> > > I am unable to use my Debian Linux system after the major update I did > on Tuesday. > > WHAT HAPPENED: I used dselect in an xterm window under XFree to update the > system after an idle period of 1 week. I update from stable, unstable, > contrib, and nonfree. I allowed one of the installers to shut down xdm, > which led to a reboot. I finished the installation by starting dselect again > from an Xless console. The next reboot led to a login prompt on a non-X > console screen, flashing and ignoring all input, except for CTL-ALT-DEL > which led to another reboot ending in the same state.
Something similar happened to me. I figured out what was wrong in my case, which was similar. In my case, because I knew that xbase required restarting X, I intentionally stopped X before doing the install. I also ran the new XF86Setup program, and configured it for my card, a Cirrus 5426-based VLB video card. XF86Setup decided that probing my dot clocks and adding a "clocks" line to the XF86Config file would be a good thing. My video card doesn't need a clocks line, and in fact, the X server won't run with it. So at reboot, xdm starts up. It runs the X server, which finds the problem with the configuration, and exits. So xdm starts it again. It exits, and repeat. I basically dealt with it by careful typing... (flash) r (blank) (flash) o (blank) (flash) o (blank) (flash) t (blank) (flash) enter (blank) (flash) and so on. It took me several attempts before I was able to time -all- the needed keypresses in my password correctly (that'll teach me to use a 11-character root password). But then I was able to kill xdm, start X manually (and thus discover the problem), and fix. What happens is that while the VC is on the login prompt, it is listening to the keyboard, but when X takes over, it switches the VC. WHen I was able to finally kill it, the other VC contained all of my mistimed keystrokes. > > WHAT I THINK IS WRONG: I think that my configuration of xdm is broken. The > last two outputs from the boot process, before the login prompt and the > flashing, are an indication that xdm is starting, and an indication that the > nas, which started earlier, has failed. It is probably true that it is a misconfigured X server. That is exactly what I saw causing my similar problems. > > WHAT I THINK I NEED: I think that I need to boot the system in single-user > mode, or otherwise avoid starting up xdm, so that I can seek out the bad > configuration files and fix them. This will work, but I was also very surprised that when upgrading X on my system, the install scripts decided that starting XDM for me was good. Even though I was in single-user mode. > I have *only* Debian Linux on the system, > and I start it with LILO. I have been able to run several versions of the > kernel from LILO, including a very primitive one which I keep on a diskette > for emergencies. They all lead to the same behavior. Probably, there is an > appropriate option to give LILO, and it's probably mentioned in the online > documentation which I am now unable to read :^{ (I hope that this emoticon > portrays embarassment). In the past, I have used CTL-ALT-F1 to bring up a > single-user state, but I have been getting no useful response to this > signal, although it resets the phase of the flashing, so something is > evidently reading and ignoring it. When starting with LILO, hit the shift key to get a boot: prompt, then type linux emergency, which will start it in single user mode. Or try timing your keystrokes, like I did. (My system has a long uptime I didn't want to ruin even when upgrading). > > I'll be grateful for all suggestions. Useful ones will help me, and useless > ones will at least distract me from despair for a while :^) > > Mike O'Donnell > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~odonnell > > -- > TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to > [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]