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Since a full installation of X-Plane requires about 80 Gb, we'll not duplicate everything for the slaves, but instead we'll use the linking function of UNIX file systems.
XSCREENSAVER TIMESTAMP INSTALL
If you don't have already a copy installed, install it (together with the scenery, plugins and everything else you may want/need).įor the remaining part of this tutorial, I'll assume you have X-Plane installed in ~/X-Plane-9. We'll need a copy of it for every monitor. Now we have a working multi monitor linux system, with 3d acceleration on every screen. This will start icewm on the second monitor when you login. Install it from your package manager, then create a file called icewm.sh in ~/.kde/env/ (~ means your home), put the following code in it and make it executable: To solve this, we will install icewm and set it up to start in the second monitor. KDE4 before version 4.5.3, for example, will be able to start only on one monitor, leaving the other black. Not every DE is able to work with such a setup. Make the changes that are necessary for you. Here's mine as a reference:Īs you can see, this is for two nvidia cards with a monitor connected to each one.
XSCREENSAVER TIMESTAMP HOW TO
You can use the graphic tools from your distribution, from NVIDIA or ATI to configure a multi screen setup (choose "separate x screen" in the selection), but I'll show how to do it manually in nf. It allows us to easily distinguish between different windows in X-Plane and to use scripting It provides 3d acceleration on every monitor
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We'll be using a multi-screen setup (screen is used here in the xorg way), which has the following advantages over other solutions (TwinView, BigDesktop, xinerama, xrandr.): Two or more monitors (otherwise why would you be reading this?) A working Linux system with 3d acceleration enabled. A few free megabytes after a full install of X-Plane. One or more videocards: I use a different videocard for every monitor, you may attach 2 or 3 monitors to the same card if it is really powerful or if you are going to use a monitor to draw only the IOS. A powerful processor: a dual-core 2 Ghz cpu is the absolute minimum, but you will experience lookups. The whole has been tested on Linux, but it will work with some adaptations with every OS. In this tutorial I'll explain how to install multiple copies of X-Plane on the SAME machine and take advantage of all the processing power of your PC, including the setup of a multi-monitor configuration.
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X-Plane is a multi-pc oriented simulator - that is, only one monitor per computer (the draw IOS on secondary monitor options has too many restrictions to make it really useful).īut modern multi-cores computers can do a lot better than that.
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