Saturday, October 13, 2001, 7:21:08 PM, dman wrote: d> On Sat, Oct 13, 2001 at 07:03:50PM +0200, Søren Neigaard wrote: d> | Saturday, October 13, 2001, 5:42:09 PM, dman wrote: d> | | d>> On Sat, Oct 13, 2001 at 04:32:19PM +0200, Søren Neigaard wrote: | d>> | Saturday, October 13, 2001, 4:08:53 PM, dman wrote: | d>> | | | d>>> On Sat, Oct 13, 2001 at 03:21:54PM +0200, Søren Neigaard wrote: | | d>>> | I just did a apt-get dist-update to testing, and it killed my X. | | d>>> | Why? | d>> | | | d>>> Probably because you didn't configure X after the upgrade. | d>> | | d>> | Ok and how do I do this? d> | | d>> When I installed X4 (install, not upgrade) recently debconf asked me a | d>> bunch of questions, then generated a config file. The config file is | d>> named /etc/X11/XF86Config-4 by default so that you can have | d>> simultaneous X3 and X4 installs. d> | | d>> With X4 the config is built-in, you don't need a separate program. | d>> Run "X -configure" from a console (you might need the full path to X, | d>> I'm not sure) and it will autoprobe and generate the file. This | d>> didn't quite work for me on one machine (el-cheapo SiS6326 card). I | d>> got a config file, but it didn't work. I manually edited the | d>> generated config file to have the same options as my old X3 config | d>> file, and everything worked fine. d> | d> | No matter if I run startx or X -configure, I get: "X: cannot stat d> | /etc/X11/X (no souch file or directory), aborting" d> | d> | I guess that's where my problem is.
d> Yeah, that would be a problem. If I look at my system, I see the d> following files that appear relevant : d> lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 22 Sep 8 2001 /etc/X11/X -> /usr/X11R6/bin/XFree86 d> -rwsr-sr-x 1 root root 7436 Sep 17 2001 /usr/bin/X11/X d> -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 1507548 Sep 17 2001 /usr/bin/X11/XFree86 d> lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 12 Sep 25 2001 /usr/bin/X11 -> ../X11R6/bin/ d> I think /usr/bin/X11/X is just a small wrapper program that loads some d> config from /etc/X11 and then runs the real X server. The X server is d> identified by the /etc/X11/X symlink, and in my case it is d> /usr/X11R6/bin/XFree86. This is the binary from xserver-xfree86 d> 4.1.0-6. d> Try creating that symlink, and see if it helps. You could also try d> just running the real X server directly, d> /usr/X11R6/bin/XFree86 -configure d> | When I did apt-get, I had some problems with a Danish ftp mirror in d> | sources.list, but I solved this by using debian.org. Do you think d> | there could have gone something wrong anyway, and that's why I'm d> | having problems? And if so, how do I fix it, can I ask apt-get to d> | reinstall? d> apt-get remove xserver-xfree86 d> apt-get install xserver-xfree86 d> To "reinstall" the package. This doesn't always work so well because d> other stuff might get removed due to dependencies. To simply d> reconfigure the package, d> dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xfree86 Oh... Found out that xserver-xfree86 wasn't installed at all!? Strange huh? I have had X running, so something must have gone badly wrong during my apt-get dist-install, I wonder what else is missing. Ok I installed it, and run X -configure. I do not get any options, it seems to autodetect everything... At boot gdm trys to start, and the screen flickers 4-5 times, and I get my normal text login (no X). Can't I get this good old graphic setup menu I got during install, the one where I can chose my mouse, keyboard, card and screen (I really miss it)? If I do a XFree86 -configure I lose my keyboard, and I have to pull the plug. Oh year, and if I try to run startx, I get this: "Fatal server error: could not open default font 'fixed'" Please help me :) -- Med venlig hilsen/Best regards, Søren Neigaard mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]