I think the generic way to do this would be,
X -configure
and it should give you a xorg configuration file right there.
xorg.conf.new
I think,
then you will want to run
X -config xorg.conf.new
and if it works, rename it
mv xorg.conf.new xorg.conf
and then put it in one of the following
Release 2.21.0 (2013-02-01)
===
A few new features:
* Enable render acceleration for Haswell GT1/GT2.
* Enable multi-threaded rasterisation of trapezoids and fallback composition
* Utilile a new kernel interface (v3.9) for processing relocations
along with a few older
On Fri, 1 Feb 2013 09:09:19 +1000
Peter Hutterer wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 06:05:43PM +, Steven Newbury wrote:
> > On Thu, 2013-01-31 at 09:01 -0800, Etienne Robillard wrote:
> > > Thanks. But i didn't use --disable-config-hal... It was set to the
> > > default (auto). For that
> > >
On 2/02/13 05:49 , Etienne Robillard wrote:
On Fri, 1 Feb 2013 09:09:19 +1000
Peter Hutterer wrote:
On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 06:05:43PM +, Steven Newbury wrote:
On Thu, 2013-01-31 at 09:01 -0800, Etienne Robillard wrote:
Thanks. But i didn't use --disable-config-hal... It was set to the d
On Fri, 2013-02-01 at 02:34 -0500, Eric Gunther wrote:
> I have been contacted by autodesk, systems support, hopefully they can work
> this out with me.
>
> I will update the thread after I talk to them.
>
Thomas,
-don't support it, redhat they do.
Anyway thanks for the help,
I may try for a