are able to survive! If I do *NOT* move VGA monitor
from right to left, but just rotate it, I will get again immediate crash.
Conclusion: my X11 crashes since Feb 24 update on monitor rotation on R5
230 GPU.
I've also verified that while being logged into KDE following command:
$ xrand
ply I get crash.
>
> IMPORTANT: if I do *NOT* rotate left monitor, if I just move it from
> right to left, X11 are able to survive! If I do *NOT* move VGA monitor
> from right to left, but just rotate it, I will get again immediate crash.
>
> Conclusion: my X11 crashes s
right to left, X11 are able to survive! If I do *NOT* move VGA monitor
from right to left, but just rotate it, I will get again immediate crash.
Conclusion: my X11 crashes since Feb 24 update on monitor rotation on R5
230 GPU.
Question: is there any forum where should I report this conclusio
On 2/25/22, Karel Gardas wrote:
> On 2/25/22 13:29, Christian Britz wrote:
>> Hello Karel,
>>
>> please try it with a temporary clean profile.
>>
>
> thanks for the idea, indeed after creating a random new and clean user
> and attempt to log into the Plasma (X11) session I went in well.
>
> On my
Hello Christian,
thanks for the idea, indeed after creating a random new and clean user
and attempt to log into the Plasma (X11) session I went in well.
On my problematic user I tried to rename some .cache and .config dirs to
remove possibility of corrupted config but this still does not he
Hello Karel,
please try it with a temporary clean profile.
Regards,
Christian
On 2022-02-25 13:12 UTC+0100, Karel Gardas wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I'm using debian testing so not sure if this is the right ML, but after
> Feb 24 update I'm no longer capable of logging into the X11/KDE-plasma.
> I
Hello,
I'm using debian testing so not sure if this is the right ML, but after
Feb 24 update I'm no longer capable of logging into the X11/KDE-plasma.
I simply log into, seeing KDE progress gear and then it returns back to
login. My .xsession errors shows that KDE complains about connection
On Sun, Jun 16, 2002 at 12:24:40AM -0700, Bill Moseley wrote:
> So I decided to install debian on a laptop today. I used a woody idepci
> boot disk I had from an install on a desktop not too long ago. Then I
> proceeded to do a network install.
[...]
> Next problem is that the sources.list file
On Sun, 2002-06-16 at 08:24, Bill Moseley wrote:
> I then updated sources.list to sid and upgraded. Then apt-get install
> xserver-xfree86, which seems like that installed 4.1.
>
> The problem is not I don't have an XF86Config-4 file.
>
> So, the question is: how do I remove all traces of X11, a
So I decided to install debian on a laptop today. I used a woody idepci
boot disk I had from an install on a desktop not too long ago. Then I
proceeded to do a network install.
The idepci disk is nice, I believe, as it includes the EEpro LAN driver so
I can quickly move onto a network install
I used to be using the fonts package that came with the XFree86 4 binary
distribution, but after upgrading to the most recent XFree86 package in sid
(4.0.2-4), X refused to start, on account of not having the "fixed" font.
I checked it out, and the font was installed! I've never had that error
bef
Hello, it's nice to see you. First let me introduce myself. My name is
Juhar and now I'm studying at Sepuluh Nopember Institute of Technology.
My major is Computer Science.
Sir, I'd like to have some information
from you, especially about a weird problem with my X window. The problem
is that
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