Hi Andrew,
Actually, Debian boots into init level 2 by default.
Potato/Woody, anyway. I haven't heard yet if Sid has
it set up differently, but I would guess that it does
not.
--
Rob Helmer
Namodn
On Thu, Nov 01, 2001 at 01:10:33PM +0100, Henryx wrote:
> On 29 Oct 2001 23:42:14 +1300
> Andrew
Hi Andrew,
Actually, Debian boots into init level 2 by default.
Potato/Woody, anyway. I haven't heard yet if Sid has
it set up differently, but I would guess that it does
not.
--
Rob Helmer
Namodn
On Thu, Nov 01, 2001 at 01:10:33PM +0100, Henryx wrote:
> On 29 Oct 2001 23:42:14 +1300
> Andre
On 29 Oct 2001 23:42:14 +1300
Andrew McMillan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you uninstall gdm / kdm / xdm ("dpkg -r gdm xdm kdm") you will get
> the login prompt and be able to log in, then go 'startx' to start an
> Xsession.
If don't change the line
id:5:initdefault:
in
id:2:initdefault:
i
On 29 Oct 2001 23:42:14 +1300
Andrew McMillan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you uninstall gdm / kdm / xdm ("dpkg -r gdm xdm kdm") you will get
> the login prompt and be able to log in, then go 'startx' to start an
> Xsession.
If don't change the line
id:5:initdefault:
in
id:2:initdefault:
On 29 Oct 2001 23:42:14 +1300
Andrew McMillan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you uninstall gdm / kdm / xdm ("dpkg -r gdm xdm kdm") you will get
> the login prompt and be able to log in, then go 'startx' to start an
> Xsession.
If don't change the line
id:5:initdefault:
in
id:2:initdefault:
i
On 29 Oct 2001 23:42:14 +1300
Andrew McMillan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you uninstall gdm / kdm / xdm ("dpkg -r gdm xdm kdm") you will get
> the login prompt and be able to log in, then go 'startx' to start an
> Xsession.
If don't change the line
id:5:initdefault:
in
id:2:initdefault:
excellent, thanks andrew+karsten!
marko
At 03:10 AM 29/10/2001 -0800, Karsten M. Self wrote:
http://kmself.home.netcom.com/Linux/FAQs/xdm-disable.html
on Mon, Oct 29, 2001 at 11:42:14PM +1300, Andrew McMillan ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> On Mon, 2001-10-29 at 23:16, Marko Djukic wrote:
> > there is no /home//.xsession-errors file...
> >
> > i don't think it gets to the xsession to do any error logging... i see the
> > terminal prompt for login
nope, no xsession error log file to be found anywhere... just looks like
xsession doesn't start at all...
i get the command line login prompt for about a sec then the screen blanks
out, i don't even get a chance to log in...
thanks,
marko
> there is no /home//.xsession-errors file...
How
On Mon, 2001-10-29 at 23:16, Marko Djukic wrote:
> there is no /home//.xsession-errors file...
>
> i don't think it gets to the xsession to do any error logging... i see the
> terminal prompt for login for a second and then it goes blank... i don't
> even get a chance to log in...
Right, sorry
on Mon, Oct 29, 2001 at 11:16:34AM +0100, Marko Djukic ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> At 11:11 PM 29/10/2001 +1300, Andrew McMillan wrote:
> >On Mon, 2001-10-29 at 23:03, Marko Djukic wrote:
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > have a problem, I did a debian install and that went ok... i did a gnome
> > > inst
there is no /home//.xsession-errors file...
i don't think it gets to the xsession to do any error logging... i see the
terminal prompt for login for a second and then it goes blank... i don't
even get a chance to log in...
thanks,
marko
At 11:11 PM 29/10/2001 +1300, Andrew McMillan wrote:
On Mon, 2001-10-29 at 23:03, Marko Djukic wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> have a problem, I did a debian install and that went ok... i did a gnome
> install and that didn't seem to go too well.
>
> everytime i boot, debian gets to the login prompt, waits 1sec then blanks
> out the screen with a cursor bli
excellent, thanks andrew+karsten!
marko
At 03:10 AM 29/10/2001 -0800, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> http://kmself.home.netcom.com/Linux/FAQs/xdm-disable.html
--
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on Mon, Oct 29, 2001 at 11:42:14PM +1300, Andrew McMillan ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> On Mon, 2001-10-29 at 23:16, Marko Djukic wrote:
> > there is no /home//.xsession-errors file...
> >
> > i don't think it gets to the xsession to do any error logging... i see the
> > terminal prompt for logi
nope, no xsession error log file to be found anywhere... just looks like
xsession doesn't start at all...
i get the command line login prompt for about a sec then the screen blanks
out, i don't even get a chance to log in...
thanks,
marko
> > there is no /home//.xsession-errors file...
>
>H
On Mon, 2001-10-29 at 23:16, Marko Djukic wrote:
> there is no /home//.xsession-errors file...
>
> i don't think it gets to the xsession to do any error logging... i see the
> terminal prompt for login for a second and then it goes blank... i don't
> even get a chance to log in...
Right, sorry
on Mon, Oct 29, 2001 at 11:16:34AM +0100, Marko Djukic ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> At 11:11 PM 29/10/2001 +1300, Andrew McMillan wrote:
> >On Mon, 2001-10-29 at 23:03, Marko Djukic wrote:
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > have a problem, I did a debian install and that went ok... i did a gnome
> > > inst
there is no /home//.xsession-errors file...
i don't think it gets to the xsession to do any error logging... i see the
terminal prompt for login for a second and then it goes blank... i don't
even get a chance to log in...
thanks,
marko
At 11:11 PM 29/10/2001 +1300, Andrew McMillan wrote:
>
On Mon, 2001-10-29 at 23:03, Marko Djukic wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> have a problem, I did a debian install and that went ok... i did a gnome
> install and that didn't seem to go too well.
>
> everytime i boot, debian gets to the login prompt, waits 1sec then blanks
> out the screen with a cursor bl
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