2017-04-30 04:44:49 |
Justin |
bug |
|
|
added bug |
2017-04-30 04:44:49 |
Justin |
attachment added |
|
20170430_003828.jpg https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1687246/+attachment/4869821/+files/20170430_003828.jpg |
|
2017-04-30 04:58:32 |
Jeremy Bícha |
bug task added |
|
gnome-shell (Ubuntu) |
|
2017-04-30 05:00:58 |
Jeremy Bícha |
bug watch added |
|
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765011 |
|
2017-04-30 05:00:58 |
Jeremy Bícha |
bug task added |
|
mutter |
|
2017-04-30 05:01:17 |
Jeremy Bícha |
tags |
|
gnome-1710 |
|
2017-04-30 05:01:25 |
Jeremy Bícha |
gnome-shell (Ubuntu): status |
New |
Triaged |
|
2017-04-30 05:02:04 |
Jeremy Bícha |
gnome-shell (Ubuntu): importance |
Undecided |
Medium |
|
2017-04-30 05:02:08 |
Jeremy Bícha |
ubuntu-gnome: importance |
Undecided |
Medium |
|
2017-04-30 05:02:11 |
Jeremy Bícha |
ubuntu-gnome: status |
New |
Triaged |
|
2017-04-30 05:02:16 |
Jeremy Bícha |
ubuntu-gnome: milestone |
|
artful |
|
2017-04-30 05:02:57 |
Jeremy Bícha |
summary |
HiDPI Scaling Issue |
GNOME Shell should support fractional (non-integer) Hi-DPI scaling |
|
2017-04-30 05:51:57 |
Bug Watch Updater |
mutter: status |
Unknown |
Confirmed |
|
2017-04-30 05:51:57 |
Bug Watch Updater |
mutter: importance |
Unknown |
Medium |
|
2017-05-06 20:19:52 |
Jeremy Bícha |
tags |
gnome-1710 |
gnome-17.10 |
|
2017-05-18 02:16:41 |
Till Kamppeter |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Till Kamppeter |
2017-05-19 05:44:59 |
Daniel van Vugt |
gnome-shell (Ubuntu): assignee |
|
Marco Trevisan (Treviño) (3v1n0) |
|
2017-05-21 14:46:12 |
Marco Trevisan (Treviño) |
gnome-shell (Ubuntu): status |
Triaged |
In Progress |
|
2017-05-29 04:04:08 |
Daniel van Vugt |
description |
I'm using fully updated Ubuntu GNOME 17.04.
In Ubuntu Gnome, you only allow for integer scaling of things for high DPI monitors. While in theory this sounds good, on a 27 inch 4k monitor like mine, restricting it to integers is a problem. 1x is annoyingly small, and 2x is WAY too big. You need a 1.5x, and presumably to just allow most noninteger values to future proof the distribution given 8k monitors and all sorts of new and weird things coming out, like windows 10 has.
Photos of the two annoying sizes are available here (it won't let me attach two files):
http://i.imgur.com/vWrvZxq.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/11p19k7.jpg
I apologize for my photography skills in advance., you'll have to look at the ruler for scale to see the problem. Please contact me if you need any more information etc. |
https://trello.com/c/TvwNvXOo
---
I'm using fully updated Ubuntu GNOME 17.04.
In Ubuntu Gnome, you only allow for integer scaling of things for high DPI monitors. While in theory this sounds good, on a 27 inch 4k monitor like mine, restricting it to integers is a problem. 1x is annoyingly small, and 2x is WAY too big. You need a 1.5x, and presumably to just allow most noninteger values to future proof the distribution given 8k monitors and all sorts of new and weird things coming out, like windows 10 has.
Photos of the two annoying sizes are available here (it won't let me attach two files):
http://i.imgur.com/vWrvZxq.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/11p19k7.jpg
I apologize for my photography skills in advance., you'll have to look at the ruler for scale to see the problem. Please contact me if you need any more information etc. |
|
2017-07-24 11:16:20 |
Daniel Seither |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Daniel Seither |
2017-08-13 13:21:09 |
Rez N. |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Rez N. |
2017-09-22 07:10:22 |
Rocko |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Rocko |
2017-10-18 18:03:00 |
Bug Watch Updater |
mutter: status |
Confirmed |
In Progress |
|
2017-10-21 08:23:22 |
Václav Haisman |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Václav Haisman |
2017-11-13 19:07:06 |
Marco Trevisan (Treviño) |
tags |
gnome-17.10 |
gnome-18.04 |
|
2017-11-13 19:07:32 |
Marco Trevisan (Treviño) |
description |
https://trello.com/c/TvwNvXOo
---
I'm using fully updated Ubuntu GNOME 17.04.
In Ubuntu Gnome, you only allow for integer scaling of things for high DPI monitors. While in theory this sounds good, on a 27 inch 4k monitor like mine, restricting it to integers is a problem. 1x is annoyingly small, and 2x is WAY too big. You need a 1.5x, and presumably to just allow most noninteger values to future proof the distribution given 8k monitors and all sorts of new and weird things coming out, like windows 10 has.
Photos of the two annoying sizes are available here (it won't let me attach two files):
http://i.imgur.com/vWrvZxq.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/11p19k7.jpg
I apologize for my photography skills in advance., you'll have to look at the ruler for scale to see the problem. Please contact me if you need any more information etc. |
https://trello.com/c/r12LY9iA (for 17.04 was https://trello.com/c/TvwNvXOo)
---
I'm using fully updated Ubuntu GNOME 17.04.
In Ubuntu Gnome, you only allow for integer scaling of things for high DPI monitors. While in theory this sounds good, on a 27 inch 4k monitor like mine, restricting it to integers is a problem. 1x is annoyingly small, and 2x is WAY too big. You need a 1.5x, and presumably to just allow most noninteger values to future proof the distribution given 8k monitors and all sorts of new and weird things coming out, like windows 10 has.
Photos of the two annoying sizes are available here (it won't let me attach two files):
http://i.imgur.com/vWrvZxq.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/11p19k7.jpg
I apologize for my photography skills in advance., you'll have to look at the ruler for scale to see the problem. Please contact me if you need any more information etc. |
|
2017-11-13 19:08:50 |
Marco Trevisan (Treviño) |
tags |
gnome-18.04 |
gnome-18.04 highdpi |
|
2017-12-13 03:10:16 |
Daniel van Vugt |
tags |
gnome-18.04 highdpi |
gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
|
2017-12-22 23:33:24 |
Simon May |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Simon May |
2018-02-16 13:48:59 |
Rob Parker |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Rob Parker |
2018-03-04 00:13:16 |
David |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber David |
2018-04-25 19:48:25 |
Jeremy Bícha |
description |
https://trello.com/c/r12LY9iA (for 17.04 was https://trello.com/c/TvwNvXOo)
---
I'm using fully updated Ubuntu GNOME 17.04.
In Ubuntu Gnome, you only allow for integer scaling of things for high DPI monitors. While in theory this sounds good, on a 27 inch 4k monitor like mine, restricting it to integers is a problem. 1x is annoyingly small, and 2x is WAY too big. You need a 1.5x, and presumably to just allow most noninteger values to future proof the distribution given 8k monitors and all sorts of new and weird things coming out, like windows 10 has.
Photos of the two annoying sizes are available here (it won't let me attach two files):
http://i.imgur.com/vWrvZxq.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/11p19k7.jpg
I apologize for my photography skills in advance., you'll have to look at the ruler for scale to see the problem. Please contact me if you need any more information etc. |
https://trello.com/c/r12LY9iA (for 17.04 was https://trello.com/c/TvwNvXOo)
---
I'm using fully updated Ubuntu GNOME 17.04.
In Ubuntu Gnome, you only allow for integer scaling of things for high DPI monitors. While in theory this sounds good, on a 27 inch 4k monitor like mine, restricting it to integers is a problem. 1x is annoyingly small, and 2x is WAY too big. You need a 1.5x, and presumably to just allow most noninteger values to future proof the distribution given 8k monitors and all sorts of new and weird things coming out, like windows 10 has.
Photos of the two annoying sizes are available here (it won't let me attach two files):
http://i.imgur.com/vWrvZxq.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/11p19k7.jpg
I apologize for my photography skills in advance., you'll have to look at the ruler for scale to see the problem. Please contact me if you need any more information etc.
Workaround
==========
You can enable experimental fractional scaling in Ubuntu 17.10 or 18.04 LTS by running the following command in a terminal and then restarting your computer. Note that this is an experimental feature and is not fully supported by either Ubuntu or GNOME.
gsettings set org.gnome.mutter experimental-features "['scale-monitor-framebuffer']"
If you change your mind and want to get back to supported status, run:
gsettings reset org.gnome.mutter experimental-features |
|
2018-04-25 19:49:38 |
Jeremy Bícha |
description |
https://trello.com/c/r12LY9iA (for 17.04 was https://trello.com/c/TvwNvXOo)
---
I'm using fully updated Ubuntu GNOME 17.04.
In Ubuntu Gnome, you only allow for integer scaling of things for high DPI monitors. While in theory this sounds good, on a 27 inch 4k monitor like mine, restricting it to integers is a problem. 1x is annoyingly small, and 2x is WAY too big. You need a 1.5x, and presumably to just allow most noninteger values to future proof the distribution given 8k monitors and all sorts of new and weird things coming out, like windows 10 has.
Photos of the two annoying sizes are available here (it won't let me attach two files):
http://i.imgur.com/vWrvZxq.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/11p19k7.jpg
I apologize for my photography skills in advance., you'll have to look at the ruler for scale to see the problem. Please contact me if you need any more information etc.
Workaround
==========
You can enable experimental fractional scaling in Ubuntu 17.10 or 18.04 LTS by running the following command in a terminal and then restarting your computer. Note that this is an experimental feature and is not fully supported by either Ubuntu or GNOME.
gsettings set org.gnome.mutter experimental-features "['scale-monitor-framebuffer']"
If you change your mind and want to get back to supported status, run:
gsettings reset org.gnome.mutter experimental-features |
https://trello.com/c/r12LY9iA (for 17.04 was https://trello.com/c/TvwNvXOo)
---
I'm using fully updated Ubuntu GNOME 17.04.
In Ubuntu Gnome, you only allow for integer scaling of things for high DPI monitors. While in theory this sounds good, on a 27 inch 4k monitor like mine, restricting it to integers is a problem. 1x is annoyingly small, and 2x is WAY too big. You need a 1.5x, and presumably to just allow most noninteger values to future proof the distribution given 8k monitors and all sorts of new and weird things coming out, like windows 10 has.
Photos of the two annoying sizes are available here (it won't let me attach two files):
http://i.imgur.com/vWrvZxq.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/11p19k7.jpg
I apologize for my photography skills in advance., you'll have to look at the ruler for scale to see the problem. Please contact me if you need any more information etc.
Workaround
==========
You can enable experimental fractional scaling in Ubuntu 17.10 or 18.04 LTS by running the following command in a terminal and then restarting your computer. Note that this is an experimental feature and is not fully supported by either Ubuntu or GNOME.
gsettings set org.gnome.mutter experimental-features "['scale-monitor-framebuffer']"
After restarting your computer, you should find additional scale options in Settings > Devices > Displays.
If you change your mind and want to get back to supported status, run:
gsettings reset org.gnome.mutter experimental-features |
|
2018-04-25 19:51:07 |
Jeremy Bícha |
ubuntu-gnome: importance |
Medium |
Wishlist |
|
2018-04-25 19:51:11 |
Jeremy Bícha |
gnome-shell (Ubuntu): importance |
Medium |
Wishlist |
|
2018-04-29 01:15:44 |
Graham McGregor |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Graham McGregor |
2018-05-01 10:09:58 |
Chen-Han Hsiao (Stanley) |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Chen-Han Hsiao (Stanley) |
2018-05-02 06:47:57 |
Mac Chicken |
removed subscriber Mac Chicken |
|
|
|
2018-05-05 20:41:23 |
Alex |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Alex |
2018-05-08 17:27:12 |
Eric Rouleau |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Eric Rouleau |
2018-05-19 17:57:50 |
Pedro Côrte-Real |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Pedro Côrte-Real |
2018-05-23 11:21:51 |
Max Waterman |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Max Waterman |
2018-05-23 16:22:41 |
Julian Alarcon |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Julian Alarcon |
2018-07-09 08:00:27 |
Stefan Heindorf |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Stefan Heindorf |
2018-07-09 08:02:17 |
Stefan Heindorf |
removed subscriber Stefan Heindorf |
|
|
|
2018-08-06 10:05:40 |
Lonnie Lee Best |
tags |
gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
bionic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi xenial |
|
2018-08-06 11:05:56 |
Lonnie Lee Best |
tags |
bionic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi xenial |
bionic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
|
2018-08-10 00:00:36 |
Igor K |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Igor K |
2018-09-06 07:15:07 |
Mario Vukelic |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Mario Vukelic |
2018-09-09 08:13:01 |
Mario Vukelic |
tags |
bionic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
bionic cosmic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
|
2018-09-09 08:13:30 |
Mario Vukelic |
tags |
bionic cosmic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
bionic cosmic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpii |
|
2018-09-09 08:15:27 |
Mario Vukelic |
tags |
bionic cosmic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpii |
bionic cosmic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
|
2018-09-09 09:10:39 |
Niklas Knipp |
removed subscriber Niklas Knipp |
|
|
|
2018-09-09 09:11:11 |
Niklas Knipp |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Niklas Knipp |
2018-09-11 23:49:22 |
userspaced |
removed subscriber Corey Mosher |
|
|
|
2018-09-19 05:38:20 |
Marco |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Marco |
2018-09-29 19:59:11 |
Omer Akram |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Omer Akram |
2018-12-12 06:14:31 |
Adam Bużko |
bug |
|
|
added subscriber Adam Bużko |
2019-03-02 18:48:28 |
Bug Watch Updater |
mutter: status |
In Progress |
Fix Released |
|
2019-04-21 10:42:29 |
Lonnie Lee Best |
tags |
bionic cosmic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
bionic cosmic disco gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
|
2019-07-22 03:59:28 |
Daniel van Vugt |
tags |
bionic cosmic disco gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
bionic disco gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
|
2020-01-24 09:47:37 |
Daniel van Vugt |
tags |
bionic disco gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
bionic gnome-18.04 hidpi highdpi |
|
2020-07-25 15:25:03 |
Niklas Knipp |
removed subscriber Niklas Knipp |
|
|
|
2020-07-26 00:45:23 |
Chen-Han Hsiao (Stanley) |
removed subscriber Chen-Han Hsiao (Stanley) |
|
|
|
2020-07-28 02:34:00 |
Daniel van Vugt |
gnome-shell (Ubuntu): status |
In Progress |
Fix Released |
|