On Tue, Jan 23, 2007 at 04:48:43PM -0600, Mike Myers wrote: > On 1/23/07, Andrew Sackville-West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > >Mike, please don't cc: me as I subscribe to the list. thanks. > > > I apologize, I'm using gmail and it did that automatically for some > reason. > > On Tue, Jan 23, 2007 at 03:27:40PM -0600, Mike Myers wrote: > >> On 1/23/07, Andrew Sackville-West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> > > >> >On Tue, Jan 23, 2007 at 02:41:40PM -0600, Mike Myers wrote: > >> >> Hi all, > >> >> > >> >> I'm still trying to adjust from Gentoo's way of doing things (do it > >> >> manually) to debian's (apt-something) way. So far everything has > >been > >> >> great, but i'm having trouble finding docs on a couple of issues > >I'm > >> >> having. Both of them seem related to modules. > >> >> > >> >> First one is with the nvidia driver. It seems like everytime my > >debian > >> >box > >> >> is rebooted, I have to re-apt-get nvidia-glx before I can use > >> >xorg. Also,
> >> I'm pretty sure it's not related to xorg, since it works fine after > >running > >> 'apt-get --reinstall install nvidia-glx', even with a widescreen. > >It's > >only > >> after a reboot that I must run that, as long as I want to use the > >nvidia > >> driver. If I use the 'nv' driver, then of course there's no issue > >there, > >> but that driver sucks. Just to oblige you, here's the contents: > >(hopefully > >> it looks sane enough to read) > >> > > > >so, what exactly happens when you *don't* apt-get install nvidia-glx? > >what output do you get? > > > It tries to start and then fails, saying it can't find the nvidia module, > even though it's loaded. So I get a blank screen. one thing you could do, to make sure you're loading the right module, is to use insmod /path/to/the/right/module instead of modprobe, which may, I suppose, be grabbing the wrong one. or modprobe -v should show you the command it is using when inserting the module. regardless, though, you shouldn't have to insert the module in advance. xorg should do it for you, IIRC. > >> > >> Here's the output of 'dpkg -l'. Maybe you can explain what it means? > >> > >> 'debian:~# dpkg -l | grep nvidia > >> ii nvidia-glx 1.0.8776-4 > > NVIDIA > >> binary XFree86 4.x driver > >> rc nvidia-glx-legacy 1.0.7184-3 > > NVIDIA > >> binary Xorg driver (legacy version) > >> ii nvidia-kernel-2.6-686 1.0.8776+5 > > NVIDIA > >> binary kernel module for 2.6 series c > > > >**** > >> ii nvidia-kernel-2.6.18-3-686 1.0.8776+5 > > NVIDIA > >> binary kernel module for Linux 2.6.18 > >**** > > > >> > >ii nvidia-kernel-common 20051028+1 > >NVIDIA > >> binary kernel module common files > > > >**** > >> ii nvidia-kernel-legacy-2.6.18-3-486 1.0.7184+5 > > NVIDIA > >> binary kernel module for Linux 2.6.18 > >**** > > > > > > > >hmmm... you have two sets of nvidia kernel modules installed. That may > >contribute to the problem. purge one of them (probably the legacy one) > >and see what happens. There for different architectures, so it > >*shouldn't* matter, but what the heck... > > > This might have happened when I was trying to narrow down which one I > needed. I didn't realize the legacy drivers were still installed. I'll > try > removing those and see if it makes a difference. It might be loading the > legacy one, I guess, which would explain why xorg fails to start at > first. let us know what happens... A
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