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Graphics address remapping table

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The graphics address remapping table (GART), sometimes known as the graphics translation table (GTT),[1] is an I/O memory management unit (IOMMU) used by AGP and PCI Express graphics cards. The GART allows the graphics card direct memory access to the host system memory, through which buffers of textures, polygon meshes and other data are loaded. It's used as a means of data transfer between physical memory and video memory, but can also be used to expand the amount of video memory available for graphics cards—particularly for cards with no dedicated video memory, such as Intel integrated graphics.

Operating system support

Jeff Hartmann served as the primary maintainer of the Linux agpgart driver, which began as part of Brian Paul's Utah-glx accelerated Mesa 3D driver project. The developers primarily targeted Linux 2.4.x kernels, but made patches available against older 2.2.x kernels. Dave Jones heavily reworked agpgart for the Linux 2.6.x kernels, along with more contributions from Jeff Hartmann.[2]

In FreeBSD, the agpgart driver[3] appeared in FreeBSD 4.1.

AGPgart support was introduced into Solaris Express Developer Edition as of its 7/05 release.[4]

References

  1. ^ freedesktop.org. "GART". Retrieved 2010-03-05.
  2. ^ Ugly Ducklings: Resurrecting unmaintained code - agpgart adapted for Linux 2.6 kernel
  3. ^ agpgart(4) - manpage.
  4. ^ "agpgart_io manpage". docs.sun.com. Sun Microsystems. Retrieved 2007-12-04.