On Saturday 24 May 2014 06:55:08 you wrote:
Am 24.05.2014 10:39, schrieb Greg Madden:
On Friday 23 May 2014 19:40:36 you wrote:
Am 24.05.2014 02:21, schrieb Greg Madden:
On Friday 23 May 2014 15:05:11 you wrote:
hi all,
Like the subject said i've got problems with tdm. Its just the other branch of the bug Nr 2057. I recently switched from 3.5.13.2 on precise to the nightly builds (R14.0.0 i guess).
And ended up with both kdm-trinity and tdm-trinity. On the way to switch i was getting asked whitch DisplayManager and i choose tdm-trinity. i reboot and ended in the non-X Prompt on tty1. The confusing part is that the command (after login) initctl list shows the service 'tdm-trinity start/running, process 2838'. So i have to 'initctl restart tdm-trinity' to get the X-Login(graphically)
I just looked around a bit in /etc/init/tdm-trinity.conf and it seems alright.
So I'm in a state of confusion. What am i doing wrong
Greetings Werner Bast
How did you 'switch' to R14 ? There is a thread on the TDE users
list:
:Most simple way to upgrade Trinity" discussing how to upgrade : TDE.
Since the upgrade path has not been , at least, documented yet, feedback is welcome on what you did, sources.list, commands or ?.
To fix a possible broken install I would make sure I did not have any packages with 'KDE' in the name since R14 has renamed everthing? to TDE Purge leftover KDE-* packages
I just changed the lines in sources.list. and updated. After that i had to manually start tdm. Then i kicked kdm-trinity*. And nothing changed (the description says its only a transitional package). I had to manually start tdm anyway.
What i also want is not only the solution, but to know where the problem is.
Yours Werner
Is there a 'tdm-trinity' script in '/etc/init.d' ?
There is a link in /etc/init.d: lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 21 Mai 21 08:17 /etc/init.d/tdm-trinity -> /lib/init/upstart-job ubuntu uses upstart and the tdm-trinity.conf in /etc/init looks ok.
cat /etc/init/tdm-trinity.conf:
<code> # tdm-trinity - TDE Display Manager # # The display manager service manages the X servers running on the # system, providing login and auto-login services
snipped
Not familiar with Ubuntu, I use Debian.
that said I did a test, needed to anyway to documentt a safe upgrade for my workstaions..eventually.
System, Debian Squeeze, TDE 3.5.13.2. Changed sources list to nightly builds (TDE R14).
apt-get upgrade: only installs a few packages, most are held back. aptitude upgrade: removes one package, installs NEW packages, and upgrades packages.
these were simulated runs, will do more testing later. what this indicates to me is that depending on how you upgraded your system, you did not say..updating a Ubuntu system has no meaning to me, there could be issues with a complete install, ie held packages.