Hello,
The situation is as follows :
Seeing it as more a global debian tread than a TDE one, i went to the
debian-facile.org forums where a couple of suggestions were made to me.
The first one regarded the /var/log/Xorg.o.log file where it was pointed that
the acceleration and enhancement of my graphic card were not enabled.
I installed the amd firmware.
Then, as root, the desktop worked with no slowlyness problem, videos worked
normally and synchronized with the sound (yet before, they worked better than
as user).
When logging out, there is no problem, it falls back to the tdm desktop
manager.
I can also stop or reboot the PC from tboth he desktop and TDM.
Not so as user.
User remains slower, slow starting kmail (not used under root), slow starting
firefox, extremely slow starting and playing any video and with the sound
totally unsynchonized.
I eliminated the autogenerated hidden files and directories that don't change
the desktop configuration, like DCOP, aso, .... to have them regenrated from
scratch : no change.
If i try to logout as user, i get the mouse pointer on a black screen and it
remains undefinidetly.
To go back to the TDM desktop manager, i have first to go to another console
(Alt+Ctrl+Fx), log in as root and command killall Xorg
Then i fall back to the TDM manager.
But if i try to stop the computer from there i have to end up with a hard
shutdown.
What i can do is, from TDM, go back to the root desktop but i cannot reboot or
shutdown the PC but a hard way.
So, i come back to You since it might be a Xorg/TDE problem that affect the
users.
My /home and /root are individual partitions.
On Thursday 23 January 2020 23:28:54 Dr. Nikolaus Klepp wrote:
Anno domini 2020 Thu, 23 Jan 22:33:10 +0100
mb850063(a)proximus.be scripsit:
Hello,
No, the files don't xist.
And as far as the ATI support is concerned, i understand that the problem
would be with a kernel module ?
By now, i use to start with kernel 5.4
but still have the possibility, via grub, to start with kernel 4.19.
Doing so makes absolutely no difference as far as the slowness is
concerned.
IMO it's not a kernel probblem, but an Xorg problem. You can try to
deinstall Xorg and reinstall the previouse version. If it works, set it on
hold.
nik
> On Thursday 23 January 2020 21:24:16 deloptes wrote:
> > Dr. Nikolaus Klepp wrote:
> > > Usually it's selfconfigured, but you could check if
> > > /etc/X11/xorg.conf or /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d exist. If yes, it might be
> > > a good idea to delete these and try again. If they don't exist,
> > > you'll have to ask the searchengine of your trust (sorry, don't
have
> > > any ATI GPU here)
> >
> > AMD discontinued support for older cards and firmware might not work is
> > what I know. I experienced this on one ubuntu, but might be something
> > else - worth checking.
> >
> >
> >
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