On 12/16/2011 10:35 AM, Lawrence Graves wrote: > > > On 12/16/2011 09:27 AM, Reindl Harald wrote: >> Am 16.12.2011 17:23, schrieb Lawrence Graves: >>> On 12/16/2011 09:17 AM, linux guy wrote: >>>> On Fri, Dec 16, 2011 at 8:59 AM, Lawrence Graves <lgrave...@gmail.com> >>>> wrote: >>>>> On 12/16/2011 08:52 AM, linux guy wrote: >>>>> >>>>> The above assuming you are running F16... I haven't followed your >>>>> thread closely. Sorry. >>>>> >>>>> Yes. I can not get a graphical screen back once I install nvidia drivers >>>>> so >>>>> I am unable to give you anymore information. >>>>> >>>> ctrl-alt F2, F3... etc. will get you a command line session. >>>> >>>> Have you run this ? >>>> mv /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r).img /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r)-nouveau.img >>>> dracut /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r).img $(uname -r) >>> Linux guy: >>> Yes. After I doing all you have ask me to do, I am still not able to get >>> the nvidia drivers to work. Could I send >>> you a picture of my screen to your private email address as it will be to >>> large to send to this email address. >>> The picture shows you what I get after installation and reboot. >> jesus christ you have to explain "I did a runlevel drop to 3 now I can't >> get rpm -qa | grep nvidia* to work." first because it seems you are >> doing randomly things without understanding what they are supposed to do >> >> you have to make sure that the "nouveau" drivers are not get loaded >> or unload them manually to test anything >> >> >> > I went to inittab at root and changed the runlevel to 3 because I was told > that sometimes you have to change the runlevel in order > to get the nividia drivers install and then do a nvidia-xconfig to change it > back to runlevel 5. Sorry for the confusion but I am > thoroughly confused about all of this. I wish I sent my laptop to you. I > believe it is something simple but I am not able to > define in tech terms so all of you though you mean well are not able to help > because I am not able to explain or demonstrate what > is that's going on. > -- > Lawrence Graves All things are workable but don't all things work. > > Ok, so you're in runlevel 3 (if you're using F16 then you would do this, as root, by doing " systemctl isolate runlevel3.target" in a terminal). Do the following as root:
1). lsmod | grep nouveau If you see nouveau modules installed then you need to "rmmod nouveau" 2). Once that is done, do "akmods --force" (this will build and probably load the nvdia driver). 3). lsmod | grep nvidia If you *don't* see nvidia, try doing a "modprobe nvidia" and then redo the lsmod in step 3; it should be loaded at that point. 4). assuming all of this has worked, do your "nvidia-xconfig". 5). assuming *that* works, then do "systemctl isolate runleve5.target". This *should* put you back to an X-Windows session using the nvidia driver. Kevin
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