On 11/1/05, John R. Sowden <jsowden@americansentry.net> wrote:
On Mon October 31 2005 21:40, John R. Sowden wrote:
Today I took my desktop home to access our dsl to download the latest open office. I booted into a blank screen after the first grub menu. I was unable to determine how to insert custom boot parameters.
Is there a reasonable way to set up a different menu selection in grub to access a monitor with less resolution, or just different parameters?
I found a site on google that showed a chart of video ram vs resolution with hex values in the field. I put vga=0x31F in a new menu item in grub's menu.lst. This allowed the computer to display the boot process, but when it started in kde it went blank, as kde apparently does not check the resolution in current use.
How do I deal with this? Another use for a solution: having an external monitor on a laptop, and wanting to use the higher resolution of the ext mon v the built in screen.
Felix's answer is one of the solutions. In any case you need to boot to runlevel 3. But once there, I'd recommend to start yast2, and enable SCPM (profile manager). Create a new profile for your home configuration, and switch to that profile. Then go with sax2 to edit the monitor configuration. If sax2 can not detect the monitor, and tries higher resolution as needed, so your monitor goes black again, try starting it with the "-l" option. This will open it in a low resolution mode so you can continue your work. Once in sax2, setup your monitor with the right parameters. Then: #init 5 this will start kdm, or whatever login manager you have - rock&roll. Now, as you have created profiles, every time you boot, you will have a choice in the grub initial menu to select which profile to boot - so you can choose the right one for your home or work monitor. Cheers Sunny -- Svetoslav Milenov (Sunny)