On Thu, Jun 22, 2006 at 20:03:33 +0800, Dr Bean wrote: > I don't think I have X Windows installed. How do I now install > it? > > Installing sid with installer-i386, I was given a choice about what > kind of setup I wanted, eg a personal workstation, an Internet > server, etc. > > With the cursor on the personal workstation, I hit Enter and > was surprised by the installer immediately starting to do > something. I expected some more questions.
That part of the setup is handled by a utility called "tasksel". You can run it again if you want a second chance. (But you don't have to, see below.) The trick is to move the cursor to an item and then press <SPACE> to select it. An asterisk will indicate that an option has been selected. > What it was doing I don't think had anything to do with > installing a personal workstation, which is mainly X Windows, I > think. I didn't get asked whether I wanted gnome or KDE for > example. > > I have now a perfectly good console-based linux system, but exec > startx doesn't give me X Windows. I used apt-get to install > gnome, which may explain a few X11 libs I have and some X docs in > /usr/share. Installing Gnome does not automatically pull the Xorg packages because you could be running the X server on another machine and therefore not want the X packages on the client computer which runs Gnome. > Assuming debian-installer didn't install X Windows, how do I now > do that? Can I do it with apt-get? Or do I have to start from the > start again and boot the system with debian-installer? > > None of the packages in the X Window System software package > list seem to be relevant. Normally it should be enough to run apt-get install xorg (You also need a package which provides "x-window-manager", but I think installing Gnome takes care of that by pulling in "metacity".) If you want a graphical log-in screen you can install the package "gdm". -- Regards, Florian -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]