I broke my X
I broke my X
Hi folks
Can someone please give me some advice. I received my HP 2133 mini notebook a couple of days ago and got Puppy 4.1.2 going on it. The only thing I couldn't do was to switch to an external display. Someone suggested I tried the openChrome drivers. I downloaded these from somewhere else on the forum and installed it. It worked, but my cursor went funny. I decided to address the problem later and wanted to revert back to my old settings so I uninstalled the openChrome pet. However, since after uninstalling X is now totally broken. I do I go about restoring X ? I do have a pendrive installation that works, so if neccessary I can copy files from it. I just need to know what I could have potentially messed up and what I need to replace.
Thank you in advance for any help and suggestions.
Jannetta
Can someone please give me some advice. I received my HP 2133 mini notebook a couple of days ago and got Puppy 4.1.2 going on it. The only thing I couldn't do was to switch to an external display. Someone suggested I tried the openChrome drivers. I downloaded these from somewhere else on the forum and installed it. It worked, but my cursor went funny. I decided to address the problem later and wanted to revert back to my old settings so I uninstalled the openChrome pet. However, since after uninstalling X is now totally broken. I do I go about restoring X ? I do have a pendrive installation that works, so if neccessary I can copy files from it. I just need to know what I could have potentially messed up and what I need to replace.
Thank you in advance for any help and suggestions.
Jannetta
This is the link: http://download.mcpup.org/pets/drivers/ ... .2.903.petMU wrote:do you have a link for the openchrome you downloaded?
So I could look up, what it changed.
Mark
I found it in this thread:
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 4555b8b87a
uh, that is a quite complex package.
Can you start X, if you choose xvesa in xorgwizard?
I would "clean up" my savefile:
This assumes, that you have a FRUGAL installation using a pup_save.2fs file.
When you drop back to consolemode, delete all the files installed.
You'll catch most by typing:
rm -rf /initrd/pup_rw/usr/X11R7/
rm -rf /initrd/pup_rw/usr/lib/libchrome*
rm -f /etc/X11/xorg.conf
sync
reboot
Then when the computer rebooted, run xorgwizard again.
If that still fails, I would need your /var/log/Xorg.0.log:
cp /var/log/Xorg.0.log /mnt/home
gzip /mnt/home/Xorg.0.log
As /mnt/home/ is the drive, where the savefile is located, you now can attach Xorg.0.log.gz from there with the system, that you currently use, to write here.
Mark
Can you start X, if you choose xvesa in xorgwizard?
I would "clean up" my savefile:
This assumes, that you have a FRUGAL installation using a pup_save.2fs file.
When you drop back to consolemode, delete all the files installed.
You'll catch most by typing:
rm -rf /initrd/pup_rw/usr/X11R7/
rm -rf /initrd/pup_rw/usr/lib/libchrome*
rm -f /etc/X11/xorg.conf
sync
reboot
Then when the computer rebooted, run xorgwizard again.
If that still fails, I would need your /var/log/Xorg.0.log:
cp /var/log/Xorg.0.log /mnt/home
gzip /mnt/home/Xorg.0.log
As /mnt/home/ is the drive, where the savefile is located, you now can attach Xorg.0.log.gz from there with the system, that you currently use, to write here.
Mark
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Instead of uninstalling OpenChrome, I suggest you set your xorg.conf file with settings which are known to work with the OpenChrome driver on the HP 2133, such as described here -
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LaptopTestingTe ... yConfig810
under "xorg.conf for 3D".
to activate external VGA and disable internal LCD -
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LaptopTestingTe ... yConfig810
under "xorg.conf for 3D".
The ASUS Eee uses the "xrandr" utility to enable/disable its displays. To activate both the internal LCD and external VGA the command would probably be -jannetta wrote:The only thing I couldn't do was to switch to an external display.
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xrandr --output VGA --auto --output LVDS --mode 1280x768
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xrandr --output VGA --auto --output LVDS --off
Hi Mark
That took only 3 minutes and worked perfectly. Thank you SOOOO much for your help.
I would like to make a restorable image of my installation as it is now. I tend to fiddle around with settings and I would like to carry on trying getting the external monitor to work which would mean some more experimenting with openChrome. However, I am using the little notebook quite a bit now so I wouldn't want it to be out of order for long if I manage to mess it up. What would you recommend the best method to be?
Kind Regards
Jannetta
That took only 3 minutes and worked perfectly. Thank you SOOOO much for your help.
I would like to make a restorable image of my installation as it is now. I tend to fiddle around with settings and I would like to carry on trying getting the external monitor to work which would mean some more experimenting with openChrome. However, I am using the little notebook quite a bit now so I wouldn't want it to be out of order for long if I manage to mess it up. What would you recommend the best method to be?
Kind Regards
Jannetta
Hi tempestuoustempestuous wrote:Instead of uninstalling OpenChrome, I suggest you set your xorg.conf file with settings which are known to work with the OpenChrome driver on the HP 2133, such as described here -
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LaptopTestingTe ... yConfig810
under "xorg.conf for 3D".
Thanks for that info. I'm going to give that a go ... as soon as I have figured out how to make a quickly restorable image of my current installation
I assume, that you want to create the backup on sda2, else use the propriate drivename.
I assume, that Puppy is installed to sda1.
run Puppy from CD.
Mount both drives.
Then type:
cd /mnt/sda1
tar -czvf /mnt/sda2/backup.tgz *
To restore:
Here it depends, if you just want to restore files:
cd /mnt/sda1
tar -xzvf /mnt/sda2/backup.tgz
Sometimes, you also must delete disturbing files first.
This you ca do in the filemanager as before, when you deleted usr/X11R7.
Of course, you also could backup files with a filemanager.
But I encountered, that they sometimes do not work reliable, so using tar from the console is the best solution.
Mark
I assume, that Puppy is installed to sda1.
run Puppy from CD.
Mount both drives.
Then type:
cd /mnt/sda1
tar -czvf /mnt/sda2/backup.tgz *
To restore:
Here it depends, if you just want to restore files:
cd /mnt/sda1
tar -xzvf /mnt/sda2/backup.tgz
Sometimes, you also must delete disturbing files first.
This you ca do in the filemanager as before, when you deleted usr/X11R7.
Of course, you also could backup files with a filemanager.
But I encountered, that they sometimes do not work reliable, so using tar from the console is the best solution.
Mark
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- Posts: 5464
- Joined: Fri 10 Jun 2005, 05:12
- Location: Australia
Well now that you have successfully reverted to the original (2D) Xorg configuration, don't worry about OpenChrome at all.jannetta wrote:I'm going to give that a go ... as soon as I have figured out how to make a quickly restorable image of my current installation
Just try the xrandr commands I explained above. xrandr should work just as well with 2D as it does with 3D.
Hi tempestuoustempestuous wrote: Well now that you have successfully reverted to the original (2D) Xorg configuration, don't worry about OpenChrome at all.
Just try the xrandr commands I explained above. xrandr should work just as well with 2D as it does with 3D.
Using xrandr with the current X setup (ie without openChrome, just the default install) doesn't seem to do anything. The screen just stays blank after I issued the command. When I do a
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xrandr -v