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    A New Chapter for MagicMirror: The Community Takes the Lead
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    Vertical Image Diagonal Line Issue

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Unsolved Troubleshooting
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    • S Offline
      sdetweil @mfruckus
      last edited by

      @mfruckus i have never done this so, searching yields this

      http://www.raspberryconnect.com/gamessoftware/item/314-trying_out_opengl_on_raspberry_pi_3

      Sam

      How to add modules

      learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

      M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • M Offline
        mfruckus @sdetweil
        last edited by

        @sdetweil Thanks for the info. I’m going to give it a shot and I’ll come back with results.

        cheers

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        • M Offline
          mfruckus
          last edited by

          I tried out all of the options (Full Kernel, Fake Kernel, and Legacy).

          For some reason, using the Full Kernel and the Fake Kernel somehow disregards my /boot/config.txt which tells it to rotate vertically. Changing the value and rebooting does nothing. I’m only able to be vertical at all when using Legacy.

          I’m fairly confounded as to why I’m not even able to get the display vertical with Full KMS and Fake KMS. My hunch is that it may not be of huge importance to my diagonal line issue.

          Even when using Legacy, if the display is horizontal, there’s no diagonal lines. It seems that it just wants to divide the vertical screen with a couple diagonal lines. There must be a solution though.

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          • M Offline
            mfruckus @mfruckus
            last edited by

            I’ve also tried installing just a clean raspbian stretch. However, the problem persists when I rotate the display with only the desktop environment of stretch running.

            I’m now thinking that the 32" Samsung I’m using may be the issue and I’m going to try out another make/model.

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            • M Offline
              mfruckus
              last edited by

              At this point, from what I’ve read, the issue of the screen tearing when vertical seems to be related to using the legacy driver. Supposedly a switch to Full KMS should work but I need to rotate my screen using xrandr. Can anyone give me the breakdown on using xrandr to rotate my screen vertically?

              Would be supremely appreciated

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              • S Offline
                sdetweil @mfruckus
                last edited by

                @mfruckus see

                https://askubuntu.com/questions/95812/how-can-i-rotate-my-display-in-the-most-easy-way/95825

                Sam

                How to add modules

                learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • M Offline
                  mfruckus @sdetweil
                  last edited by

                  @sdetweil said in Vertical Image Diagonal Line Issue:

                  @mfruckus see

                  https://askubuntu.com/questions/95812/how-can-i-rotate-my-display-in-the-most-easy-way/95825

                  Thanks so much man. I got it working. This was the exact info I needed.

                  Rendering is still imperfect but there’s no screen tearing at all. Really really appreciate it. Going to post a detailed solution here shortly because this info is too hidden.

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                  • S Offline
                    sdetweil @mfruckus
                    last edited by

                    @mfruckus cool… i just did a google search to find that info… will be great if you post a step by step for others

                    Sam

                    How to add modules

                    learning how to use browser developers window for css changes

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • M Offline
                      mfruckus
                      last edited by

                      Here’s a fix for screen tearing/graphical errors when you’ve rotated the screen to a vertical position.

                      First, you need to change your GL Driver to Full KMS. To do so, run:

                           sudo raspi-config
                      
                      • Select Advanced Options

                      • Select GL Driver

                      • Select G1 GL (Full KMS) OpenGL desktop driver with full KMS

                      • Select Finish

                      • Reboot

                      Upon reboot, you’ll find your screen is horizontal.
                      To fix this, first run:

                           xrandr -q
                      

                      You will be presented with a list of ports, the port that your monitor is connected to will say “connected.”

                      It should look something like this:

                      Screen 0: minimum 320 x 200, current 1080 x 1920, maximum 2048 x 2048
                      HDMI-1 connected 1080x1920+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 1210mm x 680mm
                      1920x1080i 60.0*+
                      1680x1050 59.8 60.0
                      1024x768 60.0
                      800x600 60.3 56.2
                      640x480 59.9
                      Composite-1 unknown connection (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
                      720x480 62.69

                      In my instance, the port I need to know is HDMI-1. Yours may very well be different.

                      Now, using the name of the connected port, run:

                      xrandr --output (name of your connected port) --rotate right
                      

                      My example would be:

                      xrandr --output HDMI-1 --rotate right
                      

                      There you go! Now, your screen is vertical and not suffering from the awful screen tearing that it was. Not going to say it’ll look as good as it does horizontally but this fix vastly improved how my raspberry pi and MagicMirror looked when the screen is vertical.

                      I haven’t yet figured out how to make xrandr rotate on boot (any assistance there would be appreciated!) therefore, you’ll have to rotate the screen each time you boot it up.

                      When I do figure out how to make xrandr rotate upon boot, I’ll amend this guide!

                      Good luck, everybody!

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                      • M Offline
                        mfruckus
                        last edited by mfruckus

                        Here’s an update with an even better fix!

                        While beginning my journey into custom css, I quickly came across another fix to the poor graphics of a vertically rotated screen. In my opinion, this fix is even better than using xrandr because this fix saves a ton on performance, results in a look just as good as using the screen in its native horizontal look, and once you implement it, it will stay implemented.

                        All you have to do is copy and paste the following to your MagicMirror’s custom css:

                         body {
                                margin: 0;
                        	position: absolute;
                         	transform: rotate(90deg);
                         	transform-origin: bottom left;
                        	width: 100vh;
                        	height: 100vw;
                        	object-fit: cover;
                        	top: -100vw;
                                visibility: visible;
                         }
                        

                        There you go, just like that you’re set. The custom css of modules may have to be edited as well to make it work but that’s a small price to pay for a much better finished product.

                        Credit where credit is due, I found this fix right here on the forum!

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