Release Notes for X11R7.2

                              Abstract

     These release notes contains information about features and
        their status in the X.Org Foundation X11R7.2 release.
           _______________________________________________

   Table of Contents
   Introduction to the X11R7.2 Release
   Summary of new features in X11R7.2
   Drivers
   Overview of X11R7.2
   Miscellaneous
   Deprecated components and removal plans
   Attributions/Acknowledgements/Credits

Introduction to the X11R7.2 Release

   This release is the third modular release of the X Window
   System. The next official release will be X11R7.3 and is
   expected in mid 2007.

   For help with how to build and develop in the modular tree see
   Modular Developer's Guide.

   We encourage you to submit bug fixes and enhancements to
   freedesktop.org's bug tracking system using the xorg product,
   and to discuss them on <xorg@lists.freedesktop.org>.

   The release numbering is based on the original MIT X numbering
   system. X11 refers to the version of the network protocol that
   the X Window system is based on: Version 11 was first released
   in 1988 and has been stable for 18 years, with only upward
   compatible additions to the core X protocol, a record of
   stability envied in computing. Formal releases of X started
   with X version 9 from MIT; the first commercial X products were
   based on X version 10. The MIT X Consortium and its successors,
   the X Consortium, the Open Group X Project Team, and the X.Org
   Group released versions X11R3 through X11R6.6. Since the
   founding of the X.Org Foundation in early 2004, five further
   major releases have been issued, from 6.7 to the current 7.2.

   The next section describes what is new in the latest version
   (7.2) compared with the previous full release (7.1).
     __________________________________________________________

Summary of new features in X11R7.2

   This is a sampling of the new features in X11R7.2. A more
   complete list of changes can be found in the ChangeLog files
   that are part of the X source tree.

     * The X Access Control Extension (XACE) has been added to
       this release. XACE is a set of generic "hooks" that can be
       used by other X extensions to perform access checks. This
       provides integration of the X server with the SELinux and
       xtsol platform-specific security frameworks.
     * The X server now incorporates significantly improved
       autodetection when running without an xorg.conf file. This
       will help to limit the number of users who have to fuss
       with their X configuration to get a working server setup.
     * XCB now provides a new implementation of libX11. The XCB
       library is a ground-up rewrite of the venerable libX11. It
       features a small footprint, latency hiding, direct access
       to the protocol, improved threading support, and
       extensibility. In addition to providing a new programming
       interface, it also provides a libX11 compatibility layer to
       allow it to be used transparently in place of libX11.
     * OS support enhancements for Linux, Solaris, and most of the
       *BSD family
     * Platform support enhancements for x86, amd64, sparc64, and
       ia64
     * ... and the usual assortment of correctness and crash
       fixes.
     __________________________________________________________

Updated keyboard mappings

   The requirement for XKB data can be satisfied by the dataset
   from the xkeyboard-config project (the 'xkbdesc' module).
   xkbdesc has numerous improvements relative to the deprecated
   xkbdata: layouts have been cleaned up for consistency and
   universal multi-layout support, some new layouts have added,
   and some layouts have changed names to be more straightforward
   and ISO compliant. Some setups will need adjustments in order
   to use xkbdesc. It is now strongly encouraged for all
   distributions to migrate to xkbdesc, as the old formats are
   deprecated and are not considered a part of the X11R7.2
   release.
     __________________________________________________________

Video driver enhancements

   Please see the ChangeLog files for individual drivers; there
   are far too many updates to list here.
     __________________________________________________________

Drivers

Video Drivers

   X11R7.2 includes the following video drivers:

   Driver Name Description Further Information
   apm Alliance Pro Motion README.apm
   ark Ark Logic
   ast ASPEED Technology
   ati ATI README.ati, README.r128, r128(4), radeon(4)
   chips Chips & Technologies README.chips, chips(4)
   cirrus Cirrus Logic
   cyrix (*) Cyrix MediaGX README.cyrix
   fbdev Linux framebuffer device fbdev(4)
   glint 3Dlabs, TI glint(4)
   i128 Number Nine README.I128, i128(4)
   i740 Intel i740 README.i740
   i810 Intel i8xx README.i810, i810(4)
   impact SGI Indigo Impact impact(4)
   imstt Integrated Micro Solns
   mga Matrox mga(4)
   neomagic NeoMagic neomagic(4)
   newport (-) SGI Newport README.newport, newport(4)
   nsc National Semiconductor nsc(4)
   nv NVIDIA nv(4)
   rendition Rendition README.rendition, rendition(4)
   s3 S3 (not ViRGE or Savage)
   s3virge S3 ViRGE README.s3virge, s3virge(4)
   savage S3 Savage savage(4)
   siliconmotion Silicon Motion siliconmotion(4)
   sis SiS README.SiS, sis(4)
   sisusb SiS USB sisusb(4)
   sunbw2 (+) Sun bw2
   suncg14 (+) Sun cg14
   suncg3 (+) Sun cg3
   suncg6 (+) Sun GX and Turbo GX
   sunffb (+) Sun Creator/3D, Elite 3D
   sunleo (+) Sun Leo (ZX)
   suntcx (+) Sun TCX
   tdfx 3Dfx tdfx(4)
   tga DEC TGA README.DECtga
   trident Trident trident(4)
   tseng Tseng Labs
   v4l Video4Linux
   vesa VESA vesa(4)
   vga Generic VGA vga(4)
   via VIA via(4)
   vmware VMware guest OS vmware(4)
   voodoo 3Dfx Voodoo vmware(4)
   wfb Wrapper Framebuffer vmware(4)

   Drivers marked with (*) are present in a preliminary form in
   this release, but are not complete and/or stable yet.

   Drivers marked with (+) are for Linux/Sparc only.

   Drivers marked with (-) are for Linux/mips only.

   Darwin/Mac OS X uses IOKit drivers and does not use the module
   loader drivers listed above. Further information can be found
   in README.Darwin.
     __________________________________________________________

Input Drivers

   X11R7.2 includes the following input drivers:

   Driver Name Description                      Further Information
   acecad      Acecad Flair                     acecad(4)
   aiptek(*)   Aiptek USB tablet                aiptek(4)
   calcomp     Calcomp
   citron      Citron                           citron(4)
   digitaledge DigitalEdge
   dmc         DMC                              dmc(4)
   dynapro     Dynapro
   elo2300     EloGraphics 2300
   elographics EloGraphics
   evdev(*)    EvDev                            evdev(4)
   fpit        Fujitsu Stylistic Tablet PCs     fpit(4)
   hyperpen    Aiptek HyperPen 6000
   js_x        JamStudio pentablet              js_x(4)
   kbd         generic keyboards (alternate)    kbd(4)
   keyboard    generic keyboards                keyboard(4)
   magellan    Magellan
   microtouch  MicroTouch
   mouse       most mouse devices               mouse(4)
   mutouch     MicroTouch
   palmax      Palmax PD1000/PD1100             palmax(4)
   penmount    PenMount
   spaceorb    SpaceOrb
   summa       SummaGraphics
   tek4957     Tektronix 4957 tablet            tek4957(4)
   ur98(*)     Union Reality UR-F98 headtracker ur98(4)
   void        dummy device                     void(4)

   Drivers marked with (*) are available for Linux only.
     __________________________________________________________

Overview of X11R7.2

   On most platforms, X11R7.2 has a single X server binary called
   Xorg. This binary can either have one or more video and input
   drivers linked in statically, or more usually, dynamically, and
   in that manner load the video drivers, input drivers, and other
   modules that are needed.

   X11R7.2 has currently has support for Linux, Solaris, and some
   BSD OSs on Alpha, PowerPC, IA-64, AMD64, Intel x86, Sparc, and
   MIPS platforms.
     __________________________________________________________

Loader and Modules

   The X server relies on the operating system's native module
   loader support for handling program modules. The X server makes
   use of modules for video drivers, X server extensions, font
   rasterisers, input device drivers, framebuffer layers, and
   internal components used by some drivers (like XAA),

   The module interfaces (both API and ABI) used in this release
   are subject to change without notice. While we will attempt to
   provide backward compatibility for the module interfaces, we
   cannot guarantee this. Compatibility in the other direction is
   explicitly not guaranteed because new modules may rely on
   interfaces added in new releases.

   Note about module security "The X server runs with root
   privileges, i.e., the X server loadable modules also run with
   these privileges. For this reason we recommend that all users
   be careful to only use loadable modules from reliable sources,
   otherwise the introduction of viruses and contaminated code can
   occur and wreak havoc on your system. We hope to have a
   mechanism for signing/verifying the modules that we provide
   available in a future release."
     __________________________________________________________

Configuration File

   The X server uses a configuration file as the primary mechanism
   for providing configuration and run-time parameters. The
   configuration file format is described in detail in the
   xorg.conf(5) manual page.

   The recommended method for generating a configuration file is
   to use the Xorg server itself. Run as root:
        Xorg -configure

   and follow the instructions.

   This release comes with a graphical configuration tool called
   "xorgcfg", which also has a text mode interface and can be used
   to create an initial configuration file. It can also be used to
   customize existing configurations. This tool is deprecated,
   although it is still available for use.

   Finally, if all else fails, the old standby text-based tool
   "xorgconfig" can also be used for generating X server config
   files.

   At least one, and hopefully, all of these configuration options
   will give you a reasonable starting point for a suitable
   configuration file. With the automatic mechanism you might even
   find that you don't need one! Note that this release features
   significant improvements for running the server without a
   configuration file, so many users may find that that they don't
   need a configuration file.

   If you do need to customize the configuration file, see the
   xorg.conf manual page . You can also check the driver-specific
   manual pages and the related documentation (found at driver
   tables also.
     __________________________________________________________

Command Line Options

   Command line options can be used to override some default
   parameters and parameters provided in the configuration file.
   These command line options are described in the Xorg(1) manual
   page.
     __________________________________________________________

XAA

   The XFree86 Acceleration Architecture (XAA) was completely
   rewritten from scratch for XFree86 4.x and is used in X11R7.2.
   Most drivers implement acceleration by making use of the XAA
   module.
     __________________________________________________________

EXA

   EXA was created as a new driver acceleration architecture to
   replace XAA. EXA was designed specifically to accelerate Render
   operations. This release features improved driver support for
   EXA. See the individual driver changelogs for details. Users
   should beware that EXA support is considered to be incomplete
   in X11R7.2.
     __________________________________________________________

Multi-head

   Some multi-head configurations are supported in X11R7.2,
   primarily with multiple PCI/AGP cards.

   One of the main problems is with drivers not sufficiently
   initializing cards that were not initialized at boot time. This
   has been improved somewhat with the INT10 support that is used
   by most drivers (which allows secondary card to be
   "soft-booted", but in some cases there are other issues that
   still need to be resolved. Some combinations can be made to
   work better by changing which card is the primary card (either
   by using a different PCI slot, or by changing the system BIOS's
   preference for the primary card).
     __________________________________________________________

Xinerama

   Xinerama is an X server extension that allows multiple physical
   screens to behave as a single screen. With traditional
   multi-head in X11, windows cannot span or cross physical
   screens. Xinerama removes this limitation. Xinerama does,
   however, require that the physical screens all have the same
   root depth, so it isn't possible, for example, to use an 8-bit
   screen together with a 16-bit screen in Xinerama mode.

   Xinerama is not enabled by default, and can be enabled with the
   +xinerama command line option for the X server.

   Known problems:

     * Most window managers are not Xinerama-aware, and so some
       operations like window placement and resizing might not
       behave in an ideal way. This is an issue that needs to be
       dealt with in the individual window managers, and isn't
       specifically an X server problem.
     __________________________________________________________

DGA version 2

   DGA 2.0 is included in 7.2. Documentation for the client
   libraries can be found in the XDGA(3) man page. A good degree
   of backward compatibility with version 1.0 is provided. DGA
   should be considered deprecated; if you are relying on it,
   please let us know what you need it for so we can find better
   solutions.
     __________________________________________________________

DDC

   The VESA Display Data Channel (DDC(TM)) standard allows the
   monitor to tell the video card (or on some cases the computer
   directly) about itself; particularly the supported screen
   resolutions and refresh rates.

   Partial or complete DDC support is available in most of the
   video drivers. DDC is enabled by default, but can be disabled
   with a "Device" section entry: Option "NoDDC". We have support
   for DDC versions 1 and 2; these can be disabled independently
   with Option "NoDDC1" and Option "NoDDC2".

   At startup the server prints out DDC information from the
   display, and can use this information to set the default
   monitor parameters, or to warn about monitor sync limits if
   those provided in the configuration file don't match those that
   are detected.
     __________________________________________________________

Changed behavior caused by DDC.

   Several drivers uses DDC information to set the screen size and
   pitch. This can be overridden by explicitly resetting it to the
   and non-DDC default value 75 with the -dpi 75 command line
   option for the X server, or by specifying appropriate screen
   dimensions with the "DisplaySize" keyword in the "Monitor"
   section of the config file.
     __________________________________________________________

GLX and the Direct Rendering Infrastructure (DRI)

   Direct rendered OpenGL support is provided for several
   hardware platforms by the Direct Rendering Infrastructure
   (DRI). Further information about DRI can be found at the DRI
   Project's web site. The 3D core rendering component is provided
   by Mesa.

   Of note is that this release supports building the X server
   using the system-wide libdrm. Previously, drm was kept in the
   server's tree and loaded as a module, rather than using the
   standard OS mechanisms for managing shared libraries of code.
   This requires that the server be built using a version of
   libdrm of 2.3.0 or newer if it is to use DRM.
     __________________________________________________________

XVideo Extension (Xv)

   The XVideo extension is supported in X11R7.2.
     __________________________________________________________

X Rendering Extension (Render)

   The X Rendering extension provides a 2D rendering model that
   more closely matches application demands and hardware
   capabilities. It provides a rendering model derived from Plan 9
   based on Porter/Duff image composition rather than binary
   raster operations.

   Using simple compositing operators provided by most hardware,
   Render can draw anti-aliased text and geometric objects as well
   as perform translucent image overlays and other image
   operations not possible with the core X rendering system.

   Unlike the core protocol, Render provides no font support for
   applications, rather it allows applications to upload glyphs
   for display on the screen. This allows the client greater
   control over text rendering and complete access to the
   available font information while still providing hardware
   acceleration. The Xft library provides font access for Render
   applications.
     __________________________________________________________

The Xft Library

   On the client side, the Xft library provides access to fonts
   for applications using the FreeType library, version 2. One
   important thing to note is that Xft uses the vertical size of
   the monitor to compute accurate pixel sizes for provided point
   sizes; if your monitor doesn't provide accurate information via
   DDC, you may want to add that information to xorg.conf.

   To allow a graceful transition for applications moving from
   core text rendering to the Render extension, Xft can use either
   the core rendering requests or the Render extension for text.
   See the section on FreeType support in Xft for instructions on
   configuring X11R7.2 to use an existing FreeType installation.

   The Xft library uses configuration files, /etc/fonts/fonts.conf
   and /etc/fonts/local.conf, which contains information about
   which directories contain font files and also provides a
   sophisticated font aliasing mechanism. Documentation for that
   file is included in the Xft(3) man page.
     __________________________________________________________

Application Support For Anti-Aliased Text

   Only four applications have been modified in X11R7.2 to work
   with the Render extension and the Xft and FreeType libraries to
   provide anti-aliased text: xterm, xditview, x11perf and xclock.
   Migration of other applications may occur in future releases.

   By default, xterm uses core fonts through the standard core
   API. It has a command line option and associated resource to
   direct it to use Xft instead:

     * -fa family / .VT100.faceName: family. Selects the font
       family to use.

   Xditview will use Xft instead of the core API by default.
   X11perf includes tests to measure the performance of text
   rendered in three ways, anti-aliased, anti-aliased with
   sub-pixel sampling and regular chunky text, but through the
   Render extension, a path which is currently somewhat slower
   than core text.

   Xclock uses the Render extension to draw the analog face and
   shares the -fa option and faceName resources with xterm to
   select a font for the digital mode.
     __________________________________________________________

Font support

   Details about the font support in X11R7.2.x can be found in the
   README.fonts document.
     __________________________________________________________

TrueType support

   X11R6.7 came with two TrueType backends. The functionality from
   the `X-TrueType' backend has been integrated into the
   `FreeType' backend which is designed to transparently support
   all of the functionality from the `X-TrueType' backend with the
   exception of the font encoding libraries; the `FreeType'
   backend uses only the fontenc-based encoding system.
     __________________________________________________________

Internationalisation of the scalable font backends

   X11R7.2 has a ``fontenc'' layer to allow the scalable font
   backends to use a common method of font re-encoding. This
   re-encoding makes it possible to uses fonts in encodings other
   than their their native encoding. This layer is used by the
   Type1 and FreeType backends.
     __________________________________________________________

Large font optimization

   The glyph metrics array, which all the X clients using a
   particular font have access to, is placed in shared memory, so
   as to reduce redundant memory consumption. For non-local
   clients, the glyph metrics array is transmitted in a compressed
   format.
     __________________________________________________________

Unicode/ISO 10646 support

   What is included in X11R7.2

     * All ``-misc-fixed-*'' BDF fonts are now available in the
       ISO10646-1 encoding and cover at least the 614 characters
       found in ISO 8859-{1-5,7-10,14,15}, CP1252, and MES-1. The
       non-bold fonts also cover all Windows Glyph List 4 (WGL4)
       characters, including those found in all 8-bit
       MS-DOS/Windows code pages. The 8-bit variants of the
       ``-misc-fixed-*'' BDF fonts (ISO8859-1, ISO8859-2, KOI8-R,
       etc.) have all been automatically generated from the new
       ISO10646-1 master fonts.
     * Some ``-misc-fixed-*'' BDF ISO10646-1 fonts now cover a
       comprehensive Unicode repertoire of over 3000 characters
       including all Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Armenian, Gregorian,
       Hebrew, IPA, and APL characters, plus numerous scientific,
       typographic, technical, and backward-compatibility symbols.
       Some of these fonts also cover Arabic, Ethiopian, Thai,
       Han/Kanji, Hangul, full ISO 8859, and more. For the 6x13
       font there is now a 12x13ja Kanji extension and for the
       9x18 font there is a 18x18ja Kanji/Han/Hangul extension,
       which covers all ISO-2022-JP-2 (RFC 1554) characters. The
       9x18 font can also be used to implement simple combining
       characters by accent overstriking. For more information,
       read Markus Kuhn's UTF-8 and Unicode FAQ.
     * Mark Leisher's ClearlyU proportional font (similar to
       Computer Modern).
     * ISO 10646/Unicode UTF-8 Level 1 support added to xterm
       (enabled with the -u8 option).
     * The Freetype backend (the "freetype" module) supports
       Unicode-encoded fonts.
     __________________________________________________________

Xlib Compose file support and extensions

   A more flexible Compose file processing system was added to
   Xlib in X11R7.2. The compose file is searched for in the
   following order:

    1. If the environment variable $XCOMPOSEFILE is set, its value
       is used as the name of the Compose file.
    2. If the user's home directory has a file named ".XCompose",
       it is used as the Compose file.
    3. The old method is used, and the compose file is
       "<xlocaledir>/<localename>/Compose".

   Compose files can now use an "include" instruction. This allows
   local modifications to be made to existing compose files
   without including all of the content directly. For example, the
   system's iso8859-1 compose file can be included with a line
   like this:
        include "/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/locale/iso8859-1/Compose"

   There are two substitutions that can be made in the file name
   of the include instruction. %H expands to the user's home
   directory (the $HOME environment variable), and %L expands to
   the name of the locale specific Compose file (i.e.,
   "<xlocaledir>/<localename>/Compose").

   For example, you can include in your compose file the default
   Compose file by using:
        include "%L"

   and then rewrite only the few rules that you need to change.
   New compose rules can be added, and previous ones replaced.

   Finally, it is no longer necessary to specify in the right part
   of a rule a locale encoded string in addition to the keysym
   name. If the string is omitted, Xlib figures it out from the
   keysym according to the current locale. I.e., if a rule looks
   like:
        <dead_grave> <A> : "\300" Agrave

   the result of the composition is always the letter with the
   "\300" code. But if the rule is:
        <dead_grave> <A> : Agrave

   the result depends on how Agrave is mapped in the current
   locale.
     __________________________________________________________

Bitstream Vera fonts

   X11R7.1 includes the Bitstream Vera family of typefaces in
   TrueType format. This family includes the ``Bitstream Vera
   Sans'', ``Bitstream Vera Sans Mono'' and ``Bitstream Vera
   Serif'' in Roman and Bold variants as well as the ``Bitstream
   Vera Sans'' and ``Bitstream Vera Sans Mono'' in Oblique and
   Bold Oblique. These fonts include all of the glyphs needed for
   ISO  8859 parts 1 9 and 15.

   The license terms for the Vera fonts are included in the file
   COPYRIGHT.Vera.
     __________________________________________________________

Luxi fonts from Bigelow and Holmes

   The X distribution includes the ``Luxi'' family of Type 1 fonts
   and TrueType fonts. This family consists of the fonts
   ``Luxi Serif'', ``Luxi Sans'' and ``Luxi Mono'' in Roman,
   oblique, bold and bold oblique variants. The TrueType version
   have glyphs covering the basic ASCII Unicode range, the Latin 1
   range, as well as the Extended Latin range and some additional
   punctuation characters. In particular, these fonts include all
   the glyphs needed for ISO 8859 parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 9, 13 and 15,
   as well as all the glyphs in the Adobe Standard encoding and
   the Windows 3.1 character set.

   The glyph coverage of the Type 1 versions is somewhat reduced,
   and only covers ISO 8859 parts 1, 2 and 15 as well as the Adobe
   Standard encoding.

   The Luxi fonts are original designs by Kris Holmes and Charles
   Bigelow from Bigelow and Holmes Inc., who developed the Luxi
   typeface designs in Ikarus digital format. URW++ Design and
   Development GmbH converted the Ikarus format fonts to TrueType
   and Type 1 font programs and implemented the grid-fitting
   "hints" and kerning tables in the Luxi fonts.

   The license terms for the Luxi fonts are included in the file
   `COPYRIGHT.BH', as well as in the License document. For further
   information, please contact <design@bigelowandholmes.com> or
   <info@urwpp.de>, or consult the URW++ web site.
     __________________________________________________________

Miscellaneous

   This section describes other items of note for the X11R7.2
   release.
     __________________________________________________________

Socket directory ownership and permissions

   The socket directories created in /tmp are now required to be
   owned by root and have their sticky-bit set. If the permissions
   are not set correctly, the component using this directory will
   print an error message and fail to start. Common socket
   directories that are known to be affected include:
        /tmp/.font-unix
        /tmp/.ICE-unix
        /tmp/.X11-unix

   These directories are used by the font server, xfs,
   applications using the Inter-Client Exchange protocol (ICE) and
   the X server, respectively.

   There are several solutions to the problem of when to create
   these directories. They could be created at install time by the
   system's installer if the /tmp dir is persistent. They could be
   created at boot time by the system's boot scripts (e.g., the
   init.d scripts). Or, they could be created by PAM modules at
   service startup or user login time.

   The solution chosen is platform dependent, and the system
   administrator should be able to handle creating those
   directories on any systems that do not have the correct
   ownership or permissions.
     __________________________________________________________

Composite exposes extra visuals

   When the Composite extension is enabled via xorg.conf or the
   command line, a new visual is created. This visual is different
   from the other visuals used by X applications in that it
   includes an alpha component. It is used by the compositing
   manager and other Composite aware applications.

   Most X applications ignore this visual since it is not useful
   to them; however some applications mistakenly try to use it,
   which will cause them to fail. An environment variable,
   XLIB_SKIP_ARGB_VISUALS, was added to the X11 library to hide
   this visual from applications that mistakenly try to use it. If
   an application fails only when the Composite is enabled, try
   setting this environment variable before starting the
   application.

   Since Composite is not enabled by default, it is not expected
   that this issue will be visible to most users.
     __________________________________________________________

Deprecated components and removal plans

   This section lists current plans for removal of obsolete or
   deprecated components in the X.Org releases. As our releases
   are open source, users who continue to require these can find
   the source in previous releases and continue to use these, but
   the X.Org Foundation and its volunteers have decided the burden
   of continued maintenance and distribution in the core X11
   releases outweighs the benefits of doing so. In some cases,
   this is simply because no one has volunteered to do continued
   maintenance, so if software is listed here that you need, you
   can contact <xorg@lists.freedesktop.org> to volunteer to take
   over maintainership, either inside or outside of the Xorg
   release process.

   Low-Bandwidth X (LBX)
          The LBX extension is has been removed in this release.

   CID Fonts
          Support for CID fonts has been removed as of this
          release. mkcfm has also been deprecated as a result.

   xkbdata
          The old xkbdata module has been deprecated and is not
          considered to be a part of this release. Please migrate
          to the data provided by the xkeyboard-config project,
          which located in the xkbdesc CVS module.
     __________________________________________________________

Attributions/Acknowledgements/Credits

   This section lists the credits for the X11R7.2 release. For a
   more detailed breakdown, refer to the ChangeLog file in the
   X.Org source tree, the ChangeLog's in the xorg product in
   freedesktop.org's CVS or the 'cvs log' information for
   individual source files.

   These people contributed in some way to X11R7.1
          Jonathan Adamczewski, Dave Airlie, Paul Anderson, Eric
          Anholt, Andrei Barbu, Jesse Barnes, Donnie Berkholz,
          Alan Coopersmith, Michel Dnzer, Alex Deucher, Radek
          Doulik, Egbert Eich, Eduard Fuchs, George Fufutos,
          Alexander Gottwald, Matthieu Herrb, Ben Herrenschmidt,
          Thomas Hellstrm, Fredrik Hglund, Kristian Hgsberg,
          Matthias Hopf, Zephaniah E. Hull, Alan Hourihane, Valery
          Inozemtsev, Adam Jackson, Deron Johnson, Nicholas Joly,
          Jaymz Julian, Lars Knoll, Egmont Koblinger, Felix
          Khling, Philip Langdale, Kevin E. Martin, Keith
          Packard, Drew Parsons, Hong Bo Peng, Aaron Plattner,
          Jeremy C. Reed, David Reveman, Ian Romanick, Zack Rusin,
          Sren Sandmann, Tilman Sauerbeck, Roland Scheidegger,
          Dag-Erling Smrgrav, Daniel Stone, Carl Switzky, Luc
          Verhaegen, Julio M. Merino Vidal, Zhenyu Wang, Alex
          Williamson, Thomas Winischhofer, David Woodhouse,

   The X Window System has been a collaborative effort from its
   inception. Our apologies for anyone or organization
   inadvertently overlooked. Many individuals (including major
   contributors) who worked on X are represented by their
   employers in this list. If you feel we have left anyone out,
   please let us know.

   This product includes software developed by:
          Paul Anderson, Michael Bax, Jehan Bing, Peter
          Breitenlohner, Alan Coopersmith, Egbert Eich, John
          Dennis, Fabrizio Gennari, Jim Gettys, Alexander
          Gottwald, Ralf Habacker Mike Harris, Matthieu Herrb,
          Alan Hourihane, Harold L Hunt II, Elliot Lee, Jeremy
          Katz, Kaleb Keithley, Stuart Kreitman, Andreas Luik,
          Torrey Lyons, Roland Mainz, Kevin E. Martin, Takuma
          Murakami, Kensuke Matsuzaki, Keith Packard, Ivan Pascal,
          Earle F. Philhower III, Benjamin Rienfenstahl, Leon
          Shiman, Toshimitsu Tanaka, Nicholas Wourms.

          2d3d Inc., 3Dlabs Inc. Ltd., Aaron Plattner, Adam de
          Boor, Adam Jackson, Adobe Systems Inc., After X-TT
          Project, AGE Logic Inc., Alan Coopersmith, Alan Cox,
          Alan Hourihane, Alexander Gottwald, Alex Deucher, Anders
          Carlsson, Andreas Luik, Andreas Monitzer, Andreas
          Robinson, Andrew C Aitchison, Andy Ritger, Angus Lees,
          Ani Joshi, Anton Zioviev, Apollo Computer Inc., Apple
          Computer Inc., Ares Software Corp., AT&T Inc., ATI
          Technologies Inc., BEAM Ltd., Ben Skeggs, Benjamin
          Herrenschmidt, Benjamin Rienfenstahl, Bigelow and
          Holmes, Bill Reynolds, Bitstream Inc., Bogdan
          Diaconescu, Branden Robinson, Brian Fundakowski Feldman,
          Brian Goines, Brian Paul, Bruno Haible, Bryan Stine,
          Catharon Productions Inc., Charles Murcko, Chen
          Xiangyang, Chisato Yamauchi, Chris Constello, Christian
          Zietz, Cognition Corp., Compaq Computer Corporation,
          Concurrent Computer Corporation, Conectiva S.A., Corin
          Anderson, Craig Struble, Daewoo Electronics Co. Ltd.,
          Dale Schumacher, Damien Miller, Daniel Berrange, Daniel
          Borca, Daniel Stone, Daniver Limited, Daryll Strauss,
          Data General Corporation, Dave Airlie, David Bateman,
          David Dawes, David E. Wexelblat, David Holland, David J.
          McKay, David McCullough, David Mosberger-Tang, David S.
          Miller, Davor Matic, Deron Johnson, Digeo Inc., Digital
          Equipment Corporation, Dirk Hohndel, Doug Anson, Dmitry
          Golubev, Earle F. Philhower III, Edouard TISSERANT,
          Eduardo Horvath, Egbert Eich, Elliot Lee, Eric Anholt,
          Eric Fortune, Eric Sunshine, Erik Fortune, Erik Nygren,
          Evans & Sutherland Computer Corporation, Fabio Massimo
          Di Nitto, Fabrizio Gennari, Felix Kuehling, Finn
          Thoegersen, Francesco Zappa Nardelli, Frank C. Earl,
          Frederic Lepied, Free Software Foundation Inc., Fujitsu
          Limited, Fujitsu Open Systems Solutions Inc., Fuji Xerox
          Co. Ltd., Geert Uytterhoeven, Gerrit Jan Akkerman, Gerry
          Toll, Glenn G. Lai, GNOME Foundation, Go Watanabe, Greg
          Kroah-Hartman, Greg Parker, Gregory Mokhin, GROUPE BULL,
          Guy Martin, Hans Oey, Harald Koenig, Harm Hanemaayer,
          Harold L Hunt II, Harry Langenbacher, Henry A. Worth,
          Hewlett-Packard Company, Hitachi Ltd, Holger Veit,
          Howard Greenwell, Hummingbird Communications Ltd., IBM
          Corporation, Intel Corporation, INTERACTIVE Systems
          Corporation, International Business Machines Corp., Itai
          Nahshon, Ivan Kokshaysky, Ivan Pascal, Jakub Jelinek,
          James Tsillas, Jason Bacon, Jean-loup Gailly, Jeff
          Hartmann, Jeff Kirk, Jeffrey Hsu, Jehan Bing, Jeremy
          Katz, Jerome Glisse, Jim Gettys, Jim Tsillas, John
          Dennis, John Harper, John Heasley, Jon Block, Jon Smirl,
          Jon Tombs, Jorge Delgado, José Fonseca, Joseph
          Friedman, Joseph V. Moss, Juliusz Chroboczek, Jyunji
          Takagi, Kaleb Keithley, Kazushi (Jam) Marukawa, Kazuyuki
          (ikko-) Okamoto, Kean Johnston, Keith Packard, Keith
          Whitwell, Kensuke Matsuzaki, Kristian Hgsberg, Larry
          Wall, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Leif Delgass,
          Lennart Augustsson, Leon Shiman, Lexmark International
          Inc., Linus Torvalds, Luc Verhaegen, Machine Vision
          Holdings Inc., Manfred Brands, Marc Aurele La France
          Mark Adler, Mark J. Kilgard, Mark Leisher, Mark
          Smulders, Mark Vojkovich, Marvin Solomon, Massachusetts
          Institute Of Technology, Matrox Graphics, Matthew
          Grossman, Matthieu Herrb, Metro Link Inc., Michael Bax,
          Michael H. Schimek, Michael P. Marking, Michael Schimek,
          Michael Smith, Michel Daenzer, Mike A. Harris, Ming Yu,
          MIPS Computer Systems Inc., National Semiconductor, NCR
          Corporation Inc., Netscape Communications Corporation,
          Network Computing Devices Inc., Nicholas Miell, Nicholas
          Wourms, Nicolai Haehnle, Noah Levitt, Nolan Leake,
          Novell Inc., Nozomi YTOW, NTT Software Corporation,
          Number Nine Computer Corp., Number Nine Visual
          Technologies, NVIDIA Corp., Oivier Danet, Oki
          Technosystems Laboratory Inc., OMRON Corporation, Open
          Software Foundation, Orest Zborowski, Owen Taylor, Pablo
          Saratxaga, Panacea Inc., Panagiotis Tsirigotis, Paolo
          Severini, Pascal Haible, Patrick Lecoanet, Patrick
          Lerda, Paul Anderson, Paul Elliott, Paul Mackerras,
          Peter Breitenlohner, Peter Kunzmann, Peter Trattler,
          Philip Homburg, Precision Insight Inc., Prentice Hall,
          Quarterdeck Office Systems, Ralf Habacker Randy Hendry,
          Ranier Keller, Red Hat Inc., Regents of the University
          of California, Regis Cridlig, Rene Cougnenc, Richard A.
          Hecker, Richard Burdick, Rich Murphey, Rickard E. Faith,
          Rik Faith, Robert Chesler, Robert Millan, Robert V.
          Baron, Robin Cutshaw, Roland Mainz, Ronny Vindenes, Russ
          Blaine, Ryan Breen, Ryan Lortie, Ryan Underwood, S3
          Graphics Inc., Sam Leffler, SciTech Software, Scott
          Laird, Sebastien Marineau, Shigehiro Nomura, ShoGraphics
          Inc., Shunsuke Akiyama, Silicon Graphics Computer
          Systems Inc., Silicon Integrated Systems Corp Inc.,
          Silicon Motion Inc., Simon P. Cooper, Snitily Graphics
          Consulting Services, Sony Corporation, Sren Sandmann,
          SRI, Stanislav Brabec, Stefan Dirsch, Stephan Lang,
          Stephane Marchesin, Steven Lang, Stuart Kreitman, Sun
          Microsystems Inc., SunSoft Inc., SuSE Inc, Sven Luther,
          T. A. Phelps, Takis Psarogiannakopoulos, Takuma
          Murakami, Takuya SHIOZAKI, Tektronix Inc., The
          DOS-EMU-Development-Team, The Institute of Software
          Academia Sinica, The NetBSD Foundation, Theo de Raadt,
          Theodore Ts'o, The Open Group, The Open Software
          Foundation, The Regents of the University of California,
          The Santa Cruz Operation Inc., The Weather Channel Inc.,
          The X Consortium, The XFree86 Project Inc., Thomas E.
          Dickey, Thomas G. Lane, Thomas Hellstrm, Thomas
          Mueller, Thomas Roell, Thomas Thanner, Thomas
          Winischhofer, Thomas Wolfram, Thorsten.Ohl, Tiago Gons,
          Todd C. Miller, Tomohiro KUBOTA, Torrey Lyons, Torrey T.
          Lyons, TOSHIBA Corp., Toshimitsu Tanaka, Travis Tilley,
          Trolltech AS, Tungsten Graphics Inc., Tuomas J. Lukka,
          Ty Sarna, UCHIYAMA Yasushi, Unicode Inc., UniSoft Group
          Limited, University of Utah, University of Wisconsin,
          UNIX System Laboratories Inc., URW++ GmbH, VA Linux
          Systems, VIA Technologies Inc., Video Electronics
          Standard, VMware Inc., Vrije Universiteit, Wittawat
          Yamwong, Wyse Technology Inc., X Consortium, Xi Graphics
          Inc., X-Oz Technologies, X-TrueType Server Project and
          their contributors, Yu Shao.

          This product includes software developed by The XFree86
          Project, Inc (http://www.xfree86.org/) and its
          contributors.

          This produce includes software that is based in part of
          the work of the FreeType Team (http://www.freetype.org).

          This product includes software developed by the
          University of California, Berkeley and its contributors.

          This product includes software developed by Christopher
          G. Demetriou.

          This product includes software developed by the NetBSD
          Foundation, Inc. and its contributors.

          This product includes software developed by the X-Oz
          Technologies and its contributors.
