| The Frame Buffer Device |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Maintained by Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@linux-m68k.org> |
| Last revised: May 10, 2001 |
| |
| |
| 0. Introduction |
| --------------- |
| |
| The frame buffer device provides an abstraction for the graphics hardware. It |
| represents the frame buffer of some video hardware and allows application |
| software to access the graphics hardware through a well-defined interface, so |
| the software doesn't need to know anything about the low-level (hardware |
| register) stuff. |
| |
| The device is accessed through special device nodes, usually located in the |
| /dev directory, i.e. /dev/fb*. |
| |
| |
| 1. User's View of /dev/fb* |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| From the user's point of view, the frame buffer device looks just like any |
| other device in /dev. It's a character device using major 29; the minor |
| specifies the frame buffer number. |
| |
| By convention, the following device nodes are used (numbers indicate the device |
| minor numbers): |
| |
| 0 = /dev/fb0 First frame buffer |
| 1 = /dev/fb1 Second frame buffer |
| ... |
| 31 = /dev/fb31 32nd frame buffer |
| |
| For backwards compatibility, you may want to create the following symbolic |
| links: |
| |
| /dev/fb0current -> fb0 |
| /dev/fb1current -> fb1 |
| |
| and so on... |
| |
| The frame buffer devices are also `normal' memory devices, this means, you can |
| read and write their contents. You can, for example, make a screen snapshot by |
| |
| cp /dev/fb0 myfile |
| |
| There also can be more than one frame buffer at a time, e.g. if you have a |
| graphics card in addition to the built-in hardware. The corresponding frame |
| buffer devices (/dev/fb0 and /dev/fb1 etc.) work independently. |
| |
| Application software that uses the frame buffer device (e.g. the X server) will |
| use /dev/fb0 by default (older software uses /dev/fb0current). You can specify |
| an alternative frame buffer device by setting the environment variable |
| $FRAMEBUFFER to the path name of a frame buffer device, e.g. (for sh/bash |
| users): |
| |
| export FRAMEBUFFER=/dev/fb1 |
| |
| or (for csh users): |
| |
| setenv FRAMEBUFFER /dev/fb1 |
| |
| After this the X server will use the second frame buffer. |
| |
| |
| 2. Programmer's View of /dev/fb* |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| As you already know, a frame buffer device is a memory device like /dev/mem and |
| it has the same features. You can read it, write it, seek to some location in |
| it and mmap() it (the main usage). The difference is just that the memory that |
| appears in the special file is not the whole memory, but the frame buffer of |
| some video hardware. |
| |
| /dev/fb* also allows several ioctls on it, by which lots of information about |
| the hardware can be queried and set. The color map handling works via ioctls, |
| too. Look into <linux/fb.h> for more information on what ioctls exist and on |
| which data structures they work. Here's just a brief overview: |
| |
| - You can request unchangeable information about the hardware, like name, |
| organization of the screen memory (planes, packed pixels, ...) and address |
| and length of the screen memory. |
| |
| - You can request and change variable information about the hardware, like |
| visible and virtual geometry, depth, color map format, timing, and so on. |
| If you try to change that information, the driver maybe will round up some |
| values to meet the hardware's capabilities (or return EINVAL if that isn't |
| possible). |
| |
| - You can get and set parts of the color map. Communication is done with 16 |
| bits per color part (red, green, blue, transparency) to support all |
| existing hardware. The driver does all the computations needed to apply |
| it to the hardware (round it down to less bits, maybe throw away |
| transparency). |
| |
| All this hardware abstraction makes the implementation of application programs |
| easier and more portable. E.g. the X server works completely on /dev/fb* and |
| thus doesn't need to know, for example, how the color registers of the concrete |
| hardware are organized. XF68_FBDev is a general X server for bitmapped, |
| unaccelerated video hardware. The only thing that has to be built into |
| application programs is the screen organization (bitplanes or chunky pixels |
| etc.), because it works on the frame buffer image data directly. |
| |
| For the future it is planned that frame buffer drivers for graphics cards and |
| the like can be implemented as kernel modules that are loaded at runtime. Such |
| a driver just has to call register_framebuffer() and supply some functions. |
| Writing and distributing such drivers independently from the kernel will save |
| much trouble... |
| |
| |
| 3. Frame Buffer Resolution Maintenance |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| Frame buffer resolutions are maintained using the utility `fbset'. It can |
| change the video mode properties of a frame buffer device. Its main usage is |
| to change the current video mode, e.g. during boot up in one of your /etc/rc.* |
| or /etc/init.d/* files. |
| |
| Fbset uses a video mode database stored in a configuration file, so you can |
| easily add your own modes and refer to them with a simple identifier. |
| |
| |
| 4. The X Server |
| --------------- |
| |
| The X server (XF68_FBDev) is the most notable application program for the frame |
| buffer device. Starting with XFree86 release 3.2, the X server is part of |
| XFree86 and has 2 modes: |
| |
| - If the `Display' subsection for the `fbdev' driver in the /etc/XF86Config |
| file contains a |
| |
| Modes "default" |
| |
| line, the X server will use the scheme discussed above, i.e. it will start |
| up in the resolution determined by /dev/fb0 (or $FRAMEBUFFER, if set). You |
| still have to specify the color depth (using the Depth keyword) and virtual |
| resolution (using the Virtual keyword) though. This is the default for the |
| configuration file supplied with XFree86. It's the most simple |
| configuration, but it has some limitations. |
| |
| - Therefore it's also possible to specify resolutions in the /etc/XF86Config |
| file. This allows for on-the-fly resolution switching while retaining the |
| same virtual desktop size. The frame buffer device that's used is still |
| /dev/fb0current (or $FRAMEBUFFER), but the available resolutions are |
| defined by /etc/XF86Config now. The disadvantage is that you have to |
| specify the timings in a different format (but `fbset -x' may help). |
| |
| To tune a video mode, you can use fbset or xvidtune. Note that xvidtune doesn't |
| work 100% with XF68_FBDev: the reported clock values are always incorrect. |
| |
| |
| 5. Video Mode Timings |
| --------------------- |
| |
| A monitor draws an image on the screen by using an electron beam (3 electron |
| beams for color models, 1 electron beam for monochrome monitors). The front of |
| the screen is covered by a pattern of colored phosphors (pixels). If a phosphor |
| is hit by an electron, it emits a photon and thus becomes visible. |
| |
| The electron beam draws horizontal lines (scanlines) from left to right, and |
| from the top to the bottom of the screen. By modifying the intensity of the |
| electron beam, pixels with various colors and intensities can be shown. |
| |
| After each scanline the electron beam has to move back to the left side of the |
| screen and to the next line: this is called the horizontal retrace. After the |
| whole screen (frame) was painted, the beam moves back to the upper left corner: |
| this is called the vertical retrace. During both the horizontal and vertical |
| retrace, the electron beam is turned off (blanked). |
| |
| The speed at which the electron beam paints the pixels is determined by the |
| dotclock in the graphics board. For a dotclock of e.g. 28.37516 MHz (millions |
| of cycles per second), each pixel is 35242 ps (picoseconds) long: |
| |
| 1/(28.37516E6 Hz) = 35.242E-9 s |
| |
| If the screen resolution is 640x480, it will take |
| |
| 640*35.242E-9 s = 22.555E-6 s |
| |
| to paint the 640 (xres) pixels on one scanline. But the horizontal retrace |
| also takes time (e.g. 272 `pixels'), so a full scanline takes |
| |
| (640+272)*35.242E-9 s = 32.141E-6 s |
| |
| We'll say that the horizontal scanrate is about 31 kHz: |
| |
| 1/(32.141E-6 s) = 31.113E3 Hz |
| |
| A full screen counts 480 (yres) lines, but we have to consider the vertical |
| retrace too (e.g. 49 `lines'). So a full screen will take |
| |
| (480+49)*32.141E-6 s = 17.002E-3 s |
| |
| The vertical scanrate is about 59 Hz: |
| |
| 1/(17.002E-3 s) = 58.815 Hz |
| |
| This means the screen data is refreshed about 59 times per second. To have a |
| stable picture without visible flicker, VESA recommends a vertical scanrate of |
| at least 72 Hz. But the perceived flicker is very human dependent: some people |
| can use 50 Hz without any trouble, while I'll notice if it's less than 80 Hz. |
| |
| Since the monitor doesn't know when a new scanline starts, the graphics board |
| will supply a synchronization pulse (horizontal sync or hsync) for each |
| scanline. Similarly it supplies a synchronization pulse (vertical sync or |
| vsync) for each new frame. The position of the image on the screen is |
| influenced by the moments at which the synchronization pulses occur. |
| |
| The following picture summarizes all timings. The horizontal retrace time is |
| the sum of the left margin, the right margin and the hsync length, while the |
| vertical retrace time is the sum of the upper margin, the lower margin and the |
| vsync length. |
| |
| +----------+---------------------------------------------+----------+-------+ |
| | | ↑ | | | |
| | | |upper_margin | | | |
| | | ↓ | | | |
| +----------###############################################----------+-------+ |
| | # ↑ # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | left # | # right | hsync | |
| | margin # | xres # margin | len | |
| |<-------->#<---------------+--------------------------->#<-------->|<----->| |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # |yres # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # | # | | |
| | # ↓ # | | |
| +----------###############################################----------+-------+ |
| | | ↑ | | | |
| | | |lower_margin | | | |
| | | ↓ | | | |
| +----------+---------------------------------------------+----------+-------+ |
| | | ↑ | | | |
| | | |vsync_len | | | |
| | | ↓ | | | |
| +----------+---------------------------------------------+----------+-------+ |
| |
| The frame buffer device expects all horizontal timings in number of dotclocks |
| (in picoseconds, 1E-12 s), and vertical timings in number of scanlines. |
| |
| |
| 6. Converting XFree86 timing values info frame buffer device timings |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| An XFree86 mode line consists of the following fields: |
| "800x600" 50 800 856 976 1040 600 637 643 666 |
| < name > DCF HR SH1 SH2 HFL VR SV1 SV2 VFL |
| |
| The frame buffer device uses the following fields: |
| |
| - pixclock: pixel clock in ps (pico seconds) |
| - left_margin: time from sync to picture |
| - right_margin: time from picture to sync |
| - upper_margin: time from sync to picture |
| - lower_margin: time from picture to sync |
| - hsync_len: length of horizontal sync |
| - vsync_len: length of vertical sync |
| |
| 1) Pixelclock: |
| xfree: in MHz |
| fb: in picoseconds (ps) |
| |
| pixclock = 1000000 / DCF |
| |
| 2) horizontal timings: |
| left_margin = HFL - SH2 |
| right_margin = SH1 - HR |
| hsync_len = SH2 - SH1 |
| |
| 3) vertical timings: |
| upper_margin = VFL - SV2 |
| lower_margin = SV1 - VR |
| vsync_len = SV2 - SV1 |
| |
| Good examples for VESA timings can be found in the XFree86 source tree, |
| under "xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/doc/modeDB.txt". |
| |
| |
| 7. References |
| ------------- |
| |
| For more specific information about the frame buffer device and its |
| applications, please refer to the Linux-fbdev website: |
| |
| http://linux-fbdev.sourceforge.net/ |
| |
| and to the following documentation: |
| |
| - The manual pages for fbset: fbset(8), fb.modes(5) |
| - The manual pages for XFree86: XF68_FBDev(1), XF86Config(4/5) |
| - The mighty kernel sources: |
| o linux/drivers/video/ |
| o linux/include/linux/fb.h |
| o linux/include/video/ |
| |
| |
| |
| 8. Mailing list |
| --------------- |
| |
| There is a frame buffer device related mailing list at kernel.org: |
| linux-fbdev@vger.kernel.org. |
| |
| Point your web browser to http://sourceforge.net/projects/linux-fbdev/ for |
| subscription information and archive browsing. |
| |
| |
| 9. Downloading |
| -------------- |
| |
| All necessary files can be found at |
| |
| ftp://ftp.uni-erlangen.de/pub/Linux/LOCAL/680x0/ |
| |
| and on its mirrors. |
| |
| The latest version of fbset can be found at |
| |
| http://home.tvd.be/cr26864/Linux/fbdev/ |
| |
| |
| 10. Credits |
| ---------- |
| |
| This readme was written by Geert Uytterhoeven, partly based on the original |
| `X-framebuffer.README' by Roman Hodek and Martin Schaller. Section 6 was |
| provided by Frank Neumann. |
| |
| The frame buffer device abstraction was designed by Martin Schaller. |