Hello,

I had this problem on a Dell T7600 running CentOS 7.6 and 8.2.

The Dell does not have an embedded GPU so a PCIe one is used, typically
Nvidia.

The standard CentOS Nvidia driver does not work on a Dell T7***.

You need to apply the Nvidia driver from their web site.

Below are the detailed instructions for CentOS 7.6


Installation of Dell T7600 CentOS 7.6 Nvidia GPU Driver

Make sure that the Dell T7600 is attached to a network.

Install OS if required: Boot USB CentOS 7.6 distribution
                        Use arrow keys to position to 'Install CentOS 7'
                        Enter <Tab>
                        Use arrow keys to insert at the end of boot command
line:  <space>nouveau.modeset=0<cr>
                        Build CentOS 7.6 making sure that the network is
enabled during the configuration phase
                        Reboot making sure that the USB CentOS 7.6
distribution is removed

Common procedure:       At CentOS boot prompt enter <e>
                        Use arrow keys to insert at end of line starting
'linux16':  <space>nouveau.modeset=0
                        Enter <Ctrl+X>
                        Log in, start a terminal window and become superuser
                        Enter:  yum -y update
kernel-3.10.0-1160.11.1.el7.x86_64
                        Enter:  cd /etc/default then edit the file grub
                        Change:  GRUB_DEFAULT=0
                        Append to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX before last ":
<space>nouveau.modeset=0
                        Enter:  grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
                        Enter:  grub2-mkconfig -o
/boot/efi/EFI/centos/grub.cfg
                        Enter Browser and go to:
www.nvidia.com/object/unix.html
                        Download Nvidia Legacy Driver 390.138 and save
*
                        Reboot making sure the 1160.11 kernel is selected
                        Log in, start a terminal window and become superuser
                        Enter:  yum -y groupinstall "Development Tools"
                        Enter:  yum -y install kernel-devel epel-release
                        Enter:  systemctl isolate multi-user.target
                        Log in and become superuser
                        Change directory to where the Nvidia driver was
saved                           *
                        Enter:  sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-* and answer
Yes/Overwrite to everything
                        Reboot making sure that the 1160.11 kernel is
selected
                        The procedure is now complete
                        To check the driver is installed correctly:  Log in,
start a terminal window and become superuser
                        Enter:  lshw - numeric -C display
                        The configuration line should have:  driver=nvidia
                        nvidia-settings can now be used to change display
settings

Regards,
Mark Woolfson

-----Original Message-----
From: CentOS <centos-boun...@centos.org> On Behalf Of Kenneth Porter
Sent: 11 January 2021 18:23
To: CentOS mailing list <centos@centos.org>
Subject: [CentOS] Reboot/shutdown without login

I installed CentOS 8 on a Dell server and it's been running fine as a
headless system, admin'd remotely by ssh. Now I'd like to allow someone to
shut it down at the console without logging in. Is there a way to do that? 
Or do I need to get the GUI working?

I tried switching it into graphical mode ("systemctl isolate graphical") and
the console freezes with nothing but a non-blinking text cursor at top left.
The usual virtual console switching hotkeys (ctrl-alt F1-F7) don't do
anything when it's hung like this. The system is still responsive in my ssh
session. It doesn't recover if I switch back to multi-user target so I have
to reboot it to make the console useful again. I'm guessing I'm lacking a
good video driver. (It's an R720xd I inherited and the latest drivers on
Dell's site are for RHEL 7.)

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