Thusly spoke Julien Cristau (jcris...@debian.org on 2011-03-18 23:18 +0100): > On Fri, Mar 18, 2011 at 23:14:11 +0100, Arno Schuring wrote: > > > > you're missing /usr/bin/X? > > Yes, it appears so: > > > > aschuring@neminis:~$ file /usr/bin/X > > /usr/bin/X: ERROR: cannot open `/usr/bin/X' (No such file or > > directory) aschuring@neminis:~$ apt-file search /usr/bin/X | grep > > -w X xserver-xorg: /usr/bin/X > > > > But that shouldn't really be surprising given that xserver-xorg is > > not installed. Like I said, reinstalling xserver-xorg does not > > help, at least not by itself. > > > Well, X not working when xserver-xorg is not installed is kinda the > expected result. Yet, I have no issues with X when started through my ?dm flavour of the month (currently gdm3). Cue eerie twilight-zone soundtrack...
Maybe I'm just misreading this, but from the changelog I had assumed that not having xserver-xorg installed is a valid configuration: xorg-server (2:1.9.4-2) unstable; urgency=low * Put an end to the dependency hell! Now that we have proper dependencies between drivers and the server, remove xserver-xorg from xserver-xorg-core's Depends (Closes: #362313). In a nutshell, one may want to choose between installing: - xserver-xorg-core: the server itself, with no strings attached. - xserver-xorg: pulls the server and drivers, contains the X wrapper and some documentation. - xorg: pulls xserver-xorg as well as various X11 clients and fonts. -- Cyril Brulebois <k...@debian.org> Wed, 16 Feb 2011 23:17:07 +0100 Nevertheless, the original bug still stands: I can't startx as normal user even with xserver-xorg installed. I still get the same error about not being able to move/rename Xorg.0.log... aschuring@neminis:~$ ls -l /usr/bin/X -rwsr-sr-x 1 root root 7052 Feb 25 22:20 /usr/bin/X Regards, Arno -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-x-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110319013513.03417...@neminis.loos.site