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In the good old days when graphics parameters were configured explicitly
in a file called xorg.conf, even broken hardware could be managed.

Today, with the advent of Kernel Mode Setting, a graphics board is
either correctly working because all components follow the standards -
or the computer is unusable, because the screen remains dark after
booting or it displays the wrong area. Cases when this happens are:
- The graphics board does not recognize the monitor.
- The graphics board is unable to detect any EDID data.
- The graphics board incorrectly forwards EDID data to the driver.
- The monitor sends no or bogus EDID data.
- A KVM sends its own EDID data instead of querying the connected monitor.
Adding the kernel parameter "nomodeset" helps in most cases, but causes
restrictions later on.

As a remedy for such situations, the kernel configuration item
CONFIG_DRM_LOAD_EDID_FIRMWARE was introduced. It allows to provide an
individually prepared or corrected EDID data set in the /lib/firmware
directory from where it is loaded via the firmware interface. The code
(see drivers/gpu/drm/drm_edid_load.c) contains built-in data sets for
commonly used screen resolutions (1024x768, 1280x1024, 1680x1050,
1920x1080) as binary blobs, but the kernel source tree does not contain
code to create these data. In order to elucidate the origin of the
built-in binary EDID blobs and to facilitate the creation of individual
data for a specific misbehaving monitor, commented sources and a
Makefile environment are given here.

To create binary EDID and C source code files from the existing data
material, simply type "make".

If you want to create your own EDID file, copy the file 1024x768.S and
replace the settings with your own data. The CRC value in the last line
  #define CRC 0x55
is a bit tricky. After a first version of the binary data set is
created, it must be be checked with the "edid-decode" utility which will
most probably complain about a wrong CRC. Fortunately, the utility also
displays the correct CRC which must then be inserted into the source
file. After the make procedure is repeated, the EDID data set is ready
to be used.