On Wednesday, November 10, 2010 12:09:33 pm you wrote: > On Wed, 2010-11-10 at 16:57 +0000, Beartooth wrote: > > By "s-c-d" I mean to abbreviate "system-config-display." > > > > I've been running three, sometimes four PCs, behind a series of > > > > KVM switches, against an HP w2207h monitor, which is a flat panel > > 1680x1050, for some years and several Fedora releases. > > > > Fedora's releases have always had troubles; as, I think, would > > > > any other OS, since the PCs are generally two to seven years old: at > > least one of them was built before any such resolution as 1680x1050 had > > been invented. (The monitor can compensate down to 1280x1024, or a little > > farther -- if the PC can send that, the monitor can stretch it to fit.) > > > > The troubles have gotten better but are not quite clear gone. > > > > They've gotten down to this: on some but not all PCs, the cursor showing > > on the screen is a couple millimeters higher than the mouse thinks; and > > some displays' windows cannot be sized nor moved so as to make their > > bottom lines clickable, or even visible. > > > > The big hammer used to be to take each PC in turn out from behind > > > > the KVM switch, connect it alone directly to the keyboard, mouse, and > > monitor; and use system-config-display. > > > > That would get everything close enough for the monitor to be able > > > > to handle the difference. > > > > But now I get : > > [root@Hbsk1 ~]# system-config-display > > Command not found. > > > > Telling yum to install it fails. > > > > [root@Hbsk1 ~]# yum install system-config-* > > > > finds what I have, and installs a lot more; but system-config-display is > > not among them. > > > > What can I use? This constantly clicking on the wrong place is > > > > beginning to resemble the classic water torture .... > > Not quite as gui-friendly, but you can get X itself to generate a > xorg.conf configuration file: > > X -configure :1 # the :1 avoids conflicts with existing X server if any > > You can review /root/xorg.conf.new to see if the options are to your > liking. To install it: > > mv /root/xorg.conf.new /etc/X11/xorg.conf > > -Chris Another user-surley method is to use xrandr. You can experiment with it from the command line, and then install it in a file in /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc.d/. I have two monitors, one of which doesn't report the EDID, and I wanted to use them in a side by side. By runn ing xrandr from the command line, I was able to determine the names of the two devices. I used the --addmode option to add a new size option for the ancient monitor, and the --output option to use it. I kept playing around with it until I got what I wanted. I was then able to create an executable file, 99-xrandr, in the above directory containing: #!/bin/bash xrandr --addmode VGA-0 1280x1024 xrandr --output DVI-0 --mode 1680x1050 xrandr --output VGA-0 --mode 1280x1024 --right-of DVI-0 In KDE you can put the file in a user's start up file area ~/.kde/Autostart, I am not familar with the location that gnome would want it. In one system I had to use --newmode to create the 1280x1024 mode, but I don't have that file avaliable on this computer (also it was on Fedora 8). - John. -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines