A new version of the
ATI/AMD Linux display driver was released two days ago, for both x86 and x86_64 platforms. This release includes support for openSUSE 10.3 and Red Flag DT 6.0 Linux distributions.
Issues resolved in this release:■ A memory leak is no longer noticed when running OpenGL applications.
■ Running X -configure no longer results in a segmentation fault in the fglrx driver.
■ fglrxinfo no longer reports OpenGL Render string: as Mesa GLX Indirect on systems containing an ATI Rialto AGP series of product.
Known issues of this release■ There is no support for video playback on the second head in dual head mode.
■ Desktop corruption may be noticed when dragging the overlay/video using dual-display mode.
■ A black screen may be observed on some hardware when switching to the console or leaving the X window system, using a Vesa framebuffer console driver.
■ Corruption may be noticed in the lower right corner of the display after the system is running for a long period of time.
■ Display flicker may be noticed when the gnome screen-saver starts.
■ Diagonal tearing may be noticed when playing a video file using a video player that utilizes the XVideo extension.
■ Video playback may look blocky when playing a video file
using a video player that utilizes the XVideo extension.
■ Video Playback may display wrong colors and additional shadow images when cropping or expanding a video file using a video player that utilizes the XVideo extension.
■ Connecting a display device that supports 1680x1050 to a system running Linux may result in a maximum display resolution of 1280x1024 only being available.
■ Custom mode lines in xorg.conf may be ignored by the fglrx driver.
■ Building RPM packages for Mandriva may fail.
In order to gain the best performance and ease of use, ATI/AMD recommends the following:
■ Kernel module build environment - should include the following: Kernel source code: either the Kernel Source or Kernel Headers packages.
■ ISSE Support enabled in your Linux Kernel (applies to Intel Pentium III and later CPUs only; enabled by default on version 2.4 and later kernels).
■ The rpm utility should be installed and configured correctly on your system, if you intend to install it via RPM packages.
Requirements:■ XOrg 6.7, 6.8, 6.9, 7.0, 7.1, 7.2 or 7.3
■ Linux kernel 2.6 or higher
■ glibc version 2.2 or 2.3
■ POSIX Shared Memory (/dev/shm) support is required for 3D applications.
Please notice that starting with this version, ATI Catalyst doesn't support Linux kernel 2.4. If you have a machine running Linux kernel 2.4, you should install version 8.42.3 of the ATI Catalyst software suite.
Supported operating systems:■ Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.6
■ Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.1
■ Ubuntu 7.10
■ Red Flag DT 6.0
■ openSUSE 10.3
For installation instructions and more information about this release, please go
here.
You can download the ATI/AMD Linux Display Driver now from
Softpedia.