Fedora 7 Installation Guide: Difference between revisions
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Installation on Fedora 7 is easy: Download the latest fglrx driver, apply it an executable permission, and run it. | Installation on Fedora 7 is easy: Download the latest fglrx driver, apply it an executable permission, and run it. | ||
There are | There are basically 2 options: | ||
1: Install the driver | 1: Install the driver | ||
2: Generate distribution specific package | 2: Generate distribution specific package |
Revision as of 14:38, 7 September 2007
Installation on Fedora 7 is easy: Download the latest fglrx driver, apply it an executable permission, and run it. There are basically 2 options:
1: Install the driver 2: Generate distribution specific package
Choice one installs the driver and second choice generates rpm according to your system and puts them in working directory
After the newest ATI catalyst release (8.39.4), fglrx module can be installed on new Xorg (7.2). Unfortunately, the previous ATI driver (8.37.6), nor the latter one (8.38.6), or even the hotfix (8.38.7) were compatible with the X server in the FC7 distribution.
As pointed out at Phoronix.com, the latest release (8.39.4) has very little changes and completely ignored Fedora 7 users who have waited over a month for a functional driver.
"The AMD 8.38.6 display driver had introduced Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 packaging support along with fixing a few bugs, but the driver was one of the least interesting releases in recent times." http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=764&num=1
Given that this release focuses on packaging support, ATI are still prioritizing cosmetic changes over functional aspects. Whilst packages are a 'nice to have', basic functionality is far more critical.