That's the same one I'm booting into as well (2.4.18-18.8.0). I don't
remember specifically which kernel I last booted when it worked as
expected and which was booted when it didn't. I still have the previous
one, so when I get home I may try to boot the old one and see if it makes
any difference
Hello again...
My computer also freezed right now... it was during the "screensaver"
session... I am using a Pentium3 and psyche (of course) the kernel
is 2.4.18-18.8.0 ... not sure it is the X or the Gnome.. but it is not the
first time I see it.. I saw before in another machine using the previo
I think you are onto something. Originally, booting back into the older
kernel appeared to have fixed things. However, after another lock-up in
Gnome (seems to have been Nautilus), that one became unusable as well, the
same as my original problem. However, when I would switchdesk to KDE, I
had n
It looks that you have problem with Gnome or KDE startup, not X startup. Try
to move all your gnome/kde configuration files to temporary directory, and
then startx again.
Pavel.
> -Original Message-
> From: Brian Schmidt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Fri, November 22, 2002 2:14 AM
>
Viestissä Sunnuntai 24. Marraskuuta 2002 02:27, Alan Peery kirjoitti:
> I thought most of the X windows sessions in 8.0 are writing the user
> level debugging into a file in the users home directory, but I didn't
> find one in a quick scan just now.
~/.xsession-errors
--
Markku Kolkka
Brian Schmidt wrote:
I'm certainly no X expert, but I poked through /var/log/XFree86.0.log and
didn't find anything that screamed out at me as an indicator of the
problem.
I thought most of the X windows sessions in 8.0 are writing the user
level debugging into a file in the users home direct
Well, I'm stumped. I booted back into the previous kernel
(kernel-2.4.18-17.8.0) and sure enough I'm back into X without any
problems at all. But when I boot into the newer kernel (2.4.18-18.8.0), I
can't get in. The newer one was installed via up2date. I'm happy that
solved the problem (I thin
That's the same one I'm booting into as well (2.4.18-18.8.0). I don't
remember specifically which kernel I last booted when it worked as
expected and which was booted when it didn't. I still have the previous
one, so when I get home I may try to boot the old one and see if it makes
any difference
That's what I was getting after I added the new patches to the 8.0
system
AND I ACCIDENTLY booted up in 2.4.18-14. I changed the defaullt boot
to 2.4.18-18.8.0 and gnome is working fine.
On Thursday, November 21, 2002, at 07:14 PM, Brian Schmidt wrote:
I've been having a problem with starting