Graphics
Raster displays (primarily LEDs and CRTs) underpin most users' interactions with their desktops and mobile devices. Modern desktops regularly drive one or more large, colorful, high-resolution LEDs via one or sometimes multiple video cards. Graphics processing units commonly contain more transistors than the CPUs which control them. Despite this, the basic process interface exposed by ANSI C and the UNIX kernel consists of two character streams.
Don't blame me, man; I didn't do it.
- FIXME Explain the VESA BIOS Extensions!
- FIXME Explain how printing integrates with all this...
Displays
Displays can typically identify themselves to a compliant EDID (Extended Display Identification Data) parser, usually using some instance of the DDC (Data Display Channel) protocol suite. DDC was superseded by E-DDC in 1999, but is still usually referred to as DDC. EDID itself was split out from DDC with the release of DDC2 in April 1996. EDID 1.4 was superseded by E-EDID (EDID 2.0), but this is similarly referred to as simply EDID. DisplayID is a new definition designed to replace E-EDID, but implementation has been slow.
On DE15 (commonly known as VGA) connectors, DDC takes over the 4 "identification" pins from the IBM VGA definition (ID0--ID3, pins 11, 12, 4 and 15). These pins were not commonly used under their original semantics. The similarly rare DDC1 implements a serial link atop these pins, continuously retransmitting the EDID block on Pin 12, clocked against vertical sync. DDC2 implements an I²C bus, using Pin 12 for data and Pin 15 as a clock.
DDC2B is also implemented by DVI, HDMI, and DisplayPort.
Marketed Resolutions
Note that these terms are largely meaningless, and have been since SuperVGA (also, where's EGA?).
Physical Connectors
Color Management
FIXME!
Character Cell Output
Serial consoles
GRUB on VGA
Linux system console on VGA
Linux system console on Framebuffer
Glyph matching
Libraries such as libaa and libcaca make use of glyph matching algorithms to provide a generic character cell-based rasterizer (libcaca includes Unicode support and colors, among other advances). The results can be quite striking!
Raster Output
Graphic output will require some kernel module(s) driving the video device(s). Framebuffer drivers are independent of userspace programs. They create a /dev entry, can support the system console, and are targeted by SDL, DirectFB, and fbdev (the framebuffer X server). Direct Rendering Manager (DRM) drivers are used as part of X11's Direct Rendering Infrastructure (DRI), and require their own X servers. Framebuffer drivers generally accelerate only 2D operations (blitting, rectangular tiling, etc), or none at all. DRM drivers expose a much richer API, and can be used with fully hardware-accelerated X servers. In addition, closed source drivers -- usually paired with their own X servers, and not typically supporting a framebuffer device -- can be used. Use of both the DRI and framebuffer drivers with a device can lead to errors, although sometimes it works fine.
Framebuffer
An abstraction of hardware, mapping memory to displayed pixels. If a framebuffer driver is active, /dev/fbX devices will exist, and the fbset tool can be used to display their statuses. It is generally not advised to use a framebuffer driver at the same time as X-based hardware control, though this sometimes works in practice. When a framebuffer is present and supported at kernel boot time, Linux will display a Tux logo (see right) for each processor in the machine.
Framebuffer devices are typically named /dev/fbX. The fbset command can be used to access and control framebuffer devices. The framebuffer mode is generally configured via the kernel command line or arguments to modprobe(1)/init_module(2).
Xorg
Xorg's code base combines the DDX (Device-Dependent X) and the DIX (Device-Independent X). It is a network-transparent client-server reference implementation of version 11 of the X Protocol, and provides a complete display and interface system capable of supporting multiple displays and multiple input devices. Multiple instances of the X Server can be run on one machine without much difficulty, though they must control different hardware resources. XNest and Xephyr are X servers targeting X windows as their framebuffers. Xvfb provides a null X server, allowing headless execution of Xorg-based programs.
- Extensions
- Damage -- Notification that a portion of a window needs to be redrawn.
- Render -- Porter-Duff image compositioning. It wraps the Pixmap and Window datatypes with a new type, Picture. Picture provides an alpha channel. This is necessary for any kind of translucency within an X server, a prerequisite of (among other things) sane anti-aliased text support. For that matter, it added anti-aliased drawing primitives.
- Shape -- Support for non-rectangular windows.
- RandR -- The X Resize, Rotate and Reflect Extension allows manipulation of root screens. Used for hotplugging devices, multidisplay, and changing devices.
- Xv (X Video) -- Scaling and YUV->RGB conversion offloading.
- XvMC -- X Video Motion Compensation. Offloads mocomp and iDCT for MPEG2.
- GLX -- The OpenGL extension, providing support for use of OpenGL within an X window. It is superseded by EGL.
- XDMCP -- A good way to get rooted. Don't use XDMCP. You will be laughed at, and beaten, and made to regret having done so.
- Xft -- The X Font Extension. It drove Render, but has been largely replaced by cairo.
- Composite -- Allows a compositing manager to provide a Compositing Overlay Window (COW). Largely designed around the Texture From Pixmap (TFP) OpenGL extension, the X11 Pixmap is treated as an OpenGL Texture. Not necessary for compositing (KWin4 doesn't use it), but a straightforward way to accomplish it. The reference use of this extension was xcompmgr, but it is subsumed directly into modern window managers such as Compiz and Unity.
- Pixman -- An archive of low-level rasterizing code used by Xorg and Cairo.
- Memory Managers
- GEM - Graphics Execution Manager. Intel's solution for region and context management.
- TTM - Transition Table Maps.
- Accelerators
- XAA - The XFree86 Acceleration Architecture. Added in XFree86 3.3, rewritten entirely for 4.0, and removed in X.org 1.13.
- KAA - KDrive Acceleration Architecture.
- EXA - A 3D version of XAA.
- UXA - Intel's EXA rewrite atop GEM.
- Xgl - X implemented atop the OpenGL wrapper API Glitz.
- Xglx -
- Xegl -
- AIGLX - Accelerated Indirect GLX. Replaced Xgl in 2008. Present but largely unused today.
- SNA - Sandy Bridge New Acceleration. Intel's new accelerator, which supports more than Sandy Bridge, but does not support non-Intel chipsets.
Wayland
Wayland is a new display/interface protocol, under heavy development as of the end of 2012. It integrates compositing with window management, and eliminates the need for an explicit server process.
APIs
Xorg
- XCB
The X protocol C language Bindings are a low-level API driving the minimalist XCB X wire protocol.
- X11
The original wire protocol for X11. It is now implemented atop XCB.
- Xlib
The original, archaic, extraordinarily ugly X widget set, plus window control routines and other primitives used by higher-level toolkits.
OpenGL
OpenGL (the Open Graphics Library) is an API specification geared towards hardware-accelerated 3D primitives. On desktop Linux, there are three major implementations of OpenGL:
- NVIDIA's proprietary implementation, which supports most NVIDIA cards
- AMD's proprietary implementation (fglrx), which supports most AMD cards
- Mesa, an open implementation mixing hardware acceleration with software fallback. It includes:
- Gallium, an infrastructure designed to facilitate development of hardware-accelerated drivers
- TGSI, an intermediate representation used by Gallium to target state trackers
- Nouveau, an open implementation for NVIDIA cards, using Gallium
- Radeon, an open implementation for AMD cards, using Gallium
- An open implementation for Intel cards
- llvmpipe, a software rasterizer
Generally, the proprietary drivers tend to support newer OpenGL features and provide better performance, while the Mesa drivers are more smoothly integrated with the rest of the graphics stack (Kernel Mode Switching, Direct Rendering Infrastructure, XRandr, etc). Standard Linux tools might fail to work with the proprietary drivers, forcing use of proprietary tools to control the device.
- EGL
EGL provides window manager-specific functionality for an OpenGL stack.
- OpenGL ES
OpenGL for Embedded Systems. Mesa targets this with drivers for:
- OMAP (Texas Instruments)
- SGX (PowerVR)
- OpenVG
Vector graphics acceleration targeting embedded systems (ie, often used in conjunction with OpenGL ES).
- GLU/GLUT
The OpenGL Utility Toolkit. These libraries facilitate developing simple OpenGL applications.
- GLEW
The OpenGL Extensions Wrangler. A cross-platform library for determining available OpenGL extension support.
SDL
The Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform, high-level multimedia library. It supports backends including:
DirectFB
A thin layer providing hardware acceleration and graphics primitives atop Linux framebuffer devices.
Video Playback
Hardware
Hardware-offloaded solutions generally do not provide the quality or feature set possible through CPU-based transformations.
- PureVideo -- NVIDIA GPU hardware solution in four Feature Sets.
- Avivo -- AMD GPU hardware solution
- Quick Sync -- Intel CPU hardware solution
- Clear Video -- Intel GPU hardware solution
Software
- VAAPI -- The Video Acceleration API. A cross-platform, open video offloading library.
- VDPAU -- NVIDIA's Video Decode and Presentation API for Unix. It is a superset of VAAPI, and suitable for use as a VAAPI backend.
GNOME + OpenType
- Cairo
Cairo is a vector drawing library used by applications either directly or through the GTK+ widget set. It's used heavily throughout the GNOME Project. Cairo has multiple backends, including:
Used to select fonts based on desired properties and complex selectors that virtually no one anywhere understands.
- FreeType
Font rasterization of non-complex (aka Level One) Unicode glyphs.
- FriBidi
GNU's implementation of the Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm, necessary for bidirectional and boustrophedonic writing systems.
- Harfbuzz
An OpenType layout engine capable of complex Unicode phonetic transformations.
- Pango
A very high-level API for rendering glyphs.
KDE
FIXME!
Tools
Xorg
xrandr controls and accesses the RandR extension:
Screen 0: minimum 8 x 8, current 2560 x 1600, maximum 16384 x 16384 DVI-I-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) DVI-I-1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) DVI-I-2 connected 2560x1600+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 641mm x 401mm 2560x1600 60.0*+ 1920x1440 60.0 1920x1200 59.9 1600x1200 60.0 1280x1024 75.0 60.0 1280x800 59.8 1152x864 75.0 1024x768 75.0 60.0 800x600 75.0 60.3 640x480 75.0 59.9 HDMI-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) DVI-I-3 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
xwininfo dumps information about an X window:
xwininfo: Window id: 0x3c00080 "xorg data rtypes - Google Search - Iceweasel" Absolute upper-left X: 6 Absolute upper-left Y: 21 Relative upper-left X: 6 Relative upper-left Y: 21 Width: 2548 Height: 1573 Depth: 24 Visual: 0x21 Visual Class: TrueColor Border width: 0 Class: InputOutput Colormap: 0x20 (installed) Bit Gravity State: NorthWestGravity Window Gravity State: NorthWestGravity Backing Store State: NotUseful Save Under State: no Map State: IsViewable Override Redirect State: no Corners: +6+21 -6+21 -6-6 +6-6 -geometry 2548x1573+6-6
Framebuffer
- fbset accesses and controls framebuffer devices.
- fbterm provides a terminal on a framebuffer device.
- fbcat and fbgrab can screenshot a framebuffer.
See Also
- VGA compatible text mode on Wikipedia
- "The Linux Graphics Stack"
- cairo-ickle
- carl's boring blog (Carl Worth)
- keithp.com/blog (Keith Packard)
- X Window System Technical Glossary
- "The Art and Science of Text Mode Conversion"
- Fonts in the SprezzOS Manual