John Foster wrote: > Bob Proulx wrote: > > John Foster wrote: > > > Any idea what I need to edit to get my system back to what I like. I > > > will probably figure it out sooner or later, but sooner will be > > > better. > > > > Probably. But please do tell us on the mailing list what it is that > > you are trying to accomplish. You asked about how to drop from X > > Windows to the text console and I replied with Control-Alt-F1. As far > > as I can tell that should have completely and totally answered your > > question. But I guess not. I and others on the mailing list will be > > happy to help but we are not mind readers. Tell us something. > > Sorry I thought I made it plain. I can NOT use CTRL/ALT/F1 to get to the > basic console.
Uhm... no. You said: > > > I can not access the consoles by hitting ctrl,alt,delete. That is a different key sequence. To get to the console you need CTRL-ALT-F1 through CTRL-ALT-F6 or so. <possibly_useful_sidebar> The /etc/inittab defines the following line: # What to do when CTRL-ALT-DEL is pressed. ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -t1 -a -r now And is documented in the 'man inittab' man page: ctrlaltdel The process will be executed when init receives the SIGINT signal. This means that someone on the system console has pressed the CTRL-ALT-DEL key combination. Typically one wants to execute some sort of shutdown either to get into single-user level or to reboot the machine. </possibly_useful_sidebar> > I have noticed that in the last 2 systems I have built & installed > linux on that this was the standard installation with xwindows. Sorry but your words are ambiguous. I can't tell if you are saying that you found CTRL-ALT-F1 standard and working or if you are saying that it has not been working for you the last few installs. Let me assure you that a stock Debian installation with X Windows on most normal supported hardware that CTRL-ALT-F1 will get you to the text console. If it doesn't then there may be a hardware support problem. Especially as related to the newer KVM and framebuffer console. Blech! I hate that the Linux kernel dropped support for much of the older hardware when they turned on that system. > This function is disabled. I had to edit some file in /etc/ X11 or > Xorg to get this to work. Its been a couple of years & I forgot what > I had to edit & where it was. Sorry for the confusion. Not a rookie, > just don't do this often. Okay. But how do you know it is disabled? Don't jump to conclusions. Instead describe exactly what you are seeing. You are in X11, right? Is this a gdm (gnome display manager) login screen? You press CTRL-ALT-F1 and nothing happens and you are still left at the gdm login screen? Or does something happen such as does the screen go black? Did you try Whit's suggestion to try setting vga=785 on the boot command line to set to a 640x480 64k color framebuffer? If you say the type of hardware you have then someone on the list may have the same hardware and be able to suggest the correct solution. Bob
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