On Mon, 2011-08-15 at 20:24 +0200, A. den Oudsten wrote:
Op 15-08-11 19:57, Dimstar / Dominique Leuenberger schreef:
On Mon, 2011-08-15 at 19:53 +0200, A. den Oudsten wrote:
Should I have downloaded the 32bit version from Google? André It really depends on your system and how to solve it. Also, your graphic driver install might fiddle around with libGL (NVIdia installer is known to do so).
Is GL generally running on your system? Simple tests could be: glxinfo => Does this show all 0s? Then it's bad
Andredo@linux-e2ov:~> glxinfo name of display: :0 display: :0 screen: 0 direct rendering: Yes server glx vendor string: SGI server glx version string: 1.4 server glx extensions: OpenGL vendor string: Tungsten Graphics, Inc OpenGL renderer string: Mesa DRI Intel(R) 965GM OpenGL version string: 2.1 Mesa 7.10.2 OpenGL extensions: 0x21 24 tc 0 32 0 r y . 8 8 8 8 0 24 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 None 0x22 24 dc 0 32 0 r y . 8 8 8 8 0 24 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 None
This is bad.. as expected
glxinfo | grep direct => Does this show direct Rendering = yes? Yes glxgears => A simple test animation. Should still be smooth on full screen. Yes Google earth might just be one of the tools hinting at an entire problem of your system.
What does "zypper verify" tell you? Dependencies are fullfilled
Odd... but then still: the above indicates that something messed with your open GL Setup. Based on the fact that you're running on an intel chip, this is slightly weird IMHO. Please try to re-install the Mesa package zypper install --force Mesa This should re-install the Mesa package and hopefully fix this for you. Dominique -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org