(This is the wrong place for this thread. Either contact the X maintainer Branden Robinson (be prepared to get flamed ;) or post to the debian-x list)
"Michael D. Crawford" wrote: > > So who's the rocket scientist who decided that if XWindows gets > installed, then XDM should be enabled? What do you mean when you say 'XWindows'? I assume the task-x-window-system package? If you read the package description you learn that it depends on (and thus installs) _all_ packages built from the XFree86 source. One of which is xdm. There is also the task-x-window-system-core package which only installs the necessary packages to run X apps, not xdm for example. At any rate, apt-get remove xdm will get you rid of xdm until you have X configured. > Imagine my suprise when I started my debian installation up again for > the first time in a few days and found the XDM login prompt. Well, > that's OK, just press ctrl-command-delete and it kills the x server, > then I can login and - whoa! - the X server restarts and I have the XDM > login prompt. > > I could log in alright, but I couldn't move the mouse. XWindows is not > yet doing me a whole lot of good and what was really upsetting was that > I could not log in at the console to disable it. ctrl-alt/option-F[1-6] or ctrl-command/apple-F[1-6] switches to a console when you're in X. You can do /etc/init.d/xdm stop there or startx -- :1 for an X session with a second server. -- Earthling Michel Dänzer (MrCooper) \ Debian GNU/Linux (powerpc) developer CS student, Free Software enthusiast \ XFree86 and DRI project member