It sounds to me also like there is something wrong with your display 
configuration.
It may be a wrong resolution for your monitor or something like that.

A <control-alt-backspace> will restart the X-Windows system without rebooting 
your
computer.  That won’t fix anything.  But I believe that <control-alt-+> would 
rotate
through the resolution settings.  I would try that.




From: owner-scientific-linux-us...@listserv.fnal.gov 
[mailto:owner-scientific-linux-us...@listserv.fnal.gov] On Behalf Of Nico 
Kadel-Garcia
Sent: Sunday, January 28, 2018 6:29 PM
To: Wirtti Pereira <wirttipere...@hotmail.com>
Cc: scientific-linux-us...@listserv.fnal.gov
Subject: Re: Boot hang after [ OK ] Mounted Arbitrary Executable File Formats 
File System ** EXTERNAL **



On Sun, Jan 28, 2018 at 7:12 PM, Wirtti Pereira 
<wirttipere...@hotmail.com<mailto:wirttipere...@hotmail.com>> wrote:
Hi, thanks a lot for your help, I do appreciate it 😊
I'll try to answer your questions, I am not that skilled on linux.

About version, see the output:

[rafael@fermi ~]$ cat /etc/*release

NAME="Scientific Linux"

VERSION="7.4 (Nitrogen)"

ID="rhel"

ID_LIKE="scientific centos fedora"

VERSION_ID="7.4"

PRETTY_NAME="Scientific Linux 7.4 (Nitrogen)"

ANSI_COLOR="0;31"

CPE_NAME="cpe:/o:scientificlinux:scientificlinux:7.4:GA"

HOME_URL="http://www.scientificlinux.org//[scientificlinux.org]<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.scientificlinux.org__&d=DwMFaQ&c=J-N4xUQ7Pu4HLlwo2BifHA&r=7-NQstA5IqogNkXFIxVbHg&m=D5h6J21Uux1rX3g2Rh9opJGqFGYiACY-DfvQQh_TQ8M&s=qgXyaEKd-OxONYw4u3tLzjJrp92jtmUf95gi8eXghKU&e=>"

BUG_REPORT_URL="mailto:scientific-linux-de...@listserv.fnal.gov<mailto:scientific-linux-de...@listserv.fnal.gov>"



REDHAT_BUGZILLA_PRODUCT="Scientific Linux 7"

REDHAT_BUGZILLA_PRODUCT_VERSION=7.4

REDHAT_SUPPORT_PRODUCT="Scientific Linux"

REDHAT_SUPPORT_PRODUCT_VERSION="7.4"

Scientific Linux release 7.4 (Nitrogen)

Scientific Linux release 7.4 (Nitrogen)

Scientific Linux release 7.4 (Nitrogen)

Well, I didn't know anything about epel or dkms. When trying to install Nvidiz 
by Yum, there were dependencies. then I look for dkms. The Dell site 
recommended to install epel in advance. Thus there were a chain of packs I 
supposedly had to install in advance.



So I did $yum install epel, next I've downloaded the dkms rpm and installed via 
yum as well. Next I've installed Nvidia drivers by $yum install *nvidia*

So you're running Scientific Linux 7. Cool, that's what I was guessing.

Wait a moment here. Did you do something like htis:

* yum install epel-release
* yum install dkms

Or did you get that RPM for dkms from somewhere else than EPEL? Please, be 
aware that installing RPM's from random other repositories can be... well, a 
source of confusion.


Then I've accessed a Nvidia visual app installed but did nothing there. I've 
assumed the board was not visible yet by the system and then I've decided to 
reboot and try to load the drivers. What happens next you already know, the 
boot has freezed and I've tried to boot over again and again ever since.

Although freeze in the middle, when I hit <ctrl> <alt> F2 I can go to a shell 
and log in. Then I can do a lot, including run Gromacs or access this PC from 
my mac through ssh.

Once I can log in in the shell can I fix the system from there?

You've said I could recover the system booting from USB but I don't know how to 
do it. Should I have the Scientific Linux in a stick?

Thanks, Rafael

Umm. Maybe. You have a working shell hitting Ctrl-Alt-F2? Then it's just X that 
is dead, not the operating system. *Good*. Repairing X should be easier than 
fixing the boot system.


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