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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Screen Resolution on External Monitor from RHEL 6.3 Post 302779865 by rchaud10 on Wednesday 13th of March 2013 12:14:10 PM
Old 03-13-2013
RedHat Screen Resolution on External Monitor from RHEL 6.3

Hey everyone,

I have a KVM or External monitor (19" Dell) that I am trying to hook up to a laptop running RHEL 6.3 (via VGA which is the only option). When I connect it, and go to System->Preferences->Display, the max resolution option it provides me for these external devices is 1280x1024. Now, the KVM should provide a maximum resolution capability of 1600x1200, and the Dell monitor should have a capability of 1920x1080. Neither of those come up. How do I get this to work? I was reading online that Red Hat OS needs to be configured for the graphics card on the laptop in order to provide higher resolutions. I would hope it's simpler to this. Any hints or tips?
 

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VGA(8)							      System Manager's Manual							    VGA(8)

NAME
vga - configure a VGA card SYNOPSIS
aux/vga [ -cdilmpv ] [ mode ] DESCRIPTION
Aux/vga configures a VGA controller for various display sizes and depths. Using the monitor type specified in /env/monitor (default vga) and the mode given as argument (default 640x480x1), aux/vga uses the database of known VGA controllers and monitors in /lib/vgadb (see vgadb(6)) to configure the display via the devices provided by vga(3). The options are: -c force the use of the software cursor even if the VGA card is capable of using a hardware graphics cursor. -d include the color palette in whatever actions are performed, usually printing the contents. -i when used with -p display the register values that will be loaded. -l load the desired mode. -mmonitor override the /env/monitor value. /env/monitor is usually set by including it in the plan9.ini file read by the PC boot program b.com(8). -p print the current or expected register values at appropriate points depending on other options. -v print a trace of the functions called. Mode is of the form XxYxZ , where X, Y, and Z are numbers specifying the display height, width, and depth respectively. The mode must appear in /lib/vgadb as a value for one of the monitor entries. The usual modes are 640x480x[18], 800x600x[18], 1024x768x[18][i], 1280x1024x[18][i], 1376x1024x8, and 1600x1200x8. A trailing indicates interlaced operation. EXAMPLES
Change the display resolution: aux/vga -l 1600x1200x8 Print the current VGA controller registers. It is usually best to redirect the output of a -p command to a file to prevent confusion caused by using the VGA controller while trying to dump its state: aux/vga -p>/tmp/x Force the VGA controller to a known state: aux/vga -m vga -l Print the current VGA controller state and what would be loaded into it for a new resolution, but don't do the load: aux/vga -ip 1376x1024x8>/tmp/x FILES
/env/monitor display type (default vga). /lib/vgadb VGA configuration file. SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/aux/vga SEE ALSO
vga(3), vgadb(6), b.com(8) BUGS
Aux/vga makes every effort possible to verify that the mode it is about to load is valid and will bail out with an error message before setting any registers if it encounters a problem. However, things can go wrong, especially when playing with a new VGA controller or moni- tor setting. It is useful in such cases to have the above command for setting the controller to a known state at your fingertips. VGA(8)
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