Douglas Allan Tutty wrote: > Hello Telly. > > First, let me assure you that you do not have to reinstall, nor will > this break your system. > > Second, my I suggest a planned approach to this. > > What will the end result look like? Personally, I don't use any gdm or > any other *dm, I just log into a normal terminal and run startx, which > starts icewm (on my PII) and Xfce on my Athlon. I went with Xfce over > icewm simply because I can edit the tool bar and other stuff with a > simple config applet instead of editing config files for icewm. > However, my PII only has 64 MB ram whereas my Athlon has 1 GB. Xfce > tends to leak memory. > > My suggestion would be to first learn enough GUI stuff so that if for a > short time you end up without X you won't be lost or panic. That means > that you are able to send and receive email with mutt (unless you use > webmail), browse the web with lynx or links2, and manage packages with > aptitude interactively. > > That last point is important, IMHO, but if you aren't using aptitude > now, then this is another separate project. > > Once that is accomplished, you can browse your installed packages > searching for gnome and mark them all for removal. Ensure that you > don't inadvertanly mark xorg for removal (or at least not the necessary > dependencies of the xorg metapackage). > > Then ensure you install: > > some type of xterm. Even on the PII, I like xfce-terminal. > > Your window manager of choice, with its docs if they are > separate. > > Then tell aptitude to go ahead. > > Once its all done, I would suggest a reboot just to clear out any memory > cruft. > > Then you should see a normal login prompt. Log in, type startx, and see > what you get. > > Doug. > > > Thanks,
I appreciate the bit about links2; I was using lynx. Off-question: Is this also the kind of minimal set-up that one would use to run an Apache server? I imagine that you wouldn't want a headless server, but, that a non-GUI set-up would be the next best thing. I'm not sure if this is the proper question for this mailing list, but it spins off of earlier replies about Window Managers. ~Telly -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]