Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Save performance when rotating screen e.g. on Raspberry Pi
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Didnt work that easy for me.
- You have to take the resolution of your display/monitor in the config.txt, not just 1600,900.
- I had to enable overscan, cause the picture was to big.
- If you’re using the MMM-Remote_Control the picture is rotated when you have a look at your MagicMirror.
I switched back to the fake KMS driver.
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Great hack!! I’m going to add this to my CSS 101 guide if that’s OK. I think this is incredibly useful.
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@j-e-f-f thank you! Of course you can :)
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Hello,
Iam struggeling on my PI3 to rotate by 90deg to right. Monitor has 1920x1080.
But I see only black screen at any other position than -90deg!!
As I need to change to 90deg or -270deg I got only black screen (also 180deg even) …So I changed config.txt to:
display_hdmi_rotate=0 framebuffer_width=1920 framebuffer_height=1080
& custom.css to:
body { margin: 0; position: absolute; transform: rotate(90deg); transform-origin: top left; width: 100vh; height: 100vw; object-fit: cover; top: 100vh; visibility: visible; }
What is missing?
Worse case I change physical mounting way, but not preferred :face_with_stuck-out_tongue_winking_eye:
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transform: rotate(90deg); transform-origin: top right;
works at least see have screen, but only half screen is used, so no option…
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Warning! Extreme newbie here. This is only my second day playing with Magic Mirror css.
I changed my css file and boot/config.txt following @evroom’s instructions above and although I was able to rotate the screen with these instructions, like @Joern, the Magic Mirror modules only fill the bottom half of the screen.
My CSS file is as follows (sorry, I don’t know how to put this in a separate box):
body {
margin: 0px; If I omit “px”, Magic Mirror does not display correctly.
position: absolute;
transform: rotate(90deg);
transform-origin: top right;
width: 100vh;
height: 100vh; If I change this to “100vw”, Magic Mirror does not display correctly.
object-fit: cover;
top: 100vh;
visibility: visible;
background: #000;
color: #aaa;
font-family: “Roboto Condensed”, san-serif;
font-weight: 400;
font-size: 2em;
line-height: 1.5em;
-webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;
}
.MMM-HTMLBox {
font-size: 18px;
line-height: 22px;
}
.MMM-RTSPStream header {
text-align: left;
}
.MMM-RTSPStream .innerWrapper {
border-style: none;
}…a few more entries after these ones.
My boot/config.txt contains the following entry:
display_hdmi_rotate=0
framebuffer_width=1600
framebuffer_height=900Any entries shown here that were not included in @evroom’s instructions, are from the original installation of Magic Mirror.
I’m running Magic Mirror latest software on a Pi4 with an Acer 24" monitor.
Any ideas as to what I should change in order for the modules to fill the entire screen?
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
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@hdez said in Save performance when rotating screen e.g. on Raspberry Pi:
(sorry, I don’t know how to put this in a separate box
after you paste the text, select it, and then push the button above the editor that looks like </>
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@sdetweil Thanks. Next time.
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Never mind guys I was able to get it to work by following the instructions here
After all it wasn’t the css file that I needed to change, but the Pi autostart file in the /etc/xdg/lxsession/LXDE-pi/ folder. -
Thank you @ptrk95, that just came in handy while playing around with fullpageos and the magic mirror in my docker setup!