On 10/28/07, <b class="gmail_sendername">Chris Ribe</b> <<a href="mailto:chrisribe@gmail.com">chrisribe@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<div><span class="gmail_quote"></span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
Hello all, <br> I am struggling to get my frontend to play video correctly on my new TV. It is a 1080i RPTV that I have working with a custom 1080x540 modeline. When I playback recording or watch live TV, I get horizontally squished video, as if myth believes there are square pixels.
<br><br>I am running last weeks SVN, the most recent Nvidia drivers with a 7200GS graphics card, and I have followed the instructions in several howtos on the wiki, which have lead me to this xorg.conf (edited to remove irrelevant information):
<br><br><br>Section "Device"<br> Identifier "7200GS"<br> Driver "nvidia"<br> BusID "PCI:2:0:0"<br> Option "NoBandWidthTest" "true"
<br> Option "UseEdidDpi" "false"<br> Option "UseEDID" "false"<br> Option "UseEdidFreqs" "false"<br>Option "ModeValidation" "DFP-0: NoEdidModes,NoMaxPClkCheck, NoVesaModes,
<br> AllowInterlacedModes,NoDFPNativeResolutionCheck, NoHorizSyncCheck, NoVertRefres<br>hCheck"<br> Option "ExactModeTimingsDVI" "true"<br> Option "UseFBDev" "false"
<br>EndSection<br><br><br>Section "Monitor"<br> Identifier "51S500"<br> Option "DPMS"<br> DisplaySize 243.84 137.16<br> HorizSync 15-46<br> VertRefresh 59-61
<br> Modeline "720hitachi" 79.5 1920 2088 2142 2412 540 572 576 592 -hsync -vs<br>ync<br>EndSection<br><br><br>From my understanding, the combination of the "UseEdidDpi" "false" tag, the DisplaySize tag, and the resolution should lead the drive to compute a non-square DPI and video should display correctly. Unfortunately, this isn't happening.
<br><br>Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.</blockquote><div><br>So, I was just googling things like "xorg" "DPI" and "non square pixels," and one search returned my original message from the archives as it's 2nd result. That was disheartening.
<br><br>Anyhow, it caused me to reread my own message and discover that I said 1080x540 when I meant 1920x540.<br><br>So, 1920x540 is the resolution I'm working at, 100,50 is the DPI I'm looking for.<br><br> </div>
<br></div><br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>TV/IT Engineer<br>WCJB-TV Gainesville, FL<br>(352) 416 0648<br><a href="mailto:cribe@wcjb.com">cribe@wcjb.com</a>