Oops, forgot to cc in the mailing list.
- Nick
On 06/10/2015 09:19 PM, Nick T. wrote:
Install build-essential it should contain all the packages necessary
to install the driver.
Also you might want to install dkms if you don't want to reinstall the
driver after every kernel update.
-
Try adding nomodeset to the boot command if its not already there, I had
to add that to make the driver work.
- Nick
On 06/10/2015 10:45 PM, Bret Busby wrote:
On 11/06/2015, Nick T. wrote:
Oops, forgot to cc in the mailing list.
- Nick
On 06/10/2015 09:19 PM, Nick T. wrote:
Install build
Edit /etc/default/grub as root and append nomodeset to
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT save exit and run update-grub as root.
- Nick
On 06/10/2015 10:55 PM, Bret Busby wrote:
On 11/06/2015, Nick T. wrote:
Try adding nomodeset to the boot command if its not already there, I had
to add that to
nomodeset goes inside the quotes derp :P
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet nomodeset"
- Nick
On 06/10/2015 11:23 PM, Bret Busby wrote:
On 11/06/2015, Nick T. wrote:
Edit /etc/default/grub as root and append nomodeset to
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT save exit and run update-gr
On 06/26/2015 12:55 PM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
well and good until you find yourself in the situation
this very thread is about: your root filesystem is broken and you
can only log in as root. Then you need your root password.
Ubuntu and debian can boot into recovery mode from the grub menu, f
I have regained access to several debian 8 vms using this method, Yes,
it still works.
On 06/26/2015 03:33 PM, The Wanderer wrote:
On 06/26/2015 at 07:55 AM, Nick T. wrote:
On 06/26/2015 12:55 PM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
well and good until you find yourself in the situation this very
On 06/26/2015 03:59 PM, The Wanderer wrote:
(Please don't top-post.)
On 06/26/2015 at 08:49 AM, Nick T. wrote:
On 06/26/2015 03:33 PM, The Wanderer wrote:
On 06/26/2015 at 07:55 AM, Nick T. wrote:
Ubuntu and debian can boot into recovery mode from the grub
menu, from there it ask
On 06/26/2015 04:12 PM, Matthijs Wensveen wrote:
Not the case. Even in rescue mode I needed to supply the root login. I
could use init=/bin/sh but I couln't find anything in the logs in
/var/log, so I'm guessing systemd and journalctl keeps the journal in
some other place (probably some binary
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