I had a bad experience upgrading F-14/KDE to F-15.

I upgraded from the F-15 DVD ISO, by NFS from another machine,
after abstracting isolinux/vmlinuz and isolinux/initrd.img
and transferring them to /boot on the target machine, a Thinkpad T43,
and writing a trivial stanza in /etc/grub.conf on this machine
----------------------------------
Fedora-15 install
root (hd0,2)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz askmethod
initrd /boot/initrd.img
----------------------------------

On re-booting into this, all went well;
the ISO was found, and after choosing to upgrade the F-14 system
about 1,600 packages were updated remarkably quickly - about an hour.

But then when I re-booted my problems began.
Firstly, the screen was so bright I was frightened something might blow.
There were random colours and broken images on the screen,
and finally I got the error message
----------------------------------
Failed to connect to X Server.pdate pf Smolt.... PC/SC....
  devices..ee 'systemct; status kdump/service' for details.
----------------------------------

I found that Alt-F2 gave me a text login,
so I edited the stanza in /etc/grub.conf created by the installation,
replacing "rhgb quiet" in the kernel line by "text".

Now when I re-booted I got a text login.
On running "sudo yum update",
I was told there were 1.1GB worth of packages to update.
The update failed with a number of errors, which I did not pursue.
I guess I should have run "sudo yum --skip-broken update".
Instead I updated in a number of steps, like "sudo yum update k*".
This seemed to avoid most of the errors;
the only recurring problem was with gthumb, which I yum-removed
and later re-installed.

After this I ran "startx" and a KDE screen came up.
So I deleted the "text" in the grub kernel line, and re-booted.

This brought up a proper KDE screen,
but several of the KDE programs ran strangely.
In particular, on choosing konsole from the f-menu
a page-size window opened, and then shrank rapidly
until it was about 3 lines deep, and a quarter of the screen wide.
(I've never seen this before.)
On enlarging the window by moving the mouse on the perimeter,
I found that I could not input into the window.

Finally, I deleted ~/.kde and started again,
and at last I got a proper Fedora/KDE setup.

-- 
Timothy Murphy  
e-mail: gayleard /at/ eircom.net
tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366
s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland

-- 
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users
Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines

Reply via email to