I think the problem is caused by Intel graphic driver does not play well with mesa which Gnome is depended on.
Before that gets fixed, what you can do is at the bootloader, edit the kernel parameters. Append systemd.unit=multi-user.target to your kernel line. This will boot you to tty instead of GDM. So then log in as root, disable GDM, install another login manager such as lxdm, slim etc. Then enable it, reboot. The problem should be solved. On Tue, Apr 23, 2013 at 8:24 AM, Magnus Therning <[email protected]>wrote: > On Apr 23, 2013 7:40 AM, "Tomasz Kowalski" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > I have the same problem. All I can say at the moment is that > > slim+fvwm work for me as a stop-gap solution. I suspect the problem has > > to do with infinality (or with fonts, at any rate), but I can't be any > > more specific. Anyway, here's what "worked for me": > > (1) During the boot sequence, before gdm hangs, switch to a tty<#n> via > > No, this won't work for me, unfortunately. I don't get to GDM, in fact I > don't even get to a point where I have any tty to switch to :-( > > I'll see if I can get some logs out once I have another way to boot. > > > ctrl-alt-F<#n> > > (2) Login as root > > (3) Disable gdm (#> systemctl disable gdm.service) > > (4) Enable slim (#> systemctl enable slim.service) > > (5) In ~/.xinitrc replace "exec gnome-session" with "exec fvwm" > > > > There are a few obvious alternatives available, such as booting from > > another media, mounting the filesystem and then doing (3) - (5) > > manually, possibly with different login/window managers. > > > > Cheers, > > > > T. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > On Tue, 2013-04-23 at 13:54 +1000, Dean Thomson wrote: > > > Probably best bet is to post this in the forum with any relevent > systemd > > > logs. > > > > > > On 23/04/13 13:53, Magnus Therning wrote: > > > > Hi, > > > > > > > > I performed a large-ish update yesterday, gnome 3.8, linux kernel and > a few > > > > other bits and bobs, which left my computer in an unbootable state. I > still > > > > haven't any more details on why since I've left my other boot option > at > > > > work. All I see is that the kernel boots and systemd is started but > never > > > > progresses to a login prompt or GDM. I also don't get any of the > virtual > > > > terminals. > > > > > > > > Maybe this is enough for someone to point me in a direction for > solving it. > > > > If it isn't ill get back with more details this evening when I have > some > > > > other mean of booting the system. > > > > > > > > /M > > > > > > > >
