On 05/01/2007 10:32 PM, Rene Herman wrote:
On 05/01/2007 04:43 AM, Linus Torvalds wrote:
Doubtful. The Tseng ET4000 cards may have been the gold standard in
1991, but I don't think most people even _remember_ them. And if they
have them in their machines, they probably tend to run a Linux-1.2
kernel, or at least not care a lot about graphics (ie they may have an
old card in the machine just because they need VGA to boot, rather
than because they care about Tseng).
My 386 has an ET4000. An ET4000AX/W32 even. And you bet it's because
it's nifty! Okay, I'll admit the thing doesn't currently run a 2.6
kernel...
The answer will probably be "no", but would this be a good point to ask
if this would be a good time to not bother with the mode switching code
at all anymore? I'm generally rather appreciative of old gunk but I
haven't cared for that specific feature for ages now. I personally don't
use framebuffer, but I would if I wanted more than the plain VGA my BIOS
sets up.
Confusingly put; please consider a "If the switching code in itself is still
considered relevant, " to be present here. But rip it all out, I'd say...
I'd consider keeping anything but VESA 1.2 (which that ET4000 and most
all other Super VGA cards of the era also do!) nonsensical and as far as
I'm concerned this includes all the VGA modes with the strange number of
lines; a 43/60-line VGA screen is too horrible to look at anyway...
Rene.
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