According to xorg.0.log, it's seeing the EDID fine. All the info was there.
mw
--
"Lose not thy airspeed, lest the ground rises up and smites thee." -- William Kershner http://crucis-court.com http://www.crucis.net/1632search
On 10/09/2012 04:25 AM, Sorin Srbu wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: centos-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of Lamar Owen Sent: den 8 oktober 2012 20:57 To: CentOS mailing list Subject: Re: [CentOS] X/Display resolution configuration
Double check your cable. I ran into a widescreen situation a whle back
where
one cable didn't work, but the cable that came with the monitor did. The EDID value comes from the monitor itself, and the cable must be able
to
support that in order for the automatic resolution code to properly figure
out the
resolution.
In the case I mention, even manually setting the resolution in xorg.conf didn't work, since the EDID was mangled by the cable.
I see a lot of EDID-errors when booting up CentOS6, this could be due to a faulty cable, even though it seems to work fine with other OS:es like Windows and CentOS5?
Is CentOS6 more "picky" with this EDID as compared to e.g. CentOS5?
-- /Sorin
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