På Thu, 25 Nov 2021 15:18:43 -0500 (EST)
Slade Watkins skrev:
> Hey there,
> Anyone know of an alternative to xrandr on Wayland ...
Try wlr-randr
Allan.
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On 11/25/21 12:18, Slade Watkins wrote:
I'd love to use Fedora and migrate off of Ubuntu fully, since it meets
my needs better, but I absolutely need to be able to run those commands
automatically at startup. Just having trouble figuring that out.
Put those commands in a shell script and creat
On Thu, 25 Nov 2021, Slade Watkins wrote:
On Thu, 25 Nov 2021, Joe Zeff wrote:
Add them to ~/.bashrc
Jeff,
*Joe. Sorry - some things got messed up working with my text editor. Not
sure what happened there.
-slade
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On Thu, 25 Nov 2021, Joe Zeff wrote:
Add them to ~/.bashrc
Jeff,
My understanding is that ~/.bashrc runs before login, and not when GNOME
is launched. I'm probably wrong but that's what some resources online are
stating... I've also tried adding things into that file and it hasn't worked, wh
On 11/25/21 1:18 PM, Slade Watkins wrote:
If not, then I'm fine sticking with X11 for xrandr. I've been having
trouble figuring out how to get my two xrandr commands to run at startup
in GNOME 41.
Add them to ~/.bashrc
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Hey there,
Anyone know of an alternative to xrandr on Wayland that has proper Colorspace
and Broadcast RGB (Full) support? I want to
use Wayland (and get off of X.Org) for better trackpad gesture support but
am out of luck due to not having something that works with it.
If not, then I'm
On 07/01/2021 16:02, Bob Goodwin wrote:
Can someone tell me the xrabdr command to set the scan to "1920x`080"
and keep it there through reboot. I have a new Fedora 33 that I cant
seem to get right.
I've had to add a BASH script to ~/.kde/Autostart to set mine. The KDE
settings app seems to
On 1/7/21 10:48 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
It's xfce which has a settings menu item for Display which allows me to
set the 1920x1080 but I have to click om Apply, then it displays
instructions for saving that setting but it reverts to the previous
display before I or a helper can read it.
Howeve
On 2021-01-07 13:19, Samuel Sieb wrote:
There is no command that will keep it there through reboot. You might
be able to add an xorg snippet. What desktop are you using that isn't
getting the right resolution or keeping the one you set?
.
It's xfce which has a settings menu item for Disp
On 1/7/21 8:02 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
Can someone tell me the xrabdr command to set the scan to "1920x`080"
and keep it there through reboot. I have a new Fedora 33 that I cant
seem to get right.
There is no command that will keep it there through reboot. You might
be able to add an xorg sni
> On 7 Jan 2021, at 16:17, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
> Can someone tell me the xrabdr command to set the scan to "1920x1080" and
> keep it there through reboot. I have a new Fedora 33 that I cant seem to get
> right.
Xrandr is only for runtime.
You need to edit the x
Can someone tell me the xrabdr command to set the scan to "1920x1080"
and keep it there through reboot. I have a new Fedora 33 that I cant
seem to get right.
--
Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA
FEDORA-32/64bit LINUX XFCE Fastmail POP3
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Can someone tell me the xrabdr command to set the scan to "1920x`080"
and keep it there through reboot. I have a new Fedora 33 that I cant
seem to get right.
--
Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA
FEDORA-32/64bit LINUX XFCE Fastmail POP3
___
users maili
ght another update would fix it. Apparently the problem might lay
> elsewhere...
>
> So I have 2 TVs (with different resolution) to test. I start with cvt,
> then xrandr --newmode, xrandr --addmode and then --output.
You should be getting EDID back from the screen that can be used to
I have 2 TVs (with different resolution) to test. I start with cvt,
then xrandr --newmode, xrandr --addmode and then --output.
At the --addmode stage the mode appears in (GNOME3) All settings,
Display, "monitor".
Whethere I use the graphical way or the --output command the monitor
On Friday, January 02, 2015 03:44:49 PM CS DBA wrote:
> Hi all;
>
> I want to run an xrandr command at startup.
>
> I Tried these solutions with no luck:
>
> 1) added command it to /etc/rc.d/rc.local (as a script with #!/bin/bash
> as the first line)
> created
On 01/03/15 06:44, CS DBA wrote:
> Hi all;
>
> I want to run an xrandr command at startup.
>
> I Tried these solutions with no luck:
>
> 1) added command it to /etc/rc.d/rc.local (as a script with #!/bin/bash as
> the first line)
> created a soft link from /etc/rc.
On 1/2/15 3:44 PM, CS DBA wrote:
Hi all;
I want to run an xrandr command at startup.
I Tried these solutions with no luck:
1) added command it to /etc/rc.d/rc.local (as a script with
#!/bin/bash as the first line)
created a soft link from /etc/rc.d/rc.local to /etc/rc.local
Hi all;
I want to run an xrandr command at startup.
I Tried these solutions with no luck:
1) added command it to /etc/rc.d/rc.local (as a script with #!/bin/bash
as the first line)
created a soft link from /etc/rc.d/rc.local to /etc/rc.local
systemctl start rc-local.service
2) added
Got RandR setup in place here with a 3 monitor setup, but have hit a sticky
wicket relative to previous Xinerama setup (which I have reverted to until
I find a suitable workaround).
With Xinerama we can stich together separate X screens under a single large
display. This allows me to use my monito
On 08/12/2012 08:18 AM, Patrick Dupre wrote:
> It seems that it is fixed after that I have been able to make
> progess in the distribution update.
Good to hear you fixed it. BTW, it is customary to tell people how you fixed
it in order to help others who may experience the same problem
htt
It seems that it is fixed after that I have been able to make
progess in the distribution update.
Trying to understand!!!
xrandr only works in an X environment.
Here is the /var/log/Xorg.0.log
The glitch is that X stops and not continue as it should.
ALso note that I can generate the /var
Trying to understand!!!
xrandr only works in an X environment.
Here is the /var/log/Xorg.0.log
The glitch is that X stops and not continue as it should.
ALso note that I can generate the /var/log/Xorg.0.log file
if I keep the /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d empty.
.Org X Server 1.11.4
Release Date
Hello,
I am still trying to solve my issue.
After some updates (Fedora 16), I get
xrandr -q
Can't open display
The variable $DISPLAY seems OK.
It is an intel card 82Q963/Q965
using the driver:
xorg-x11-drv-intel-2.19.0-3.fc16
The /var/log/message seems OK
How to wake up the X s
Dear Folks,
On 14/06/12 17:53 +1000, Nick Urbanik wrote:
Dear Folks,
My two monitors come up the wrong way round, and I quickly came up
with the xrandr command which I've been running when I log in:
xrandr --output VGA-0 --mode 1600x1200 --output DVI-0 --mode 1920x1200
--right-of
Dear Folks,
My two monitors come up the wrong way round, and I quickly came up
with the xrandr command which I've been running when I log in:
xrandr --output VGA-0 --mode 1600x1200 --output DVI-0 --mode 1920x1200
--right-of VGA-0
However, I am not sure how to express this in xorg.con
Sorry disregard the message. Found my typo.
On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 3:37 PM, suvayu ali wrote:
> Hi Fedora users,
>
> On my laptop this used to work before:
>
> $ xrandr --output LVDS1 --mode 1280x800 --output VGA1 --mode 1680x1050 --above
>
Should have been:
$ xrandr --o
Hi Fedora users,
On my laptop this used to work before:
$ xrandr --output LVDS1 --mode 1280x800 --output VGA1 --mode 1680x1050 --above
But today it stopped working. Following is the output from xrandr on my
system. Any thoughts what is going wrong?
$ xrandr
Screen 0: minimum 320 x 200, current
I've been playing around with a dual-monitor setup on my F13 install.
I can run a command like the following to get them to display
properly:
/usr/bin/xrandr --output DFP2 --auto --rotate left --output CRT1
--auto --pos 1080x420
I added the above line to /etc/kde/kdm/Xsetup. When I star
On Wed, 9 Jun 2010 18:02:12 -0400
Charles Butterfield wrote:
> In the meantime, I'm still interested in the approved manner of tweaking
> XRandR setting while the GDM login screen is being displayed.
Completely wild guess here, but gdm is running as the user "gdm".
Perhaps
Okay - I just buzzed out the cable. It is wired properly (i.e.
DMS59:VGA2_RED -> VGA#2:RED, etc). So my money is on the nouveau driver
being confused. I'm going to post that issue on the devel list.
In the meantime, I'm still interested in the approved manner of tweaking
XRandR
boot time, before the nouveau driver is involved, the boot text is
output on the connector labeled "1", which is connected to my left-hand
monitor (as god intended -- he told me so last night).
Once I get logged into Gnome, with the X server (with XRandR extension)
and the nouveau driver i
I would like to modify the default xrandr settings to swap my two
monitors when GDM displays the login screen. Do I need to edit some
script in the /etc/gdm/Init/... (or PreSession...) trees, or is there a
cleaner way to drop in a small property setting somewhere?
I'm running Fedora-13, wi
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