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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.att
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!hubcap!ncrcae!ccscae!fmcgee
- From: fmcgee@ccscae.Columbia.NCR.COM (Frank McGee - Naperville)
- Subject: Re: Looking for VESA drivers for AT&T VDC800 video controller
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.121114.19227@ncrcae.ColumbiaSC.NCR.COM>
- Followup-To: poster
- Summary: VDC 800
- Keywords: VESA driver VDC800
- Sender: Frank McGee
- Nntp-Posting-Host: ccscae.columbiasc.ncr.com
- References: <18042@umd5.umd.edu>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 93 17:11:14 GMT
- Expires: 2/23/93
- Lines: 44
-
- In article <18042@umd5.umd.edu> eyu@hamlet.umd.edu (Ellen Yu) writes:
- >I'm looking for VESA drivers for the AT&T VDC 800 Video display controller
- >card. I'm not real familiar with VESA - one of my "customers" needs it.
- >If no one can help me there, maybe someone can help me with this. What
- >is the chipset used in the VDC800 card?
- >Thanks in advance for any help.
- >Ellen
-
- If I remember right, the VDC 800 was register compatible with the IBM
- 8514/A interface. The VDC 800 was developed about a year before VESA
- came about. The 8514/A interface is well known to software vendors,
- and most support it directly within their products.
-
- If I remember right, there was a "kind-of" driver that was necessary to
- be loaded for some packages. It wasn't actually a driver, but some
- sort of high level software interface that you usually loaded at boot
- time (this software interface came with the board). I believe that this
- kind of scheme was common for 8514 cards; you could write directly to
- the registers if you wanted to, but IBM (it was their specification
- after all) only guaranteed upward compatibility if you used the software
- interface. So all the 8514 clone vendors also shipped the high-level
- software interface as well.
-
- Keep in mind that the VDC 800 only provides support for two graphics
- modes; 1024x768x16 and 1024x768x256 (depending upon the amount of RAM
- you have on the card). I believe the VESA specification actually
- specificies the operating modes of the adaptor (640x400, 640x480,
- 800x600, 800x600, 1024x768, 1024x768, etc.) the pixel depth (16 or 256
- colors), and the layout of memory planes. The 8514 standard is
- probably completely different, and probably doesn't map to the VESA
- standard at all.
-
- A "normal" VDC 800 configuration included the VDC 800, a VDC 600
- (standard VGA adaptor) and a VGA pass-through cable.
-
- To answer your question about the chipset, I believe it was based upon
- some Western Digital 8514/A clone chipset. I don't know what the
- corresponding WD product would be.
-
- --
-
- Frank McGee
- NCR Product Maintainability and Support (PM&S) Naperville
-
-