Re: Blank Display

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Thanks for response,

am using fedora 9
installed from DVD
running default Gnome

VGA compatible controller: intel corp82845G/GL{Brookdale-G}/GE chipset Intergrated Graphic device

some of the log messages i got (though i didnt understand them) are:
  •  PCI interupt link (LNKD) X0 disabled
  • prefetch window disabled
  • Avahi-daemon(2120): Successifully dropped root privileges.
  •        warning:-No NSS support for mDNS detected, consider install nss-mdns
  • Acpid connected from 2222(0;0)  debug: gdmserver started X server

/var/log/Xorg.0.log gave me "permission denied"

i also tried init 3 thing and it gave gave me the X but with different settings

thanks alot atleast i have an X. am still learning








--- On Tue, 7/28/09, stan <gryt2@xxxxx> wrote:

From: stan <gryt2@xxxxx>
Subject: Re: Blank Display
To: fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx
Date: Tuesday, July 28, 2009, 8:46 AM

On Tue, 28 Jul 2009 06:40:39 -0700 (PDT)
Morris Buffalo <manguyia@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Am new to fedora and i have a problem. when i start it loads ok up
> until when i login then the screen goes blank (whitish-greyish) but i
> can still see the cursor. How can i resolve this???? please help

It sounds like your window manager is not starting correctly. Could
you provide more information?

What version of Fedora?

How did you install it?  DVD, from LiveCD, network, ...

Which window manager are you using?  Gnome, KDE, XFCE, ...

Do you know what video hardware you have?  What driver you are using?
You can look at this by hitting Ctrl-Alt-F2, logging in as root, and
running the command
less /var/log/messages
q to exit
Look for the initialization of your video hardware at startup.  You
might see error messages here as well.

Are there any error messages in /var/log/Xorg.0.log?  You can look at
this by hitting Ctrl-Alt-F2, logging in as root, and running the command
less /var/log/Xorg.0.log
q to exit

As root, from the same terminal, you can also run
init 3
or
telinit 3
which will take you to text only login, turning off X
Xorg -configure
This will put an xorg.conf.new in your home directory. To try it, run
cp /etc/X11/xorg.conf /etc/X11/xorg.conf.bak1
cp xorg.conf.new /etc/X11/xorg.conf
Then run the command
startx
or
init 5
or
telinit 5
which will restart X with your new configuration.

Does this change the behavior of your X session after you log in?

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