[ale] Debian Install Woes
Herman, Izzie
Izzie.Herman at T-Mobile.com
Mon Mar 31 10:44:25 EST 2003
Oh yeah...and this is a fresh install. Do I need to run xf86config (or something) before using X. Everything was automatic on RedHat & Mandrake, so I'm kinda lost.
-----Original Message-----
From: Herman, Izzie [mailto:Izzie.Herman at T-Mobile.com]
To: ale at ale.org
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2003 10:41 AM
To: ale at ale.org
Subject: RE: [ale] Debian Install Woes
It goes straight to a console...but when i try to do "startx", it blinks a couple of times, then goes back to my login....would this be due to being in runlevel 2?
-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Day [mailto:jasonday at worldnet.att.net]
To: ale at ale.org
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2003 10:37 AM
To: ale at ale.org
Subject: Re: [ale] Debian Install Woes
On Mon, Mar 31, 2003 at 07:15:51AM -0800, Herman, Izzie wrote:
> I just installed Debian 30r1 and seem to be having some probs w/ it. It never makes it to xdm.
>
> What is the default runlevel for Debian?
> Is the "X" init level still 5 in Debian?
No, Debian boots up into runlevel 2, even if you use [gkx]dm. Why is a
mystery to me.
> Any other advice you can offer?
What happens when you boot? Does it try to run xdm, fail, and drop you
to a console? Or does it just go directly to a console when you want to
run xdm?
The way Debian runs xdm seems... wrong to me. Rather than booting to a
different runlevel, such as 5, Debian boots as normal. When gdm, xdm,
or kdm are installed, they add an init script to /etc/init.d. Each of
these scripts is called by the boot process, and each of these scripts
examines the file /etc/X11/default-display-manager. This file should
contain a single line, pointing to the location of your desired display
manager executable (e.g. /usr/bin/gdm). If this executable matches what
the script is expecting (/usr/bin/gdm for gdm), then it executes it.
Otherwise, it prints a message saying it's not starting the display
manager, because it is not the default.
Once you get to a console, you can start the display manager manually by
becoming root and typing "/etc/init.d xdm start". Make sure that the
/etc/X11/default-display-manager file has a line which is the full path
to xdm. If X still won't come up, then it's likely an X configuration
problem.
HTH,
Jason
--
Jason Day jasonday at
http://jasonday.home.att.net worldnet dot att dot net
"Of course I'm paranoid, everyone is trying to kill me."
-- Weyoun-6, Star Trek: Deep Space 9
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