On Sat, Aug 08, 2009 at 02:45:21AM +0200, Vincent Untz wrote:
So. You install from the livecd with X working (see first item above), you don't tweak the configuration (since you don't have a configuration file) and then... X does not work? If this happens, then it'd be a *huge* bug, which should certainly not occur on a released version of openSUSE. I mean, "huge bug" as in "blocker".
Run the following from the bashprompt if you have the kernel sources for I in `find /usr/src/linux/ -name *.c`; \ do A=`grep -i -A 1 -B 1 fuck $I`;if [ "$A" != "" ]; \
For the sake of 11.3 as to wether it should be there or not. I have had situations in the past where the installer was done nicely in GUI. I then was not able to launch X, unless I used `sax2 -b /usr/share...` to get X running. I have also needed it to get dual screens running. Also when helping other people who have problems with X (for whatever reason) it is great to be able to point to a tool that can be run from CLI and is uniform across everything. I myself now just use nvidia-settings, but those need to be installed first. I have the knowledge on how to do that. If I want to help somebody else on Usenet, I would first need to determine what card he has, then see if I know the software that comes along with it, then determine if that is already installed, explain on how to install it and then get things working. So a generic tool that works everywhere and that can be called from YaST is an ideal solution. Wether this is sax2 or another thing is not importand. The importand part is that something should be there, because with the multitude of cards it is not possible to have everything working out of the box. So if we are going to replace sax2, the replacing tool must be tested very, very, very hard. What do other distro's use? Just my two cents. houghi -- then printf "$I \n$A \n\n"; fi ;done|less -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-factory+help@opensuse.org