Paul Allen Newell wrote:
Kevin Fenzi wrote:
Don't do that. See:
http://ryanler.wordpress.com/2009/06/11/controlaltbackspace-shortcut-does-not-restart-the-x-server-in-fedora-11/
(with screenshots even! :)
There is no need at all to make an xorg.conf, and as you have seen it
can cause problems moving forward.
kevin
Kevin or anyone who has a suggestion:
I tried the suggestion in the link you provided and it works ... as
advertised (???). If I have logged in, enabling that setting does mean
that crtl+alt+backspace will restart X and put me back at the login screen.
But it doesn't help in the one situation that I usually want to restart
X. I turn on a machine but the KVM is pointing to another machine. When
I am ready to use the machine that I have just powered up, the screen
size settings are wonked and I want to crtl+alt+backspace to restart and
get the screen size correct. In this case, it doesn't work.
From what I can figure out, there is some part of the boot process that
polls the monitor and, if it the KVM has it pointing elsewhere, it makes
"worst-case default assumptions" since it doesn't see the monitor.
I am now assuming that the setting that I have made via the link's
suggestion works once a login has occurred and all shell stuff has been
resolved.
Is there a way to enable the key combination to work prior to logging
in? I am certainly happier that I can at least login, kick it, and get
settings back ... but that seems "wrong" since I don't think I really
should be restarting X once logged in.
Thanks in advance,
Paul
ps: I am also looking into all the other suggestions made in this thread
to see if I prefer any of the others, but figured I'd at least ask about
this "almost what I want" solution.
--
fedora-list mailing list
fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list
Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines