On 04/26/2012 08:38 AM, Frank Griffin wrote:
On 04/26/2012 07:50 AM, imnotpc wrote:
On 04/25/2012 10:32 PM, Frank Griffin wrote:
If you boot a rescue CD, mount the root partition, change the runlevel in /etc/inittab to 3 rather than 5, and reboot, do you get to a login prompt with no problem ?

No, it locks up with a blank screen. The last line I could read before it went blank was "Starting speech dispatcher..."

If I boot using safe mode the system doesn't lock, but doesn't give me a command prompt either. The last message is "Failed to issue method call: Transaction is destructive."

OK, there may be several issues in play here.

Cauldron currently starts plymouth on tty1 to display boot messages, and I think the design relies on a Display Manager (GDM, KDM) signalling plymouth to exit, so if you boot to runlevel 3 (where no DM is staretd, plymouth currently hangs around on tty1, and it looks like it's hung. However, if you do ALT-F2 (or 3, 4, etc), switching to an available tty that isn't running X should start getty there and give you a login prompt.

Doing a default boot the system definitely locks up. Even the cap lock key doesn't work.


What I'm trying to determine is whether your line-mode tty video works without X in the picture.

If you could read "Starting speech dispatcher", then your tty was working, and the blank screen was probably the result of starting X. Maybe with systemd now, there is a different way of setting the runlevel. Try booting in safe mode, doing ALT-F2, logging in as root, and running XFdrake. Then uncheck the box which says start graphical mode at boot, and try again.

When I boot using safe mode ALT-F2 does nothing. Interestingly CTL-ALT-DEL works even though there is no command prompt.

I installed mga2 as an upgrade to mga1 so the old boot entry is still there. When I use it the system boots to the regular login screen, but the mouse and keyboard don't work so there is nothing I can do from there.

In the past I've used the net install disc and done an "upgrade" of the installed system. Nothing is actually installed but it does allow me to change some settings. Perhaps use that to uncheck the graphic interface box?



I install over the network so the wired NIC is working during installation. The wireless NICs work as well but they usually need firmware installed first. I'll take a look at this once I can reliably get that far. Thanks for the help.

If your NICs worked under mga1, NM is most likely the culprit.

If the wired NIC works during installation, then it doesn't need firmware, and there's no reason it shouldn't work in the new system.

Correct, the wired NIC doesn't require firmware. The built in wireless NIC needs additional firmware. When you set up the interface it asks to install the firmware and it always has worked fine after that. The PCMCIA wireless NIC has needed firmware in the past, but mga1 seems to install everything it needs during installation. Installing Linux on a laptop has always been difficult, but despite my current woes laptop support has gotten much better over the years.

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