional overhead
	      in the composited case. Also note that not all compositing  man‐
	      agers  prevent  tearing,	and  if the outputs are rotated, there
	      will still be tearing without TearFree enabled.

	      Default: TearFree is disabled.

       Option "ReprobeOutputs" "boolean"
	      Disable or  enable  rediscovery  of  connected  displays	during
	      server  startup.	 As  the kernel driver loads it scans for con‐
	      nected displays and configures a console spanning those outputs.
	      When  the	 X  server  starts, we then take the list of connected
	      displays and framebuffer layout and use  that  for  the  initial
	      configuration.   Sometimes,   not	 all  displays	are  correctly
	      detected by the kernel and so it is  useful  in  a  few  circum‐
	      stances  for  X to force the kernel to reprobe all displays when
	      it starts. To make the X server recheck the status of  connected
	      displays,	 set  the  "ReprobeOutputs" option to true.  Please do
	      file a bug for any circumstances which require this workaround.

	      Default: reprobing is disabled for a faster startup.

       Option "VideoKey" "integer"
	      This is the same as the "ColorKey" option described  above.   It
	      is provided for compatibility with most other drivers.

       Option "XvPreferOverlay" "boolean"
	      Make  hardware  overlay  be  the	first XV adaptor.  The overlay
	      behaves incorrectly in the presence  of  compositing,  but  some
	      prefer  it  due  to  it syncing to vblank in the absence of com‐
	      positing.	 While most  XV-using  applications  have  options  to
	      select which XV adaptor to use, this option can be used to place
	      the overlay first for applications which don't have options  for
	      selecting adaptors.

	      Default: Textured video adaptor is preferred.

       Option "Backlight" "string"
	      Override	the  probed backlight control interface. Sometimes the
	      automatically selected backlight interface may not correspond to
	      the  correct,  or simply most useful, interface available on the
	      system. This allows you to override that	choice	by  specifying
	      the entry under /sys/class/backlight to use.

	      Default: Automatic selection.

       Option "CustomEDID" "string"
	      Override	the  probed  EDID on particular outputs. Sometimes the
	      manufacturer supplied EDID is corrupt or lacking	a  few	usable
	      modes and supplying a corrected EDID may be easier than specify‐
	      ing every modeline. This option allows to pass the path to  load
	      an  EDID from per output. The format is a comma separated string
	      of	     output:path	      pairs,		  e.g.
	      DP1:/path/to/dp1.edid,DP2:/path/to/dp2.edid

	      Default: No override, use manufacturer supplied EDIDs.

       Option "FallbackDebug" "boolean"
	      Enable  printing	of debugging information on acceleration fall‐
	      backs to the server log.

	      Default: Disabled

       Option "DebugFlushBatches" "boolean"
	      Flush the batch buffer after every single operation.

	      Default: Disabled

       Option "DebugFlushCaches" "boolean"
	      Include an MI_FLUSH at the end of every batch  buffer  to	 force
	      data  to be flushed out of cache and into memory before the com‐
	      pletion of the batch.

	      Default: Disabled

       Option "DebugWait" "boolean"
	      Wait for the completion of every batch buffer before continuing,
	      i.e. perform synchronous rendering.

	      Default: Disabled

       Option "HWRotation" "boolean"
	      Override	the  use of native hardware rotation and force the use
	      of software, but GPU accelerated where  possible,	 rotation.  On
	      some  platforms the hardware can scanout directly into a rotated
	      output bypassing the intermediate rendering  and	extra  alloca‐
	      tions  required  for  software implemented rotation (i.e. native
	      rotation uses less resources, is quicker and uses	 less  power).
	      This  allows  you	 to  disable  the  native  rotation in case of
	      errors.

	      Default: Enabled (use hardware rotation)

       Option "VSync" "boolean"
	      This option controls the use of commands to synchronise  render‐
	      ing  with	 the  vertical	refresh of the display. Some rendering
	      commands have the option to be performed in a "tear-free"	 fash‐
	      ion by stalling the GPU to wait for the display to be outside of
	      the region to be updated. This slows  down  all  rendering,  and
	      historically has been the source of many GPU hangs.

	      Default: enabled.

       Option "PageFlip" "boolean"
	      This  option  controls  the  use of commands to flip the scanout
	      address on a VBlank. This is used	 by  glXSwapBuffers  to	 effi‐
	      ciently perform the back-to-front exchange at the end of a frame
	      without incurring the penalty of a copy, or stalling the	render
	      pipeline	(the  flip  is performed asynchronrously to the render
	      command stream by the display engine). However, it has  histori‐
	      cally been the source of many GPU hangs.

	      Default: enabled.

       Option "SwapbuffersWait" "boolean"
	      This option controls the behavior of glXSwapBuffers and glXCopy‐
	      SubBufferMESA calls by GL applications.  If enabled,  the	 calls
	      will  avoid  tearing by making sure the display scanline is out‐
	      side of the area to be copied before the copy occurs.   If  dis‐
	      abled, no scanline synchronization is performed, meaning tearing
	      will likely occur.

	      Default: enabled.

       Option "TripleBuffer" "boolean"
	      This option enables the use of a third buffer for page-flipping.
	      The  third  buffer  allows applications to run at vrefresh rates
	      even if they occasionally	 fail  to  swapbuffers	on  time.  The
	      effect  of such missed swaps is the output jitters between 60fps
	      and 30fps, and in the worst case appears frame-locked to	30fps.
	      The  disadvantage	 of triple buffering is that there is an extra
	      frame of latency, due to the pre-rendered frame sitting  in  the
	      swap queue, between input and any display update.

	      Default: enabled.

       Option "Tiling" "boolean"
	      This  option  controls  whether  memory  buffers for Pixmaps are
	      allocated in tiled mode.	In most cases (especially for  complex
	      rendering), tiling dramatically improves performance.

	      Default: enabled.

       Option "LinearFramebuffer" "boolean"
	      This  option  controls  whether the memory for the scanout (also
	      known as the front or frame buffer) is allocated in linear  mem‐
	      ory. A tiled framebuffer is required for power conservation fea‐
	      tures, but for certain system configurations  you	 may  wish  to
	      override this and force a linear layout.

	      Default: disabled

       Option "RelaxedFencing" "boolean"
	      This  option controls whether we attempt to allocate the minimal
	      amount of memory required for  the  buffers.  The	 reduction  in
	      working set has a substantial improvement on system performance.
	      However, this has been demonstrate to be buggy on older hardware
	      (845-865	and 915-945, but ok on PineView and later) so on those
	      chipsets defaults to off.

	      Default: Enabled for G33 (includes PineView), and	 later,	 class
	      machines.

       Option "XvMC" "boolean"
	      Enable  XvMC driver. Current support MPEG2 MC on 915/945 and G33
	      series.  User should provide absolute path to libIntelXvMC.so in
	      XvMCConfig file.

	      Default: Disabled.

       Option "Throttle" "boolean"
	      This  option  controls whether the driver periodically waits for
	      pending drawing operations to complete. Throttling ensures  that
	      the  GPU does not lag too far behind the CPU and thus noticeable
	      delays in user responsible at the	 cost  of  throughput  perfor‐
	      mance.

	      Default: enabled.

       Option "HotPlug" "boolean"
	      This  option  controls whether the driver automatically notifies
	      applications when monitors are connected or disconnected.

	      Default: enabled.

       Option "Virtualheads" "integer"
	      This option controls specifies the number	 of  fake  outputs  to
	      create  in addition to the normal outputs detected on your hard‐
	      ware. These outputs cannot be assigned to the  regular  displays
	      attached	to  the	 GPU, but do otherwise act as any other xrandr
	      output and share a portion of the regular framebuffer.  One  use
	      case  for these extra heads is for extending your desktop onto a
	      discrete GPU using the Bumblebee project. However, the recommen‐
	      dation  here  is to use PRIME instead to create a single Xserver
	      that can addresses and coordinate between multiple GPUs.

	      Default: 0

       Option "ZaphodHeads" "string"

	      Specify the randr output(s) to use with zaphod mode for  a  par‐
	      ticular driver instance.	If you set this option you must use it
	      with all instances of the	 driver.  By  default,	each  head  is
	      assigned only one CRTC (which limits using multiple outputs with
	      that head to cloned mode). CRTC  can  be	manually  assigned  to
	      individual  heads	 by  preceding	the  output names with a comma
	      delimited list of pipe numbers followed by a  colon.  Note  that
	      different	 pipes	may be limited in their functionality and some
	      outputs may only work with different pipes.
	      For example:

	      Option "ZaphodHeads" "LVDS1,VGA1"

	      will assign xrandr outputs LVDS1 and VGA1 to  this  instance  of
	      the driver.

	      Option "ZaphodHeads" "0,2:HDMI1,DP2"

	      will  assign  xrandr  outputs HDMI1 and DP2 and CRTCs 0 and 2 to
	      this instance of the driver.

OUTPUT CONFIGURATION
       On 830M and better chipsets, the driver supports runtime	 configuration
       of detected outputs.  You can use the xrandr tool to control outputs on
       the command line as follows:

	      xrandr --output output --set property value

       Note that you may need to quote property and value arguments that  con‐
       tain  spaces.  Each output listed below may have one or more properties
       associated with it (like a binary EDID block if one  is	found).	  Some
       outputs	have  unique  properties  which	 are described below.  See the
       "MULTIHEAD CONFIGURATIONS" section below for additional information.

   VGA
       VGA output port (typically exposed via an HD15 connector).

   LVDS
       Low Voltage Differential Signalling  output  (typically	a  laptop  LCD
       panel).	Available properties:

       BACKLIGHT - current backlight level (adjustable)
	      By  adjusting the BACKLIGHT property, the brightness on the LVDS
	      output can be adjusted.  In some cases,  this  property  may  be
	      unavailable  (for	 example  if  your  platform  uses an external
	      microcontroller to control the backlight).

       scaling mode - control LCD panel scaling mode
	      When the currently selected display mode differs from the native
	      panel  resolution,  various scaling options are available. These
	      include

	      Center Simply center the image on-screen without	scaling.  This
		     is	 the  only  scaling  mode that guarantees a one-to-one
		     correspondence between native and displayed  pixels,  but
		     some portions of the panel may be unused (so-called "let‐
		     terboxing").

	      Full aspect
		     Scale the image as	 much  as  possible  while  preserving
		     aspect  ratio.  Pixels  may  not  be displayed one-to-one
		     (there may be some	 blurriness).  Some  portions  of  the
		     panel  may	 be unused if the aspect ratio of the selected
		     mode does not match that of the panel.

	      Full   Scale the image to	 the  panel  size  without  regard  to
		     aspect ratio. This is the only mode which guarantees that
		     every pixel of the panel will be used. But the  displayed
		     image  may be distorted by stretching either horizontally
		     or vertically, and pixels may not be displayed one-to-one
		     (there may be some blurriness).

       The  precise  names of these options may differ depending on the kernel
       video driver, (but the functionality should be similar). See the output
       of xrandr --prop for a list of currently available scaling modes.

   TV
       Integrated TV output.  Available properties include:

       BOTTOM, RIGHT, TOP, LEFT - margins
	      Adjusting	 these	properties allows you to control the placement
	      of your TV output buffer on the screen.  The  options  with  the
	      same name can also be set in xorg.conf with integer value.

       BRIGHTNESS - TV brightness, range 0-255
	      Adjust TV brightness, default value is 128.

       CONTRAST - TV contrast, range 0-255
	      Adjust  TV  contrast,  default  value is 1.0 in chipset specific
	      format.

       SATURATION - TV saturation, range 0-255
	      Adjust TV saturation, default value is 1.0 in  chipset  specific
	      format.

       HUE - TV hue, range 0-255
	      Adjust TV hue, default value is 0.

       TV_FORMAT - output standard
	      This  property allows you to control the output standard used on
	      your TV output port.  You can select between  NTSC-M,  NTSC-443,
	      NTSC-J, PAL-M, PAL-N, and PAL.

       TV_Connector - connector type
	      This  config  option  should  be added to xorg.conf TV monitor's
	      section, it allows you to force the TV  output  connector	 type,
	      which  bypass  load  detect  and TV will always be taken as con‐
	      nected. You can select between S-Video, Composite and Component.

   TMDS-1
       First DVI SDVO output

   TMDS-2
       Second DVI SDVO output

   TMDS-1 , TMDS-2 , HDMI-1 , HDMI-2
       DVI/HDMI outputs. Available common properties include:

       BROADCAST_RGB - method used to set RGB color range
	      Adjusting this property allows you to set	 RGB  color  range  on
	      each  channel  in	 order to match HDTV requirement(default 0 for
	      full range). Setting 1 means RGB color range is 16-235, 0	 means
	      RGB color range is 0-255 on each channel.	 (Full range is 0-255,
	      not 16-235)

       SDVO and DVO TV outputs are not supported by the driver at this time.

       See xorg.conf(5) for information on associating Monitor	sections  with
       these  outputs  for  configuration.   Associating Monitor sections with
       each output can be helpful if you need to ignore a specific output, for
       example, or statically configure an extended desktop monitor layout.

MULTIHEAD CONFIGURATIONS
       The  number  of	independent outputs is dictated by the number of CRTCs
       (in X parlance) a given chip supports.  Most recent  Intel  chips  have
       two  CRTCs,  meaning  that  two	separate framebuffers can be displayed
       simultaneously, in an extended desktop configuration.  If a  chip  sup‐
       ports  more outputs than it has CRTCs (say local flat panel, VGA and TV
       in the case of many outputs), two  of  the  outputs  will  have	to  be
       "cloned",  meaning  that they display the same framebuffer contents (or
       one displays a subset of another's  framebuffer	if  the	 modes	aren't
       equal).

       You  can use the "xrandr" tool, or various desktop utilities, to change
       your output configuration at runtime.   To  statically  configure  your
       outputs, you can use the "Monitor-<type>" options along with additional
       monitor sections in your xorg.conf to create your screen topology.  The
       example	below  puts  the VGA output to the right of the builtin laptop
       screen, both running at 1024x768.

       Section "Monitor"
	 Identifier "Laptop FooBar Internal Display"
	 Option "Position" "0 0"
       EndSection

       Section "Monitor"
	 Identifier "Some Random CRT"
	 Option "Position" "1024 0"
	 Option "RightOf" "Laptop FoodBar Internal Display"
       EndSection

       Section "Device"
	 Driver "intel"
	 Option "monitor-LVDS" "Laptop FooBar Internal Display"
	 Option "monitor-VGA" "Some Random CRT"
       EndSection

TEXTURED VIDEO ATTRIBUTES
       The driver supports the following X11 Xv attributes for Textured Video.
       You can use the "xvattr" tool to query/set those attributes at runtime.

   XV_SYNC_TO_VBLANK
       XV_SYNC_TO_VBLANK  is used to control whether textured adapter synchro‐
       nizes the screen update to the vblank to eliminate  tearing.  It	 is  a
       Boolean	attribute with values of 0 (never sync) or 1 (always sync). An
       historic value of -1 (sync for large windows only) will now  be	inter‐
       preted  as  1,  (since the current approach for sync is not costly even
       with small video windows).

   XV_BRIGHTNESS
   XV_CONTRAST
REPORTING BUGS
       The xf86-video-intel driver is part of the  X.Org  and  Freedesktop.org
       umbrella	  projects.    Details	on  bug	 reporting  can	 be  found  at
       https://01.org/linuxgraphics/documentation/how-report-bugs.     Mailing
       lists  are  also	 commonly used to report experiences and ask questions
       about configuration and other topics.   See  lists.freedesktop.org  for
       more  information  (the	xorg@lists.freedesktop.org mailing list is the
       most appropriate place to ask X.Org and driver related questions).

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

AUTHORS
       Authors include: Keith Whitwell, and also Jonathan Bian, Matthew J Sot‐
       tek, Jeff Hartmann, Mark Vojkovich, Alan Hourihane, H. J. Lu.  830M and
       845G support  reworked  for  XFree86  4.3  by  David  Dawes  and	 Keith
       Whitwell.   852GM,  855GM,  and	865G  support added by David Dawes and
       Keith Whitwell.	915G, 915GM, 945G, 945GM, 965G, 965Q and 946GZ support
       added by Alan Hourihane and Keith Whitwell. Lid status support added by
       Alan Hourihane. Textured video support for 915G and later chips,	 RandR
       1.2  and	 hardware  modesetting added by Eric Anholt and Keith Packard.
       EXA and Render acceleration added by Wang Zhenyu. TV out support	 added
       by  Zou	Nan  Hai  and  Keith Packard. 965GM, G33, Q33, and Q35 support
       added by Wang Zhenyu.

X Version 11		   xf86-video-intel 2.99.917		      intel(4)
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