On 03/06/18 05:08, Stephen Morris wrote:
> On 5/3/18 7:36 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 03/05/18 04:18, Stephen Morris wrote:
>>> As a matter of interest, which version of the nvidia drivers are you using?
>>
>> 390.25-3 And I don't use wayland as performance in KDE is horrible
>
> From the negativ
On 5/3/18 7:36 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 03/05/18 04:18, Stephen Morris wrote:
As a matter of interest, which version of the nvidia drivers are you using?
390.25-3 And I don't use wayland as performance in KDE is horrible
From the negativo17 repositories I'm using the source code for the sa
On 03/05/18 04:18, Stephen Morris wrote:
> As a matter of interest, which version of the nvidia drivers are you using?
390.25-3 And I don't use wayland as performance in KDE is horrible
--
If simple questions can be answered with a simple google query then why are
there sso
many of them?
On 4/3/18 9:02 pm, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 03/04/18 16:16, Stephen Morris wrote:
Thanks Ed, I made that change and it rectified the lagging issues with gdm and
gnome. Now to work out why dkms hasn't compiled the nvidia driver under the new
kernel.
FWIW, the lagging issues may be a byproduct of yo
On 03/04/18 16:16, Stephen Morris wrote:
> Thanks Ed, I made that change and it rectified the lagging issues with gdm and
> gnome. Now to work out why dkms hasn't compiled the nvidia driver under the
> new
> kernel.
FWIW, the lagging issues may be a byproduct of your video driver.
Anyway, whil
On 04/03/2018 13:39, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 03/04/18 09:57, Stephen Morris wrote:
Thanks Ed, I tried Gnome under Wayland and Xorg and as documented in the problem
description, even though gnome shell lags with gdm, when gnome under Xorg is
started the lag disappears. The only difference in my case
On 03/04/18 09:57, Stephen Morris wrote:
> Thanks Ed, I tried Gnome under Wayland and Xorg and as documented in the
> problem
> description, even though gnome shell lags with gdm, when gnome under Xorg is
> started the lag disappears. The only difference in my case is that the issue
> was
> not c
On 4/3/18 11:37 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 03/04/18 08:25, Stephen Morris wrote:
My issue starts with gdm, with gnome shell taking up to 800% of the cpu and
causing, ctrl+alt+F2 to switch to another login to time out, and if I launch
gnome
from gdm the issue with gnome shell continues and causes
On 03/04/18 08:25, Stephen Morris wrote:
> My issue starts with gdm, with gnome shell taking up to 800% of the cpu and
> causing, ctrl+alt+F2 to switch to another login to time out, and if I launch
> gnome
> from gdm the issue with gnome shell continues and causes gnome itself to lag.
> If I
> lo
On 2/3/18 4:45 am, Jon LaBadie wrote:
I had very slow logins from sddm and lightdm.
Not as bad from gdm, but still not good.
My culprit was staring an Xvnc server gnome
session from my Mate autostart. Clue was
50 gnome processes I owned after logging
into a Mate session.
jl
My issue starts
On 01/03/18 08:45, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 03/01/18 05:16, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 28/2/18 10:11 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 02/28/18 04:37, Stephen Morris wrote:
I might be getting confused with Ubuntu, but I thought there was a .conf file
somewhere that held the specification of the default displ
On 03/01/18 05:16, Stephen Morris wrote:
> On 28/2/18 10:11 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 02/28/18 04:37, Stephen Morris wrote:
>>> I might be getting confused with Ubuntu, but I thought there was a .conf
>>> file
>>> somewhere that held the specification of the default display manager that
>>> cou
On 28/2/18 10:11 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 02/28/18 04:37, Stephen Morris wrote:
I might be getting confused with Ubuntu, but I thought there was a .conf file
somewhere that held the specification of the default display manager that could
easily be edited to swap between any of the available disp
On 02/28/18 05:37, Stephen Morris wrote:
>
> If I remember correctly, I think in F25 or F26 lightdm was the display
> manager used
> by default
No.
It depended on the "spin" or Desktop you installed. If you installed
"Workstation" aka GNOME it has always been gdm. If you installed the KDE
On 02/28/18 04:37, Stephen Morris wrote:
> I might be getting confused with Ubuntu, but I thought there was a .conf file
> somewhere that held the specification of the default display manager that
> could
> easily be edited to swap between any of the available display managers that
> you
> happen
On 28/2/18 7:46 am, Joe Zeff wrote:
On 02/27/2018 12:37 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
I'm not using sddm because when I tried it, I didn't like its
presentation layer, and the same applies to kdm.
Have you tried lightdm?
If I remember correctly, I think in F25 or F26 lightdm was the display
m
On 02/27/2018 12:37 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
I'm not using sddm because when I tried it, I didn't like its
presentation layer, and the same applies to kdm.
Have you tried lightdm?
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On 26/2/18 9:50 pm, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 02/26/18 18:47, Ed Greshko wrote:
ll /etc/systemd/system/display-manager.service will point to what you're
using.
systemctl status display-manager
also will tell you
Thanks Ed, that tells me I'm using gdm. I might be getting confused with
Ubuntu,
On 02/26/18 18:47, Ed Greshko wrote:
> ll /etc/systemd/system/display-manager.service will point to what you're
> using.
systemctl status display-manager
also will tell you
--
A motto of mine is: When in doubt, try it out
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On 02/26/18 18:39, Stephen Morris wrote:
> I have forgotten whether I'm running gdm or kdm, and I've forgotten where
> to
> look to find out, but since the last system update I did two days ago, when
> the
> display manager is displaying the list of user who can log in, cursor
> movements an
Hi,
I have forgotten whether I'm running gdm or kdm, and I've forgotten
where to look to find out, but since the last system update I did two
days ago, when the display manager is displaying the list of user who
can log in, cursor movements and mouse movements lag something cronic,
but wh
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