Thought this might be useful to others: I have managed to use the nvidia geforce210 card with a 4k display and am attaching below the relevant xorg.conf info: -------------- # ... Section "Monitor" Identifier "seiki39u" Modeline "4k25" 225 3840 3900 3950 4000 2160 2168 2178 2250 # this is the one Modeline "4k30" 297 3840 4040 4240 4400 2160 2168 2178 2250 EndSection Section "Device" Identifier "geforce210" Driver "nvidia" # need nvidia-driver 340 or earlier BusID "PCI:1:0:0" # depends on your card EndSection Section "Screen" Identifier "Screen0" Device "geforce210" Monitor "seiki39u" Option "ModeValidation" "NoVertRefreshCheck, NoMaxPClkCheck, AllowNonEdidModes" SubSection "Display" Viewport 0 0 Depth 24 Modes "4k25" # "1920x1080_30" EndSubSection EndSection --------- Some comments: - you need the nvidia-driver 340 or earlier, newer versions do not support the GeForce 210 - the card itself is not rated for 4k, and appears to have a maximum pixel clock frequency of 225 MHz (sometimes negotiating even just 165 MHz with the monitor). I am using the HDMI port. - the Modeline "4k25" can be used to run at 4k/25Hz (which is the most you can get with such a pixel clock). Not that you are losing much, since HDMI 1.3 can only to 4k/30Hz at most. - you need to specify the Modeline because the monitor does not return a compatible mode through EDID (mine is a seiki TV se39uy01 - the very poor UK model; but i suspect others have the same issue): the modeline supplied by the tv uses a 297 MHz clock even at 50 Hz. - finally, in the "Screen" section you need some options to tell the driver to omit certain checks: Option "ModeValidation" "NoVertRefreshCheck, NoMaxPClkCheck, AllowNonEdidModes" And that's all. cheers luigiReceived on Fri Feb 06 2015 - 16:39:31 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Wed May 19 2021 - 11:40:55 UTC