xref: /openbmc/linux/Documentation/fb/fbcon.rst (revision b830f94f)
1=======================
2The Framebuffer Console
3=======================
4
5The framebuffer console (fbcon), as its name implies, is a text
6console running on top of the framebuffer device. It has the functionality of
7any standard text console driver, such as the VGA console, with the added
8features that can be attributed to the graphical nature of the framebuffer.
9
10In the x86 architecture, the framebuffer console is optional, and
11some even treat it as a toy. For other architectures, it is the only available
12display device, text or graphical.
13
14What are the features of fbcon?  The framebuffer console supports
15high resolutions, varying font types, display rotation, primitive multihead,
16etc. Theoretically, multi-colored fonts, blending, aliasing, and any feature
17made available by the underlying graphics card are also possible.
18
19A. Configuration
20================
21
22The framebuffer console can be enabled by using your favorite kernel
23configuration tool.  It is under Device Drivers->Graphics Support->Frame
24buffer Devices->Console display driver support->Framebuffer Console Support.
25Select 'y' to compile support statically or 'm' for module support.  The
26module will be fbcon.
27
28In order for fbcon to activate, at least one framebuffer driver is
29required, so choose from any of the numerous drivers available. For x86
30systems, they almost universally have VGA cards, so vga16fb and vesafb will
31always be available. However, using a chipset-specific driver will give you
32more speed and features, such as the ability to change the video mode
33dynamically.
34
35To display the penguin logo, choose any logo available in Graphics
36support->Bootup logo.
37
38Also, you will need to select at least one compiled-in font, but if
39you don't do anything, the kernel configuration tool will select one for you,
40usually an 8x16 font.
41
42GOTCHA: A common bug report is enabling the framebuffer without enabling the
43framebuffer console.  Depending on the driver, you may get a blanked or
44garbled display, but the system still boots to completion.  If you are
45fortunate to have a driver that does not alter the graphics chip, then you
46will still get a VGA console.
47
48B. Loading
49==========
50
51Possible scenarios:
52
531. Driver and fbcon are compiled statically
54
55	 Usually, fbcon will automatically take over your console. The notable
56	 exception is vesafb.  It needs to be explicitly activated with the
57	 vga= boot option parameter.
58
592. Driver is compiled statically, fbcon is compiled as a module
60
61	 Depending on the driver, you either get a standard console, or a
62	 garbled display, as mentioned above.  To get a framebuffer console,
63	 do a 'modprobe fbcon'.
64
653. Driver is compiled as a module, fbcon is compiled statically
66
67	 You get your standard console.  Once the driver is loaded with
68	 'modprobe xxxfb', fbcon automatically takes over the console with
69	 the possible exception of using the fbcon=map:n option. See below.
70
714. Driver and fbcon are compiled as a module.
72
73	 You can load them in any order. Once both are loaded, fbcon will take
74	 over the console.
75
76C. Boot options
77
78	 The framebuffer console has several, largely unknown, boot options
79	 that can change its behavior.
80
811. fbcon=font:<name>
82
83	Select the initial font to use. The value 'name' can be any of the
84	compiled-in fonts: 10x18, 6x10, 7x14, Acorn8x8, MINI4x6,
85	PEARL8x8, ProFont6x11, SUN12x22, SUN8x16, TER16x32, VGA8x16, VGA8x8.
86
87	Note, not all drivers can handle font with widths not divisible by 8,
88	such as vga16fb.
89
902. fbcon=scrollback:<value>[k]
91
92	The scrollback buffer is memory that is used to preserve display
93	contents that has already scrolled past your view.  This is accessed
94	by using the Shift-PageUp key combination.  The value 'value' is any
95	integer. It defaults to 32KB.  The 'k' suffix is optional, and will
96	multiply the 'value' by 1024.
97
983. fbcon=map:<0123>
99
100	This is an interesting option. It tells which driver gets mapped to
101	which console. The value '0123' is a sequence that gets repeated until
102	the total length is 64 which is the number of consoles available. In
103	the above example, it is expanded to 012301230123... and the mapping
104	will be::
105
106		tty | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ...
107		fb  | 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 0 ...
108
109		('cat /proc/fb' should tell you what the fb numbers are)
110
111	One side effect that may be useful is using a map value that exceeds
112	the number of loaded fb drivers. For example, if only one driver is
113	available, fb0, adding fbcon=map:1 tells fbcon not to take over the
114	console.
115
116	Later on, when you want to map the console the to the framebuffer
117	device, you can use the con2fbmap utility.
118
1194. fbcon=vc:<n1>-<n2>
120
121	This option tells fbcon to take over only a range of consoles as
122	specified by the values 'n1' and 'n2'. The rest of the consoles
123	outside the given range will still be controlled by the standard
124	console driver.
125
126	NOTE: For x86 machines, the standard console is the VGA console which
127	is typically located on the same video card.  Thus, the consoles that
128	are controlled by the VGA console will be garbled.
129
1304. fbcon=rotate:<n>
131
132	This option changes the orientation angle of the console display. The
133	value 'n' accepts the following:
134
135	    - 0 - normal orientation (0 degree)
136	    - 1 - clockwise orientation (90 degrees)
137	    - 2 - upside down orientation (180 degrees)
138	    - 3 - counterclockwise orientation (270 degrees)
139
140	The angle can be changed anytime afterwards by 'echoing' the same
141	numbers to any one of the 2 attributes found in
142	/sys/class/graphics/fbcon:
143
144		- rotate     - rotate the display of the active console
145		- rotate_all - rotate the display of all consoles
146
147	Console rotation will only become available if Framebuffer Console
148	Rotation support is compiled in your kernel.
149
150	NOTE: This is purely console rotation.  Any other applications that
151	use the framebuffer will remain at their 'normal' orientation.
152	Actually, the underlying fb driver is totally ignorant of console
153	rotation.
154
1555. fbcon=margin:<color>
156
157	This option specifies the color of the margins. The margins are the
158	leftover area at the right and the bottom of the screen that are not
159	used by text. By default, this area will be black. The 'color' value
160	is an integer number that depends on the framebuffer driver being used.
161
1626. fbcon=nodefer
163
164	If the kernel is compiled with deferred fbcon takeover support, normally
165	the framebuffer contents, left in place by the firmware/bootloader, will
166	be preserved until there actually is some text is output to the console.
167	This option causes fbcon to bind immediately to the fbdev device.
168
1697. fbcon=logo-pos:<location>
170
171	The only possible 'location' is 'center' (without quotes), and when
172	given, the bootup logo is moved from the default top-left corner
173	location to the center of the framebuffer. If more than one logo is
174	displayed due to multiple CPUs, the collected line of logos is moved
175	as a whole.
176
177C. Attaching, Detaching and Unloading
178
179Before going on to how to attach, detach and unload the framebuffer console, an
180illustration of the dependencies may help.
181
182The console layer, as with most subsystems, needs a driver that interfaces with
183the hardware. Thus, in a VGA console::
184
185	console ---> VGA driver ---> hardware.
186
187Assuming the VGA driver can be unloaded, one must first unbind the VGA driver
188from the console layer before unloading the driver.  The VGA driver cannot be
189unloaded if it is still bound to the console layer. (See
190Documentation/driver-api/console.rst for more information).
191
192This is more complicated in the case of the framebuffer console (fbcon),
193because fbcon is an intermediate layer between the console and the drivers::
194
195	console ---> fbcon ---> fbdev drivers ---> hardware
196
197The fbdev drivers cannot be unloaded if bound to fbcon, and fbcon cannot
198be unloaded if it's bound to the console layer.
199
200So to unload the fbdev drivers, one must first unbind fbcon from the console,
201then unbind the fbdev drivers from fbcon.  Fortunately, unbinding fbcon from
202the console layer will automatically unbind framebuffer drivers from
203fbcon. Thus, there is no need to explicitly unbind the fbdev drivers from
204fbcon.
205
206So, how do we unbind fbcon from the console? Part of the answer is in
207Documentation/driver-api/console.rst. To summarize:
208
209Echo a value to the bind file that represents the framebuffer console
210driver. So assuming vtcon1 represents fbcon, then::
211
212  echo 1 > sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon1/bind - attach framebuffer console to
213					     console layer
214  echo 0 > sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon1/bind - detach framebuffer console from
215					     console layer
216
217If fbcon is detached from the console layer, your boot console driver (which is
218usually VGA text mode) will take over.  A few drivers (rivafb and i810fb) will
219restore VGA text mode for you.  With the rest, before detaching fbcon, you
220must take a few additional steps to make sure that your VGA text mode is
221restored properly. The following is one of the several methods that you can do:
222
2231. Download or install vbetool.  This utility is included with most
224   distributions nowadays, and is usually part of the suspend/resume tool.
225
2262. In your kernel configuration, ensure that CONFIG_FRAMEBUFFER_CONSOLE is set
227   to 'y' or 'm'. Enable one or more of your favorite framebuffer drivers.
228
2293. Boot into text mode and as root run::
230
231	vbetool vbestate save > <vga state file>
232
233   The above command saves the register contents of your graphics
234   hardware to <vga state file>.  You need to do this step only once as
235   the state file can be reused.
236
2374. If fbcon is compiled as a module, load fbcon by doing::
238
239       modprobe fbcon
240
2415. Now to detach fbcon::
242
243       vbetool vbestate restore < <vga state file> && \
244       echo 0 > /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon1/bind
245
2466. That's it, you're back to VGA mode. And if you compiled fbcon as a module,
247   you can unload it by 'rmmod fbcon'.
248
2497. To reattach fbcon::
250
251       echo 1 > /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon1/bind
252
2538. Once fbcon is unbound, all drivers registered to the system will also
254become unbound.  This means that fbcon and individual framebuffer drivers
255can be unloaded or reloaded at will. Reloading the drivers or fbcon will
256automatically bind the console, fbcon and the drivers together. Unloading
257all the drivers without unloading fbcon will make it impossible for the
258console to bind fbcon.
259
260Notes for vesafb users:
261=======================
262
263Unfortunately, if your bootline includes a vga=xxx parameter that sets the
264hardware in graphics mode, such as when loading vesafb, vgacon will not load.
265Instead, vgacon will replace the default boot console with dummycon, and you
266won't get any display after detaching fbcon. Your machine is still alive, so
267you can reattach vesafb. However, to reattach vesafb, you need to do one of
268the following:
269
270Variation 1:
271
272    a. Before detaching fbcon, do::
273
274	vbetool vbemode save > <vesa state file> # do once for each vesafb mode,
275						 # the file can be reused
276
277    b. Detach fbcon as in step 5.
278
279    c. Attach fbcon::
280
281	vbetool vbestate restore < <vesa state file> && \
282	echo 1 > /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon1/bind
283
284Variation 2:
285
286    a. Before detaching fbcon, do::
287
288	echo <ID> > /sys/class/tty/console/bind
289
290	vbetool vbemode get
291
292    b. Take note of the mode number
293
294    b. Detach fbcon as in step 5.
295
296    c. Attach fbcon::
297
298	vbetool vbemode set <mode number> && \
299	echo 1 > /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon1/bind
300
301Samples:
302========
303
304Here are 2 sample bash scripts that you can use to bind or unbind the
305framebuffer console driver if you are on an X86 box::
306
307  #!/bin/bash
308  # Unbind fbcon
309
310  # Change this to where your actual vgastate file is located
311  # Or Use VGASTATE=$1 to indicate the state file at runtime
312  VGASTATE=/tmp/vgastate
313
314  # path to vbetool
315  VBETOOL=/usr/local/bin
316
317
318  for (( i = 0; i < 16; i++))
319  do
320    if test -x /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon$i; then
321	if [ `cat /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon$i/name | grep -c "frame buffer"` \
322	     = 1 ]; then
323	    if test -x $VBETOOL/vbetool; then
324	       echo Unbinding vtcon$i
325	       $VBETOOL/vbetool vbestate restore < $VGASTATE
326	       echo 0 > /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon$i/bind
327	    fi
328	fi
329    fi
330  done
331
332---------------------------------------------------------------------------
333
334::
335
336  #!/bin/bash
337  # Bind fbcon
338
339  for (( i = 0; i < 16; i++))
340  do
341    if test -x /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon$i; then
342	if [ `cat /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon$i/name | grep -c "frame buffer"` \
343	     = 1 ]; then
344	  echo Unbinding vtcon$i
345	  echo 1 > /sys/class/vtconsole/vtcon$i/bind
346	fi
347    fi
348  done
349
350Antonino Daplas <adaplas@pol.net>
351