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Talis Mahn
Cotton Buds
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Posted - 2011.07.15 03:50:00 -
[1]
Anyone have an idea on how I get EVE to see the correct type of video card? The graphics are much better but Eve likes to hesitate ever though my frame rate is up over 50FPS
Xubuntu 11.04 64bit AMD 6000+ X2 4 GB RAM NVIDIA Driver Version:275.09.07 Wine 1.3.24
Cheers
I am not surrounded. I'm in a target rich environment. |
Nimtra
Minmatar
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Posted - 2011.07.17 01:32:00 -
[2]
try to look here : http://wiki.winehq.org/UsefulRegistryKeys especially check " VideoPciVendorID " I guess your graphics card gets detected wrongly.
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Talis Mahn
Cotton Buds
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Posted - 2011.07.17 15:51:00 -
[3]
Thank you, I will do that. I've been looking for a solution but haven't been having much luck.
I am not surrounded. I'm in a target rich environment. |
Talis Mahn
Cotton Buds
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Posted - 2011.07.17 17:34:00 -
[4]
Now I'm having trouble finding the correct registry values to put in.
I am not surrounded. I'm in a target rich environment. |
Nimtra
Minmatar
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Posted - 2011.07.17 19:46:00 -
[5]
Read the site :P ... so here is the super short version once you are in HKEY_CURRENT_USER -> software -> wine create the new key ( copy paste it from the page, ) Direct3D , the make a new value inside that key, its of type REG_SZ . copy the name again from the site
also read the first paragrpahs on that page ^^.
Quote: If a key or value does not exist, create it. All values are strings (REG_SZ) unless stated otherwise. To create a new key if it does not exist: In a terminal, type wine regedit and hit enter Open the tree on the left to the section where you need to add it (e.g., HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Wine) Select the section you are going to add the new key to (e.g., Wine) Right click and select New->Key Type the name of the new key (taken from the list below) Hit enter
Did I say read that page? Anyway. if that is not the problem, please tell me.
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Talis Mahn
Cotton Buds
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Posted - 2011.07.17 23:05:00 -
[6]
I didn't understand what I was reading there. If they'd put an example it would have helped a lot. I think I put the values in correctly. When I first logged in after the changes everything was set to high quality, but now the video card displays as "Direct3D HAL 1"
As long as it works.
Thanx for the help
I am not surrounded. I'm in a target rich environment. |
Nimtra
Minmatar
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Posted - 2011.07.18 01:57:00 -
[7]
also try this value : VideoMemorySize Quote: [Sets the amount of emulated video memory (in megabytes). Default is a simple autodetection based on the card type guessed from OpenGL strings and extensions]
might help too
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Talis Mahn
Cotton Buds
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Posted - 2011.07.23 18:02:00 -
[8]
Edited by: Talis Mahn on 23/07/2011 18:04:55 I'm getting 59+ FPS in a window with most settings set to High (Seems to be the only way it wants to work). I can live with it. :) Thank you for the help.
Here are the Registry settings I created in Direct3D (Asus Geforce GTX 560):
VideoMemorySize REG_SZ 1024 VideoPciDeviceID REG_DWORD 0x00001201 VideoPciVendorID REG_DWORD 0x000010de
I'll keep tweaking at it. But at least it works!
Thanks again
I am not surrounded. I'm in a target rich environment. |
Katrina Bekers
Gallente Fighters Squadron Tactical Narcotics Team
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Posted - 2011.08.24 14:52:00 -
[9]
I had the same problem. I came back from holidays, upgraded WINE (1.3.26, atm), and my GTX560Ti is recognized correctly now.
Try again. --- Kat |
Katrina Bekers
Gallente Fighters Squadron Tactical Narcotics Team
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Posted - 2011.08.29 18:54:00 -
[10]
It seems it was a upper/lowercase issue in the DirectX code, now fixed:
http://bugs.winehq.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27924 --- Kat |
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Talis Mahn
Cotton Buds
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Posted - 2011.09.04 22:08:00 -
[11]
Still no go. Shows as either and 8300GS or HAL. I have a theory its how the mainboard is identifying it. And since I'm upgrading to to a Sabretooth board I'll see what happens when the new system is running. Darned alder chipsets.
On the other hand still getting 59+ FPS in space so... I'm good
I am not surrounded. I'm in a target rich environment. |
Ribaldry
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Posted - 2011.09.04 23:25:00 -
[12]
Edited by: Ribaldry on 04/09/2011 23:31:01 Just to clarify.
You will create a new key under Wine called Direct3D. This appears as a folder. You will then create a new DWORD value inside Direct3D for VideoPciDeviceID and one for VideoPciVendorID. Use "lspci | grep -i vga" to figure out the id if the pci device (you probably have dozens of devices, you just care about the VGA one). Then lspci -n looking for the same id (01:00.0 in my case).
For the lazy / confused: lspci -n | grep `lspci | grep -i vga | cut -d' ' -f1` | cut -d' ' -f3
The value before the : is the vendor id and after is the device id. Put these in the 2 new DWORDs you created.
Came here because I was wondering why my q9400 4gb 460gtx win7 box was WAY faster than my i5-2500k 560gtx 10gb linux box... I didn't even notice it detectding it as a 8300 gs or w/e. Now to figure out why lspci reports a 460 when it's a 560. I was capped at 60 fps on my windows box and the same view was 15fps on my bigger box. Now I'm 60+ on both but it sees it as HAL ( hardware abstraction layer I assume ).
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Ribaldry
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Posted - 2011.09.04 23:59:00 -
[13]
Went to a mission and I'm now peaking at 25fps with about 6 reds... going to see if it's fixed in git.
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