[Expired for gnome-shell (Ubuntu) because there has been no activity for
60 days.]
** Changed in: gnome-shell (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete => Expired
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Let's let the bug auto-expire if there are no more comments in 60 days.
** Summary changed:
- Login screen freeze
+ Login screen freeze on Intel Sandy Bridge i5-2500 GPU
** Changed in: gnome-shell (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Incomplete
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I've solved it for me now with a new graphics card. Couldn't bare the
nomodeset anymore knowing there was an alternative solution. Imagine how
much I am attached to Ubuntu to rather buy a new graphics card then to
switch to another OS ;-).
We can keep it open if you want further investigation and
I should be able to find a similar machine to test on, but it will be a
couple of weeks before I have time to do so. Please add another comment
here if I forget...
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I've just borrowed an external graphics card (ATI) from the office and
plugged it, and then it boots without a problem.
So it definitely has to do with the GPU I mentioned. It would be too
much of a coincidence if this was a hardware problem I think, since the
problem appeared immediately since th
Do you have any other possible solution or attempt I could do to get
this solved? It's pretty annoying to have to run in nomodeset all the
time. Screen res is making my eyes weird o.0 ;-)
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No, there are no known problems with that type of CPU/GPU...
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1792807
Title:
Login screen freeze
To manage notifications about th
I noticed that I have installed (and could only find) the amd64 image. I
have a 64-bit Intel (https://ark.intel.com/products/52209/Intel-
Core-i5-2500-Processor-6M-Cache-up-to-3_70-GHz) processor. Would that
matter at all? (Maybe a dumb question, but throwing it out there anyway
;-))
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** Attachment added: "nosplash_2.jpg"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1792807/+attachment/5190305/+files/nosplash_2.jpg
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** Attachment added: "nosplash_3.jpg"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-shell/+bug/1792807/+attachment/5190314/+files/nosplash_3.jpg
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I've done that now:
1. $ sudo vim /etc/default/grub
2. changed "splash" to "nosplash"
3. $ sudo update-initramfs -u
4. $ sudo update-grub
5. $ sudo reboot
Note:
* I've added the "-u" option to the update-initramfs as well (it tells me "You
must specify at least one of -c, -u, or -d", so I did "-
Can you please try booting without the graphical splash? That way we
might be able to see what's failing...
Try editing /etc/default/grub and change "splash" to "nosplash", then
'sudo update-initramfs' and reboot. You might then see errors on the
next reboot and can take a photo of them.
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You
I've tried that as well but that does not work either unfortunately. The
system freezes pretty much directly after the purple screen appears.
Hitting Ctrl+Alt+F4 does not do anything at that moment.
** Changed in: gnome-shell (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete => New
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This is starting to sound like a kernel problem.
Are you able to log in to a VT? Instead of logging in normally try
pressing Ctrl+Alt+F4 and then log into the text console.
If that worked then run:
dmesg > dmesg.txt
and attach the resulting dmesg.txt to this bug.
** Changed in: gnome-shell (
** Changed in: gnome-shell (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete => New
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Title:
Login screen freeze
To manage notifications
1. $ sudo vim /etc/default/grub
2. removed "nomodeset" (leaving emptry string for GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX
3. $ sudo update-grub
4. $ sudo update-initramfs -u
5. $ sudo vim /etc/gdm3/custom.conf
6. remove # in front of "#WaylandEnable=false", leaving "WaylandEnable=false"
(under "[daemon]")
7. sudo rebo
I'll try this first thing I get home!
Can I run the "sudo update-initramfs" during nomodeset? Or should I
remove "nomodeset" first and start in recovery mode? Since otherwise, I
am not able to get a command line.
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Please try:
1. Remove "nomodeset" from your kernel command line and `sudo update-
initramfs`; then
2. Edit /etc/gdm3/custom.conf and uncomment the line:
#WaylandEnable=false
3. Reboot
Can you log in now?
** Changed in: gnome-shell (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Incomplete
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** Description changed:
Since using Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS on boot at the login screen the screen is
frozen. I tried both gdm3 and lightdm login managers, with either I
don't get into the system.
I am using Intel 2nd generation (Sandy bridge) CPU with on-board GPU: HD
Graphics 2000. I hav
** Summary changed:
- Xorg freeze
+ Login screen freeze
** Package changed: xorg (Ubuntu) => gnome-shell (Ubuntu)
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