I was using:
rpm -i --force --allfiles --replacefiles xorg-****.rpm
Same with the kernel.
It's really strange, and I really don't understand what the ATI driver has done to my installation. I checked the insides of the fglrx rpm and there's nothing much that it replaces as you say, so it's beyond my knowledge...
Carles
>>[...] >> >>>>> >Does anyone know >>>>> >how to get back to the original, out-of-the-box configuration that >> >>>>came >> >>>>> >with Fedora and that was working very well? I'd rather avoid >>>>> >reinstalling the whole OS if possible. >> >>>>Save you xorg.conf and reinstall the following rpms: >>>> >>>>xorg-x11-6.7.0-9 >>>>xorg-x11-libs-6.7.0-9 >>>>xorg-x11-Mesa-libGL-6.7.0-9 >>>>xorg-x11-Mesa-libGLU-6.7.0-9 >>>> >>>>Then restore your xorg.conf. > >> >>Hi, >> >>Thanks for replying. >> >>I tried reinstalling all those xorg* rpms, and the kernel rpm too... >>Still, no luck. This ATI driver really did something to my machine. But >>can't figure out what. >>Do you have any other suggestion?
>What command did you use for reinstalling the rpms? The ATI driver >will only add fglrx module and change the Mesa libraries. You could >try reinstalling all the xorg rpms you have installed and reboot.