On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 4:39 AM, Tim wrote: > On Mon, 2009-08-10 at 10:39 +0100, James Allsopp wrote: >> My Fedora 10 machine locks up X completely, but I can still login via >> SSH. The monitor still shows the X window, but nothing changes, no >> clock, mouse nothing. X processes are still running, but not sure how to >> go about shutting them down. Last night, I tried to get the system to >> shut down sanely by running shutdown -h now and although the command ran >> and I couldn't login via ssh anymore, the machine did not shut down. >> >> Can anyone tell me how to shutdown and restart X properly. Tried things >> like startx( had a x lock file exists error) and init 3, but nothing worked. > > If X hadn't completely locked up, CTRL+ALT+BACKSPACE would have > restarted X (that is BACKSPACE, the delete key that deletes to the left, > not the DEL key that deletes to the right). > > If the keyboard was still being listened to, then CTRL+ALT+DEL should > have rebooted (perhaps after hammering away at the keys a lot), as a > second option instead of CTRL+ALT+BACKSPACE. <snip> I've seen similar symptoms ... for me, the keyboard is usually dead I think, so any recovery procedure would have to be done remotely through an ssh session. I'm not sure if it's a valid way to tell for sure, but I usually try the caps lock/num lock to see if the little lights toggle to see if the keyboard is dead. Whenever they don't toggle, control-alt-* hasn't worked for me. Even the sys rq REISUB trick did nothing. I've never tried unplugging the USB keyboard and plugging it back in... I wonder if that could help recover the keyboard. Even if control-alt-backspace did work, my understanding was that it was disabled by default in f11, but the poster was running f10, so that's not his problem. Regards, David -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines