Radeon 9500 Pro 9700 Drivers For Mac

Code: HorizSync 24.0 - 94.0 VertRefresh 24.0 - 87.0 Press Ctrl+X. Type “ Y” for Yes. Then type: sudo reboot 4. Start your system with the Installation DVD or USB drive.

Radeon

Open the File Manager and under Devices select the volume that lists the root folders. Go to /var/log/Xorg.0.log and copy the file to a separate USB drive and post it. If you're unable to access tty1, then select Recovery Mode at the GRUB boot menu.

If no menu shows, then hold down the Shift key while starting, or keep tapping the key. In the menu, select “ root - drop to root shell prompt”. When asked for the root password, just type your user password. Then change the file permissions to read and write by typing. F380cedric wrote:For the fglrx, in the previous installation (linux mint 17.1) I had, I had followed, and I think it worked.

But the blog don't exist anymore. Do you think that it will be a solution? When I clicked on that link and then clicked on ' Show More', this information appeared, which is probably what you were looking for? Blog link (romanian). Uninstall old drivers: sudo apt-get remove -purge fglrx fglrx-amdcccle fglrx-updates fglrx-amdcccle-updates sudo rm /etc/X11/xorg.conf Ubuntu 32 bit. Ubuntu 64 bit.

Install dependencies: sudo apt-get install dkms lib32gcc1 libc6-i386 libqtcore4 Install drivers: sudo dpkg -i fglrx.deb Initial driver configuration: sudo amdconfig -initial Those dependencies are already installed in Mint 17.1. If you use the link for downloading the Catalyst driver, then the Catalyst Control Center is in a separate package. You can get the driver and control center in one package at When the 15.5 driver package is extracted, there is now only a single driver installation file. Open the Terminal and use these commands to change to the location of the driver file and start the installation.

Code: Supported adapter detected. Check if system has the tools required for installation. Uninstalling any previously installed drivers. Creating symlink /var/lib/dkms/fglrx/15.101.1001/source - /usr/src/fglrx-15.101.1001 DKMS: add completed. Kernel preparation unnecessary for this kernel.

Building module: cleaning build area. Cd /var/lib/dkms/fglrx/15.101.1001/build; sh make.sh -nohints -unamer=3.19.0-21-generic -norootcheck.(bad exit status: 1) Error Kernel Module: Failed to build fglrx-15.101.1001 with DKMS Error Kernel Module: Removing fglrx-15.101.1001 from DKMS - Deleting module version: 15.101.1001 completely from the DKMS tree. Done.

Reboot Kernel Module: update-initramfs And on reboot, X crashed, I followed to solve this problem - I reread your fisrt post, I understand now - So, I booted in recovery mode (after installing fglrx with the driver manager) and I followed your steps. F380cedric wrote:The line was here but the file name was fglrx-core.conf and not fglrx.conf (I don't know if this is important or not ^^ ) From what I've seen, the file fglrx.conf, which blacklists the radeon driver, is created after an installation of the fglrx driver. The file blacklist-fglrx.conf is created after installing the downloaded Catalyst driver. I've only seen the file fglrx-core.conf created when the fglrx driver was already installed and then the Catalyst driver is installed or the Catalyst driver is already installed and then the fglrx driver is installed. The fglrx or Catalyst driver should be uninstalled first before the other is installed.

From the fglrx-install.log you posted, the fglrx kernel module could not be built. I did a test on my system with an AMD APU. I installed the same 3.19 kernel in the Update Manager and tried to install the 15.5 Catalyst driver but it failed. The fglrx-install.log was the same as yours.

Ati Radeon 9700 Driver Download

On rebooting I got a black screen and had to enter Recovery Mode to remove the partial installation with the command aticonfig -uninstall. On the default 3.13 kernel and the 3.16 kernel, the driver installed without a problem. Your Xorg.0.log file you posted shows the radeon driver is enabled. Actually your system with an integrated AMD GPU and discrete AMD card is more correctly called dual graphics, and an integrated Intel GPU and discrete AMD card is hybrid graphics, which has better support. The problem you're facing is not that your GPUs lack driver support but there is not enough Linux and AMD support for getting the integrated and discrete GPUs to work together correctly in your dual graphics configuration, using a proprietary driver. Hybrid graphics systems using an Intel and Nvidia GPUs are better supported with either Bumblebee or Nvidia Prime, where the proprietary driver is used. F380cedric wrote:Do you think that if I use the proprietary driver with the kernel 3.13 should resolve the hibernation issue?

Only attempting that driver installation will answer your question, but I think you will probably get the same black screen problem. I have backup images of my Mint installation and also an extra partition just for testing, so I can easily test different drivers without worrying about my system crashing.

If your system is working satisfactorily now, then I would leave it as it is. Code: sudo apt-get purge fglrx. sudo rm /etc/X11/xorg.conf sudo apt-get install -reinstall xserver-xorg-core libgl1-mesa-glx:i386 libgl1-mesa-dri:i386 libgl1-mesa-glx:amd64 libgl1-mesa-dri:amd64 sudo dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg sudo add-apt-repository ppa:oibaf/graphics-drivers sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get dist-upgrade sudo apt-get install libtxc-dxtn-s2tc0 libtxc-dxtn-s2tc0:i386 I restart and do an apt-get update/upgrade. All seems fine (the Linux mint logo on start is broken) but when I want to start CS:GO, I have a pop-up with 'preparing to launch the game.' (normal) and the pop-up disappeared but the game did not start. What can I do, steam does not show any errors but I cannot play anymore.