On Thu, Jan 5, 2012 at 10:24 AM, Alberto Luaces <alua...@udc.es> wrote: > George writes: > >> On 1/5/12, Alberto Luaces <alua...@udc.es> wrote: >>> George writes: >>> >>>> When I boot my computer, most of the time I get a command line without >>>> X starting. I have to "sudo reboot", wait for the system to reboot and >>>> then I get the correct X environment (I'm using awesome window manager >>>> but I also have kde installed). >>>> >>>> Any suggestions to troubleshoot this? >>>> >>> >>> Some time ago, the nvidia driver had a timing issue with the X server, >>> so it randomly didn't start because the driver wasn't initialized at the >>> time X did. >>> >>> In order to check this is the case, even you're not on nvidia hardware, >>> don't reboot, but just restart your desktop manager: >>> >>> sudo service {kdm|gdm|xdm|...} restart >> >> Thanks, this allowed me to proceed to kdm without rebooting. I can >> also confirm that I'm using the nvidia driver. So, is there a way to >> rectify this situation so I don't have to do an explicit restart of >> the service? >> > > I don't know any. I vaguely remember that now it seldom happens to > me. Maybe your particular configuration makes it happen always. > > I have not looked into the package in order to see where they set the > timeout. You could send a bug report in order to notify this is not yet > resolved.
As a work around, you may be able to edit /etc/init.d/kdm (or the appropriate display manager startup script) and find the start) second and then add a sleep statement before the display manager is started. I don't know how many seconds of sleep are appropriate for your problem, but you can experiment. Good luck! -- Chris -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/caoevnyv29u90ckzbcef7si58pxpcme8wjjb3or9scpm7cgy...@mail.gmail.com