Have you tried ctl+alt+backspace to restart the x server, it shouldn't interfere with your other servers you have running.
On Fri, 2003-06-27 at 23:58, Doug Lerner wrote: > On 6/27/03 10:59 PM, "Reuben D. Budiardja" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > > > I had a similar problem twice before (in the last year) with Redhat 7.3. It's > > weird. I tried everything that I could think of, but the monitor just didn't > > wake up. In the other case, it's showing "No signal" thing. > > > > The only I could do is reboot the machine, then everything is fine. I just > > press CTRL-ALT-DEL to reboot it. Those happens when the machine already had > > an uptime over a month (I *hate* to loose those uptimes). In one day, it was > > OK, and the next day I came into my office, it's like that. > > > > So, sorry I can't help, but can't you try rebooting with CTRL+ALT+DEL as a > > last resort ? > > Yes. That will be my last resort. The reason I am hesitant is that I am > running a forums server on this machine and unless I can manually restart it > after Linux starts up again people won't be able to connect. > > I was worried that this was a graphics card problem. If the graphics card is > dead then I can't access do backups, start up different things that are not > in rc.local yet, etc. > > So I was hoping there was some other way of tweaking the video signal to > respond before resorting to that. > > doug > -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list