README.OS2 MATROX GRAPHICS INC. 02-July-1998 The MGA Millennium/Mystique/MGA-G100/MGA-G200 OS/2 PM Display Driver Version 2.21.063 Product Description ------------------- The MGA Millennium/Mystique/MGA-G100/MGA-G200 OS/2 PM driver supports 8-bit (256 colors), 16-bit (64K colors), and 24- and 32-bit (16M colors) display modes under OS/2 2.11 and later, in resolutions ranging from 640 x 480 to 1800 x 1440. Driver Installation ------------------- To install the software, follow the procedure below: 1. If you have previously configured OS/2 for another graphics card, then you should uninstall the drivers for that card. Be sure that OS/2 will start up in VGA mode before installing the MGA Millennium/Mystique/MGA-G100/MGA-G200 driver. 2. Using the Command Prompts folder of OS/2, open an OS/2 Window or Full Screen session. 3. Insert the driver disk in a floppy drive (if you are installing from the floppy disk) or insert the CD-ROM in its drive bay. 4. Make the CD-ROM or floppy disk the active drive and type: "SRCPATH\INSTALL", where SRCPATH is the path which contains the Matrox OS/2 drivers. Examples: A:\INSTALL (if installing from a diskette with OS/2 only) A:\OS2\INSTALL (if installing from diskette with OS/2 and NT) D:\OS2\INSTALL (if installing from a CD-ROM) Note: if you install this driver to a Warp System, you may run \INSTALL /U for all but Japanese OS/2 or \INSTALL /UJ for Japanese OS/2 (DBCS driver disk only) and everything will be installed without any further input from the user (primary, secondary selection, driver selection, and source disk/path selection). 5. You will see a dialog box in which you can select the Primary Display. Choose "Matrox MGA Millennium/Mystique/MGA-G100/MGA-G200 Series". You may have to change the source drive if you are not installing from drive A. 6. The installation program will then proceed with the installation. When it is complete, you will have to shut down your system in order for the MGA driver to take effect. If you haven't previously installed a high-resolution driver, OS/2 will restart in Matrox default resolution (640x480x256). If you know which resolutions your monitor is capable of displaying, you may wish to configure the driver for your monitor and/or a different resolution before shutting down. To do this, use the MGA Settings notebook, as explained in the next section. However, if you do this before shutting down, some resolutions shown by the MGA Settings notebook may be invalid, and, if you select one of those, OS/2 will restart in a different, valid resolution instead. Note: If you are using Selective Install in OS/2 Warp, the MGA Millennium/Mystique/MGA-G100/MGA-G200 driver shows up as "Other." Driver Configuration -------------------- To change the driver monitor configuration or mode (resolution or pixel depth), use the following procedure: 1. Double-click on the MGA Settings icon on the desktop. 2. Select the Monitor tab and either select Use Display Data Channel (if available) or choose your monitor from the list provided. 3. Select the Resolution tab and choose the resolution/pixel depth. You will need to reboot the system to see the change take effect. CID Installation ---------------- Please refer to the README.CID file on the driver disk for information concerning CID installation. Uninstalling the Driver ----------------------- The Matrox UNINSTAL command file makes use of the OS/2 DSPINSTL.EXE program to switch the display driver from MGA mode back to VGA mode, as shown in the following procedure: 1. Open an OS/2 Text Window (or Full Screen) session. 2. Enter: CD \MGA\OS2 UNINSTAL or UNINSTAL CLEAN (to also delete the Matrox files from your hard disk) 3. Once the MGA driver has been uninstalled, the DSPINSTL utility will launch. Select Primary Display, then choose the driver you require (for example, VGA). You will need to reboot the system to see the change take effect. Note: With Warp, there are two additional ways to switch the driver from MGA mode to VGA mode: 1. You can access a menu by pressing Alt+F1 when the OS/2 logo appears in the upper left corner of the screen during the bootup process. This menu will allow you to change the driver to VGA by selecting the appropriate option. 2. You can also change the driver to VGA by running the following program in an OS/2 window or full screen session: SETVGA Driver Reinstallation --------------------- To reinstall the same level Matrox driver as was previously installed, run DSPINSTL. Select the primary display as in installation step 6 above. Change the source drive to \MGA\OS2 (on your boot drive), and then press the Install button. When DSPINSTL finishes, shut down and reboot. Monitor Customization using Matrox's MGA Settings Notebook ---------------------------------------------------------- The OS/2 Millennium/Mystique/MGA-G100/MGA-G200 driver supports VESA DDC-2B compliant monitors. If your monitor is not detected as DDC compliant, the driver will take the "Unknown Monitor" hardcoded timings, which assume that you have a monitor supporting all resolutions available on your board at a 60Hz refresh rate (non-interlaced). If you have a monitor that is capable of refresh rates higher than 60Hz, you should change the monitor setting on the Monitor page of the notebook. If your monitor is not listed, try to choose a similar monitor or one of the standard monitors. MGA Settings then creates a file called MGA.INF, which contains the appropriate video parameters for your monitor. The MGA.INF file is read by the MGA display driver when OS/2 boots. The MGA settings notebook is located in the System Setup folder, described below. You must shut down OS/2 and reboot your computer for the changes to take effect. Note: The timing information in MGA.INF overrides the timing info returned by DDC compliant monitors. If you are using a DDC compliant monitor, and you do not wish to override the monitor's timing info, then check the "Use Data Display Channel (DDC)" box. Driver configuration using the MGA settings notebook ---------------------------------------------------- Advanced configuration of the MGA driver can be performed through the MGA settings notebook, located in the System Setup folder and shadowed on the desktop. Fonts page: You may change font settings for the current resolution, and they will be remembered if you switch resolutions. You may change font resolution and the system font using the Fonts page. To change the default AVIO font, open an OS/2 or DOS Window, select Font Size from the system menu, select the desired font, and click the Save button. Your selection will be stored when you exit the MGA settings notebook. Note that this is not supported with the DBCS driver. Font resolution affects the sizes of your OS/2 fonts. The system font is the default font and also affects window sizes. On Warp 4, the WarpSans font is used for window titles and menus. On previous OS/2 versions, the window titles and menus use the default font. If you want to change this, you may drag any font from the Font Palette to any window title or menu bar while holding the Alt key. Note that the default values for the fonts are: System Font Font res AVIO Font 640x480 10.System Proportional 96 8x14 800x600 10.System Proportional 96 8x14 1024x768 10.System Proportional 120 12x22 1152x864 12.System Proportional 120 12x22 or higher Advanced page: 1. Grayscale driver switch Owners of the Millennium PowerDoc Edition may enable the grayscale driver switch, which defines whether 8 bits per pixel should be in 256 colors or 256 gray shades. 2. DIVE switch Due to an OS/2 problem in 32 bpp, the Warp Digital Video player image may be shifted to the left. 24 bpp may trap under certain conditions. The MGA Settings notebook has a switch to ensure DIVE is always enabled in 24 and 32bpp. Note that when the box is not checked, DIVE will still be used in some cases where no problems were found to occur with OS/2 Warp 3 with FixPak 17 installed. 3. EnDIVE switch If you wish to enable/disable EnDIVE support, use the EnDIVE switch. For all changes you make with the MGA setttings notebook, except for hot key changes, you must reboot your computer to see the changes take effect. Driver configuration using MGACONF.CMD -------------------------------------- 1. Cursor Vsync The cursor may exhibit some "noise" when an application changes the color palette. This switch forces to wait for a Vsync before changing the palette. The drawback is a loss of speed when changing the palette. Some animated application requires fast changing palette. This switch applies only to 8 bpp. The problem occurs only on the Millennium card. mgaconf v 0 (off) mgaconf v 1 (on) Default is 1. 2. Color cursor mgaconf c [0/1/2], where 0 will enable the software cursor (multicolor cursor) 1 will disable the software cursor (you will have 2 or fewer colors in the cursor) 2 will disable the software cursor if the cursor has fewer than 4 colors Default is 0. File description ---------------- Assume: -> Source path -> Destination drive (OS/2 system drive). -> WinOS/2 or Windows path (\os2\mdos\winos2 or \windows) \INSTALL.CMD --> stay where it is. \FIXAUTO.CMD --> :\MGA\OS2 \UNINSTAL.CMD --> :\MGA\OS2 \MGAX64.OS2 --> :\MGA\OS2\SYSLEVEL.MGA (pack file) :\MGA\OS2\MGAX64S.DSP :\OS2\DLL\PMGAX64.DLL :\OS2\DLL\BMGAX64.DLL :\MGA\OS2\KMGAX64.SYS :\OS2\MDOS\VMGAX64.SYS :\MGA\OS2\MGASET.EXE :\MGA\OS2\MGASET.DLL :\MGA\OS2\MGASET.HLP :\MGA\OS2\MGAHK.EXE :\MGA\OS2\MGA.MON :\MGA\OS2\MGACONF.CMD :\MGA\OS2\MGAOBJ.CMD \MGAX64W.OS2 --> :\SMGAX64.DRV (pack file) :\MGAX64.DLL \MGAX64.DSP --> stay where it is. \VVGA.SYS --> :\MGA\OS2 and :\OS2\MDOS \MGAX64.DSC --> :\OS2\INSTALL \README.OS2 --> :\MGA\OS2 MGAX64.DSP installation support file for "dspinstl" (for first install) MGAX64S.DSP installation support file for "dspinstl" (for re-install) MGAX64.DSC installation support file MGAX64.DLL initialization library for Win-OS/2 fullscreen BMGAX64.DLL Base Video Handle (sets VGA for OS/2 fullscreen) PMGAX64.DLL 32bit PM driver (8, 16 and 32bpp) KMGAX64.SYS low-level initialization for 32bit PM driver SMGAX64.DRV Win-OS/2 Fullscreen and Seamless driver VMGAX64.SYS Virtual MGA driver (for DOS sessions) VVGA.SYS Modified IBM VGA virtual driver. README.OS2 Readme file INSTALL.CMD first time installation MGASET.EXE MGA Settings notebook MGASET.DLL MGA Settings notebook text strings MGASET.HLP MGA Settings notebook help MGAHK.EXE hot key trapping applet MGACONF.CMD Configuration utility for PM driver FIXAUTO.CMD inserts "SET MGA=x:\MGA\OS2" in autoexec.bat (Win-OS/2) UNINSTAL.CMD uninstalls driver (and optionally removes all Millennium/Mystique/MGA-G100/MGA-G200 files from hard drive) MGA.MON MGA Monitor data file for MGA settings notebook SETUP.EXE Monitor program to create MGA.INF out of MGA.MON SYSLEVEL.MGA driver Version info (use OS/2 command syslevel.exe to obtain the driver Version) MGAOBJ.CMD MGA object installation KNOWN BUGS AND LIMITATIONS -------------------------- The following bugs and limitations are present in this release of the driver: · When using the DSPINSTL program to reconfigure your MGA driver, the program states that VGA is the current driver. This is because the DSPINSTL program included with OS/2 does not correctly identify the Matrox Millennium/Mystique/MGA-G100/MGA-G200. · The MGA PowerDesk Windows drivers should NOT be used in a Win-OS/2 full screen session. The results will be highly unpredictable. If the MGA windows driver features are absolutely needed, then a dual-boot configuration must be used. When booting from DOS, the PowerDesk Windows driver features are fully supported. · The driver does not work with Mayo Clinic Family Health Book (Windows app.) in seamless Windows at 16bpp (64K colors). If you need to run this application, please run it in Win-OS/2 fullscreen instead or change the colors to 256 or 16M. · It is necessary to shut down all Win-OS/2 sessions prior to installing the driver. Make sure the "Fast load" option in Win-OS/2 Setup (in the System Setup folder) is not checked, and close Win-OS/2 Setup prior to install. Otherwise, required Win-OS/2 files will not be copied, and install will fail. · Using the large OS/2 system font on OS/2 2.11 causes some text in the MGA settings notebook to be cut off. This is due to an OS/2 bug in the font spacing. · Selecting a scalable font as the OS/2 system font on OS/2 2.11 and Warp 3 without a FixPak does not work correctly. A system proportional font is used instead. You can obtain a list of scalable fonts by opening the Font Palette, pressing the Edit Font button, and pressing the Delete button. In the Delete Font window, any font with file extension OFM is a scalable font. Warp 3 FixPak 17 is known to fix this problem. · Using MGA Settings to select the OS/2 system font is not supported with the DBCS driver. · When using higher than 1280x1024 resolution, if you use MGA Settings to change the monitor setting to a monitor which does not support the current resolution, you must shut down the system prior to switching to a full screen session. Otherwise, the system will hang when switching back to the desktop.