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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Screen Resolution on External Monitor from RHEL 6.3 Post 302780319 by rchaud10 on Thursday 14th of March 2013 10:45:04 AM
Old 03-14-2013
The screen resolution of the laptop is 1600x900. It should at least get close to that. I was able to figure out yesterday that for RHEL6.3, the xorg.conf file is no longer there (this was a way to manually set resolutions for internal and external screens). So I had to find an alternative and found all this information on xrandr, which i was able to manipulate in order to add the resolutions that I wanted. But I feel that if xorg is more automated, Red Hat should provide some sort of way to fix this issue. Any thoughts?
 

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VGA(4x) 																   VGA(4x)

NAME
vga - Generic VGA video driver SYNOPSIS
Section "Device" Identifier "devname" Driver "vga" ... EndSection DESCRIPTION
vga is an XFree86 driver for generic VGA video cards. It can drive most VGA-compatible video cards, but only makes use of the basic stan- dard VGA core that is common to these cards. The driver supports depths 1, 4 and 8. All relevant visual types are supported at each depth. Multi-head configurations are supported in combination with some other drivers, but only when the vga driver is driving the primary head. SUPPORTED HARDWARE
The vga driver supports most VGA-compatible video cards. There are some known exceptions, and those should be listed here. CONFIGURATION DETAILS
Please refer to XF86Config(5x) for general configuration details. This section only covers configuration details specific to this driver. The driver auto-detects the presence of VGA-compatible hardware. The ChipSet name may optionally be specified in the config file "Device" section, and will override the auto-detection: "generic" The driver will only use 64k of video memory for depth 1 and depth 8 operation, and 256k of video memory for depth 4 (this is the standard VGA limit). When operating at depth 8, only a single built-in 320x200 video mode is available. At other depths there is more flexibility regarding mode choice. The following driver Options are supported: Option "ShadowFB" "boolean" Enable or disable use of the shadow framebuffer layer. Default: off. This option is recommended for performance reasons when running at depths 1 and 4, especially when using modern PCI-based hardware. It is required when using those depths in a multi-head configuration where one or more of the other screens is operating at a dif- ferent depth. SEE ALSO
XFree86(1), XF86Config(5x), xf86config(1), Xserver(1), X(7x) AUTHORS
Authors include: Marc La France, David Dawes, and Dirk Hohndel. XFree86 Version Version 4.3.0 VGA(4x)
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