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- DisplayLink is now part of Synaptics Inc. Visit synaptics.com and follow on.
- Bust out those crap-ass proprietary drivers. Enter Manjaro Settings Manger, choose Hardware Configuration, and attain the following setup (the video-linux drivers may be optional, but they’re doing no harm so whatev): 3. Enable and configure the DisplayLink service. Per the instructions in the Arch Wiki, enable DisplayLink by typing in the.
Normally, my ASUS MB169B USB Monitor lives in my briefcase, to be used when I need two screens at a coffee shop or a client. But, given the new work-from-home reality, it’s found a new life as a dedicated spot for tiles showing email, calendar, and Slack…
…at least it does when I’m running Windows. When running Manjaro, the USB monitor has sat idle, unused, and sad.
That’s not to say that Manjaro doesn’t support the use of DisplayLink to attach USB monitors — it’s just that, like all things Arch Linux, you have to work for it; doubly so if you’re running an nVidia card.
So, here’s how I got mine working.
1. Install DisplayLink and EVDI drivers.
Do you need both? Beats me, but this is what I have and it works. Purists will do this via pacman
but I’m lazy and used the GUI.
2. Install the nVidia drivers, even though they’re not very good.
This turned out to be the key step. Normally, I use modesetting as my graphics driver, mainly because it doesn’t suck. With the nVidia drivers, I get some annoying mouse flickering that I haven’t yet been able to address.
However, the USB monitor also uses modesetting, and with both on the same driver, xrandr
returns the following when you try to link them up:
What does it mean? No idea.
How do we fix it? Bust out those crap-ass proprietary drivers.
Enter Manjaro Settings Manger, choose Hardware Configuration, and attain the following setup (the video-linux
drivers may be optional, but they’re doing no harm so whatev):
3. Enable and configure the DisplayLink service
Per the instructions in the Arch Wiki, enable DisplayLink by typing in the terminalsudo systemctl enable displaylink.service
Displaylink Drivers Ubuntu
Then, create a file at/usr/share/X11/xorg.conf.d/20-evdidevice.conf
with the contents
Note: It’s entirely possible that this step is obviated by use of the nVidia drivers, but I’m not taking chances.
4. Reboot
Just to make sure.
5. List the displays in xrandr
In the terminal, enterxrandr --listproviders
With luck, you should see both displays, with their respective drivers:
6. Connect the displays in xrandr
In the terminal, enterxrandr --setprovideroutputsource 1 0
If you’re lucky, this will mirror your displays. Of course, that’s probably not what you want, so let’s get them extended.
7. Configure Manjaro to extend your displays
Driver Displaylink
Open Display Settings and declare your primary monitor as such (I’ve found that the USB monitor tends to be marked as primary, initially).
Uncheck Mirror Displays for obvious reasons.
Choose a resolution for your USB monitor that makes sense (probably not the same as your big-ass desktop monitor).
8. Have a lovely beverage
Celebrate your success. Or let me know if it failed. I probably can’t help, but hey who knows.