On 23/09/12||18:50, Mauro Santos wrote:
On 23-09-2012 18:38, Arno Gaboury wrote:
On 23/09/12||18:16, Mauro Santos wrote:
So far I am only testing how systemd behaves in my system and what changes I need to do before I permanently make the switch.
So far the first problem, which doesn't seem to be covered in the wiki, forum or google searches, is that if I switch to a tty after starting X I get just a blank screen. I also get a blank screen and no prompt after I logout from the DE.
The conditions that seem to trigger the problem are: I don't use any login managers so I use startx to start my DE of choice (xfce). I have increased the number of available ttys as described here [1] and after booting everything seems to be working fine, since I have the expected number of ttys and I can login at each one of them. Getting local permissions was also taken care of by following [2], for testing purposes I use 'startx -- vt1 &> xlog.log' and I've confirmed that it works as expected.
The problem: After starting X, if I switch to any of the ttys with ctrl-alt-f* I get only a blank screen, this includes the ttys that have not been used to start X. After logging out of the DE I get a blank screen at all ttys, including the one used to start X. The machine is otherwise still responsive.
Any clues, tips or pointers on how to get this to work are welcome.
[1] https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Systemd#Q:_How_do_I_change_the_number_o... [2] https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Start_X_at_Login
-- Mauro Santos I $startx then XFCE, and works fine with systemd. Please have a look here:
http://blog.falconindy.com/articles/back-to-basics-with-x-and-systemd.html
Thanks. I have seen that too and things seem to be working now.
It works fine on my physical machine but for some reason it doesn't with qemu-kvm, which was where I was testing it first, in a setup similar to what I have on my physical machine (lvm on luks).
I didn't want something exploding on my face so I was using a test subject first.
Sorry for the noise, now I go back to playing with systemd a little more and try not to break anything ... too much.
-- Mauro Santos I went straight to systemd, and nothing exploded on my face! Do not be scared, far from being so complex at it seems to.