Sabre Graphics capability is provided by high-performance ATI M9 graphics processors, with two devices supporting a total of 128 MB of display memory to drive a dual head display at resolutions up to 1920 x 1200. Sabre's graphics architecture supports independent framestores for overlay and underlay graphics, a feature that enables applications to separate the updates of rapidly changing overlay graphics from slowly changing, yet complex, underlays such as maps or charts. Each frame store can be configured as 8-bit pseudo colour or 24-bit true colour RGB. Since the X Server runs entirely on the Sabre card, communications from the application programme is through the standard X protocol over the 10/100 or 1000 Mbit Ethernet interface, eliminating the need for special graphics driver software running on the host processor.
A key feature of the Sabre graphics architecture is that the whole X Server runs locally on the card. With the host processor providing the X Client libraries, an application may use Sabre graphics with no special-purpose device driver on the host. The loose-coupling between the host processor and the Sabre X Server display product simplifies system integration and removes the interdependence of host processor and graphics driver. On a configuration where the host processor is running both the application software and the graphics device driver, careful system and software design is necessary to ensure deterministic performance.
When Sabre is used to receive network radar video, the remote radar server is best provided by Curtiss-Wright's RVP product. RVP provides an integrated radar acquisition and distribution capability (optionally with plot extraction and target tracking) that provides a stream of compressed radar video on the network. RVP is responsible for compressing the radar data and distributing in UDP packets to any number of Sabre display clients (in addition to PCI display clients if required). These video packets are received by Sabre, decompressed by the on-board PowerPC processor and passed over the PCI bus to Eagle-S for scan-conversion.