The X-based configuration is probably only running in VGA mode. When you're trying to configure X, you're probably telling the system you have greater than VGA capabilities.There ought to be a list for debian wannabes. I've tried several times to get woody going on a couple different boxen - most recently a Dell Latitude laptop.
Console is fine; X, of course, has been the problem (I haven't even
looked at the PCMCIA Ethernet and wireless cards yet).
When the installer says, "Have fun," and reboots, the screen blinks a
couple times, and a curses dialog box comes up saying it can't run X,
telling me why, and offering to run the X configuration program - that's
cool. I say, "Yes," and a program starts - IN X!!!
It sounds like you're running XFree86 3.x; I think upgrading to 4.x would be of benefit to you. Of course, the easiest way to do that is to leave Woody behind and go for Sid or Testing. I run Sid on my workstations (Stable/Woody on servers); every once in a while a problem comes up that takes a couple of weeks to get ironed out, but those instances are rare, and seldom catastrophic, so I find Sid perfectly suitable for workstation use. This way you get the newer stuff, like X 4.
Is there some FM or FAQ I've missed? Is there a CI program on Debian toxf86config
configure X? Or is vi /etc/X11/XF86Config it?
XF86Setup (I believe . . . it's been so-o-o long since I ran XFree86 3.x)
manually tweak XF86Config
maybe dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xfree86, but I think this is a version 4 thing
Kent
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