Good afternoon all,
I am about to port about 12 laptops to FreeBSD for a small municipality. Some of these laptops have Intel Gen III GPU's in them (Asus A550CA to be specific). I have one said laptop in my possesion on my desk.
Issue #1: I cannot get FreeBSD, PC-BSD, nor GhostBSD to recognize this card. My target OS is FreeBSD. I had installed the others to this test laptop for use as a "guinea pig" to see if I could get the Intel driver to operate. No luck at all. This chipset always comes up in VESA mode....which is not suitable for a laptop because of it's extreme slowness. Also the laptop don't have "classic" VESA resolutions, which means the screen constantly shifts position depending upon where your mouse is. I need to resolve this issue before I deploy. My customer will not accept this at all.
I also have read that Intel and FreeBSD aren't friends becasue Intel doesn't want to play "nice".
I would sincerely appreciate assistance resolving this issue.
Issue #2: When exiting the DE, X hangs, and hangs hard core, and takes the keyboard with it. This forces me to toggle the power button to start a clean shutdown. This behavior spans across XFCE, MATE, and also spans across different login DM's as well.
Reading through the forums as I have...it is clear I am not alone with this issue.....But I also see that there is not a soverign remedy for the "X" hanging problem that appears to be fairly widespread. Having tried several posted resolutions, I have had no success resolving this issue.
Once again I would appreciate some assistance resolving this issue.
What is confusing me is that the xf86-video-intel is installed. However if I am reading right...this may not be for my Intel GenIII chipset.
Edit: Without the proper driver I cannot increase nor decrease the backlight of the laptop either.
The FreeBSD community has been generous with me in resolving other issues, and I am appreciative.....I am hoping that once again I can be pointed to a how-to I am unaware of, or a post I didn't find in my own searching....
Sincerly and respectfully,
Dave
I am about to port about 12 laptops to FreeBSD for a small municipality. Some of these laptops have Intel Gen III GPU's in them (Asus A550CA to be specific). I have one said laptop in my possesion on my desk.
Issue #1: I cannot get FreeBSD, PC-BSD, nor GhostBSD to recognize this card. My target OS is FreeBSD. I had installed the others to this test laptop for use as a "guinea pig" to see if I could get the Intel driver to operate. No luck at all. This chipset always comes up in VESA mode....which is not suitable for a laptop because of it's extreme slowness. Also the laptop don't have "classic" VESA resolutions, which means the screen constantly shifts position depending upon where your mouse is. I need to resolve this issue before I deploy. My customer will not accept this at all.
I also have read that Intel and FreeBSD aren't friends becasue Intel doesn't want to play "nice".
I would sincerely appreciate assistance resolving this issue.
Issue #2: When exiting the DE, X hangs, and hangs hard core, and takes the keyboard with it. This forces me to toggle the power button to start a clean shutdown. This behavior spans across XFCE, MATE, and also spans across different login DM's as well.
Reading through the forums as I have...it is clear I am not alone with this issue.....But I also see that there is not a soverign remedy for the "X" hanging problem that appears to be fairly widespread. Having tried several posted resolutions, I have had no success resolving this issue.
Once again I would appreciate some assistance resolving this issue.
What is confusing me is that the xf86-video-intel is installed. However if I am reading right...this may not be for my Intel GenIII chipset.
Edit: Without the proper driver I cannot increase nor decrease the backlight of the laptop either.
The FreeBSD community has been generous with me in resolving other issues, and I am appreciative.....I am hoping that once again I can be pointed to a how-to I am unaware of, or a post I didn't find in my own searching....
Sincerly and respectfully,
Dave