And now OPTIONS has to be exported,
and probably should be protected against being empty in the new file. So it
becomes ${OPTIONS:-} and ${1:-}
What else have I missed?
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Bother. There is a third problem, a scope issue of some sort.
The errors in ~/.xsession.error go away if "has_options" is moved from Xsession
to its own file in Xsession.d
I don't see why sourceing it should make any difference, but it does.
$ cat /etc/X11/Xsession.d/00
has_option () {
# Ens
Public bug reported:
Jammy Jellyfish 22.04.1 LTS and others. There have been numerous bug
reports and failed fixes for this over several years and releases.
There are a couple of problems in /etc/X11/Xsessions where it fails to
handle options, causing bogus error messages and, doubtless, many
err
The bug seems to have "gone away" when using a DVD of an early March
beta version of Focal Fossa 20.04. It boots very happily with no
obvious display problems.
Sorry that I could not track down exactly what the problem was.
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I'm not so sure that it is a kernel problem.
Bionic with the edge kernel 5.3.0-24 seems OK, although it has locked up once
or twice.
Eoan with kernel 5.3.0-23 misbehaves.
Could the XFCE desktop be important?
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Correction:
Rc7 sometimes boots in the standard way. Sometimes it goes to a black
screen.
Rc7 boots reliably from the *recovery* mode in the grub menu.
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@Morten
I think that all Ryzen motherboards are going to have UEFI firmware
rather than the old BIOS firmware - even though everyone keeps using the
old name.
If it is your computer and you know what you are doing you could turn
off secure boot. If you don't know, then don't do it.
I grabbed al
Workarounds include;
use an older version of Ubuntu,
use a faster monitor,
use a video card (nVidia GT 710),
use a mainline kernel 5.4.0-050400rc6-generic
which also reports the VGA port as a VGA port.
But using a mainline kernel and a video card xrandr reports a 77 Hz refresh
rate
Public bug reported:
Regression with Ryzen 3 2200G, UEFI Asrock B450 Pro4 motherboard and
55-75 Hz monitor.
Booting Xubuntu 19.10 live iso with safe graphics options did give a
stable desktop display, but
xubuntu@xubuntu:~$ xrandr
xrandr: Failed to get size of gamma for output default
Screen 0:
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