* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
@ 2003-05-10 10:09 Amin
2003-05-10 13:29 ` Charlotte Miller
0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Amin @ 2003-05-10 10:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
Hi,
Basically, you need to edit your ``/etc/inittab'' file, and
change your default runlevel to 3 (it's currently 5). What
this means to you is: change the line that says
id:5:initdefault:
to
id:3:initdefault:
This will be a simple search-and-replace operation from any
text editor.
But you need to be able to access the file to be able to
edit it, and you can't do that when you're stuck in a messy
GUI. You need to access it from a text-based command
prompt. This is actually quite possible, and it gets easier
each time you do it:
1. Boot from your Linux installation CD. Go through the
preliminary steps of the installation (nothing that
involves overwriting anything), then press [Alt]-[F3].
I think you need to press the [Alt] button that's on the
left side of your keyboard. This will put you into a
command prompt (probably ``bash'') with full system
access.
2. Mount the filesystem that contains your Linux
installation's ``/etc/inittab'' file. To do this, you
need to determine two things: where to mount the
filesystem, and what partition to mount. Don't get
disheartened! The first requirement is very easy: make
a directory ``/mnt'':
cd /
mkdir mnt
cd mnt
So now you're in the directory ``/mnt''. Now you need
to find out the partition your Linux installation is in;
probably ``/dev/hda1'' (since you implied that Linux is the
only OS on the PC). So mount it:
mount -t auto /dev/hda1 .
Notice that there actually was a space followed by a dot
on the command line above. Now you should be able to
access all the files in your installation, including
``/etc/inittab''. Note that because you've mounted it
onto a temporary Linux system right now, this file will,
for you, actually be ``/mnt/etc/inittab''.
3. Now edit said file. Most likely you'll only have the
``vi'' editor available to you, so invoke it thusly
(assuming that you're still in /mnt):
vi etc/inittab
You should see the critical line I mentioned earlier
somewhere near the top of the screen. Move the text
editing cursor to it using the arrow keys, and move the
cursor so that it covers the ``5'' in that line. Now,
to replace the ``5'' with a ``3''. Type
r3
and the replacement takes place. Now to save and exit.
Type
ZZ
and you are returned to the command prompt.
4. Now you must unmount your Linux installation's
filesystem and restart the computer. Type these
commands:
cd /
umount /mnt
Then take out your installation CD and simply hit your
system unit's reset button.
HTH,
Yawar Amin
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 10:09 How do I stop GUI from autoloading? Amin
@ 2003-05-10 13:29 ` Charlotte Miller
2003-05-10 15:09 ` Chuck Gelm
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Charlotte Miller @ 2003-05-10 13:29 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
On Sat, 10 May 2003, Amin wrote:
>
> But you need to be able to access the file to be able to
> edit it, and you can't do that when you're stuck in a messy
> GUI. You need to access it from a text-based command
> prompt. This is actually quite possible, and it gets easier
> each time you do it:
>
These instructions sound rather convoluted. Why would this individual
need to boot from an installation CD just to edit a file? I assume one
needs root priviledges to edit /etc/innitab, but wouldn't it be alot
easier to open a console, then su to root, then invoke a word processor
and open the file with it? Or invoke MC from that root console, navigate
to the file using it, then use MC's editor to edit the runlevel argument?
Please clarify on the need to do the editing from other bootable media.
Thanks, James
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 13:29 ` Charlotte Miller
@ 2003-05-10 15:09 ` Chuck Gelm
2003-05-10 15:42 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-10 15:43 ` Amin
2 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Chuck Gelm @ 2003-05-10 15:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
Howdy:
...and along this line of thought;
couldn't one use 'vi' or 'joe' from a console.
Perhaps even a one line 'sed' command.
:-|
HTH, Chuck
Charlotte Miller wrote:
>
> On Sat, 10 May 2003, Amin wrote:
> >
> > But you need to be able to access the file to be able to
> > edit it, and you can't do that when you're stuck in a messy
> > GUI. You need to access it from a text-based command
> > prompt. This is actually quite possible, and it gets easier
> > each time you do it:
> >
> These instructions sound rather convoluted. Why would this individual
<snip>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 13:29 ` Charlotte Miller
2003-05-10 15:09 ` Chuck Gelm
@ 2003-05-10 15:42 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-10 16:09 ` Amin
2003-05-10 15:43 ` Amin
2 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2003-05-10 15:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
Whether "Amin" gave convoluted instructions is not the first concern. First
ask whether he gave correct advice.
I did not see the original posting, and I can't find it anywhere. Amin's
response does not indicate whether the original posting mentioned the Linux
distro involved, and he does not do so. And Amin's advice is not
distro-neutral; not all distros use the runlevel setting to launch xdm (or
gdm). Debian, for example, uses a script in /etc/init.d that gets called
from runlevel 2 (which it uses as its default runlevel).
That said, whatever change is needed can almost certainly be done without a
boot/init from a rescue disk or CD. Just log in via xdm (of gdm), open an
xterm, su to root, make the needed changes as root, and reboot the system.
The needed changes might be ...
edit /etc/inittab to change the default runlevel from 5 to 2 or 3
edit /etc/rc2.d to remove the symlink S99xdm
... or maybe something else that is distro specific.
Amin made reference to a "messy GUI" in his reply. Since I never saw the
original message, and he did not quote any of it, it is possible that the
original questioner indicated some reason why he or she could not actually
use the GUI interface to open an xterm (or possibly even to log in). In
that case ... typically, distros that run xdm also open a hidden console on
/dev/tty1, which one can access by pressing CTRL-ALT-F1 when the xdm
display is active. You can then log in, make any needed changes, and reboot.
Finally, if even that does not work, at the lilo prompt (assuming we're
talking about an install that uses lilo), instead of accepting the default
load, you can usually enter "linux single" to boot/init into single-user
mode with a console rather than X presented.
Only after trying these options would I turn to using a rescur disk or CD,
as Amin advices.
At 01:29 PM 5/10/2003 +0000, Charlotte Miller wrote:
>On Sat, 10 May 2003, Amin wrote:
> >
> > But you need to be able to access the file to be able to
> > edit it, and you can't do that when you're stuck in a messy
> > GUI. You need to access it from a text-based command
> > prompt. This is actually quite possible, and it gets easier
> > each time you do it:
> >
>These instructions sound rather convoluted. Why would this individual
>need to boot from an installation CD just to edit a file? I assume one
>needs root priviledges to edit /etc/innitab, but wouldn't it be alot
>easier to open a console, then su to root, then invoke a word processor
>and open the file with it? Or invoke MC from that root console, navigate
>to the file using it, then use MC's editor to edit the runlevel argument?
>Please clarify on the need to do the editing from other bootable media.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 13:29 ` Charlotte Miller
2003-05-10 15:09 ` Chuck Gelm
2003-05-10 15:42 ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2003-05-10 15:43 ` Amin
2003-05-10 15:50 ` Brian P. Bilbrey
2 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Amin @ 2003-05-10 15:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
On Sat, May 10, 2003 at 01:29:37PM +0000, Charlotte Miller wrote:
> These instructions sound rather convoluted. Why would this individual
> need to boot from an installation CD just to edit a file? I assume one
> needs root priviledges to edit /etc/innitab, but wouldn't it be alot
> easier to open a console, then su to root, then invoke a word processor
> and open the file with it? Or invoke MC from that root console, navigate
> to the file using it, then use MC's editor to edit the runlevel argument?
> Please clarify on the need to do the editing from other bootable media.
>
> Thanks, James
My reasoning was, the original poster couldn't get into a
graphical console (such as ``xterm'') because his/her X
configuration was incorrect and graphical environment was
unworkable. Also, if he/she tried to do a
[Ctrl]-[Alt]-[Backspace] to go to text mode, the only effect
that had was, X restarted itself --- because ``inittab''
only allows the system to run in runlevel 5.
For the same reason, the OP couldn't boot into text mode
when the system started up. So, I thought he/she should
access the file by using the installation CD.
Yawar Amin
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 15:43 ` Amin
@ 2003-05-10 15:50 ` Brian P. Bilbrey
0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Brian P. Bilbrey @ 2003-05-10 15:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
On Sat, 2003-05-10 at 11:43, Amin wrote:
> [Ctrl]-[Alt]-[Backspace] to go to text mode, the only effect
> that had was, X restarted itself --- because ``inittab''
> only allows the system to run in runlevel 5.
So C-A-Bksp was restarting X properly (even if X wasn't working), yes?
Then why not use C-A-F1 to get to a text console, login, do the edit,
and restart???
.brian
--
Brian P. Bilbrey <bilbrey@orbdesigns.com>
Orb Designs
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 15:42 ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2003-05-10 16:09 ` Amin
2003-05-10 16:39 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-19 17:51 ` How do I stop GUI from autoloading? Stephen Samuel
0 siblings, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Amin @ 2003-05-10 16:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
On Sat, May 10, 2003 at 08:42:05AM -0700, Ray Olszewski
wrote:
> I did not see the original posting, and I can't find it
> anywhere. Amin's response does not indicate whether the
> original posting mentioned the Linux distro involved, and
> he does not do so. And Amin's advice is not
Sorry, I found the original post in Google Groups:
http://groups.google.com/groups?q=mlist.linux.newbie&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&btnG=Google+Search
And here it is:
From: Workman (david.rust@watkinsmfg.com)
Subject: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
Newsgroups: mlist.linux.newbie
This is the only article in this thread
View: Original Format
Date: 2003-03-30 08:00:16 PST
I've FINALLY freed up one of my Pentiums to use as a
Linux platform. (I gotta get away from Microsoft!)
I fought with it for an hour trying to get the install
program to work, only to find out that my CD drive was
screwed up (I think removable media drives are the
weakest link in computers and CD drives are one of the
worst).
Swapped in a different CD drive and the installation
took off like gangbusters. Turbolinux Server 6.0 -
Lite. Right now it's set up and seems to be working fine
except that I tried to load the GUI (Gnome - I think)
and I must have entered the wrong values for the monitor
Vsync and Hsync. So the GUI comes up and it's messed
up. I can't do anything in it. Damn! Looking back I see
that my big mistake was in making the loading of the GUI
automatic - so now I have to figure out how to stop it
from loading so I can use one of the CLI configuration
tools to alter the Vsync and Hsync values.
Well - I've heard of the problem in the Linux discussion
groups (trouble getting the monitor values right) so I
know this isn't unusual but I think the other people
were smart enough not to have the GUI load automatically
and prevent the accessing of the CLI configuration
tools. The documentation says that pressing
Control-Alt-Backspace will kill the GUI but it doesn't
work for me. It's locked up when the GUI
displays. Control-Alt-Delete won't reboot it.
Well I wanted to learn about Linux, I guess I AM!
I know I'll need to read more documentation. Meanwhile,
any ideas, criticism, or encouragement?
> distro-neutral; not all distros use the runlevel setting
> to launch xdm (or gdm). Debian, for example, uses a script
> in /etc/init.d that gets called from runlevel 2 (which it
> uses as its default runlevel).
Sorry, I didn't know about this. I assumed it was
controlled by ``inittab''.
> Amin made reference to a "messy GUI" in his reply. Since I
> never saw the original message, and he did not quote any
> of it, it is possible that the original questioner
> indicated some reason why he or she could not actually use
> the GUI interface to open an xterm (or possibly even to
> log in). In that case ... typically, distros that run xdm
> also open a hidden console on /dev/tty1, which one can
> access by pressing CTRL-ALT-F1 when the xdm display is
> active. You can then log in, make any needed changes, and
> reboot.
That is a good idea, but I was afraid that it would mess
around with X. I tried it once (I'm using RH8.0), and it
seemed to hose my X server.
> Finally, if even that does not work, at the lilo prompt
> (assuming we're talking about an install that uses lilo),
> instead of accepting the default load, you can usually
> enter "linux single" to boot/init into single-user mode
> with a console rather than X presented.
I assumed Linux was the lone OS on the PC, so there was no
bootloader.
HTH,
Yawar Amin
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 16:09 ` Amin
@ 2003-05-10 16:39 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-11 13:51 ` sean
2003-05-11 21:14 ` renaming really long filenames Chuck Gelm
2003-05-19 17:51 ` How do I stop GUI from autoloading? Stephen Samuel
1 sibling, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2003-05-10 16:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
Thanks for finding the original message. It did not occur to me that it
might be 6 weeks old ... I don't normally keep list traffic anywhere close
to that long. The original message tells us two things:
1. The poster was using TurboLinux 6.0 Lite. I don't know how that distro
starts xdm, and I wonder if anyone here has used it and knows.
2. The X setup is bad enough that he cannot use it to login and open an xterm.
With that background ...
... there is one other candidate approach I forgot to mention. If the
system is on a network and accepts remote connections (via telnet or ssh),
the easiest way to fix this is simply to login remotely and make the needed
changes. I don't know why I didn't think to mention it, since it is the
actual way I usually fix X-display problems.
At 10:09 PM 5/10/2003 +0600, Amin wrote:
[...]
> > distro-neutral; not all distros use the runlevel setting
> > to launch xdm (or gdm). Debian, for example, uses a script
> > in /etc/init.d that gets called from runlevel 2 (which it
> > uses as its default runlevel).
>
>Sorry, I didn't know about this. I assumed it was
>controlled by ``inittab''.
Right. That's (as I recall) how Red Hat does it, and it is the most common
method ... just not a universal one.
Especially here on a list for beginners, knowing what parts of a setup are
distro specific and what parts (reasonably) standard across distros is
tricky. That's why I always tell people they HAVE to mention what distro
and version they are using to get meaningful help ... and why you will
often see me qualify my answers as describing the Debian approach to some
setup issue. Remember the old joke about "assume".
> > Amin made reference to a "messy GUI" in his reply. Since I
> > never saw the original message, and he did not quote any
> > of it, it is possible that the original questioner
> > indicated some reason why he or she could not actually use
> > the GUI interface to open an xterm (or possibly even to
> > log in). In that case ... typically, distros that run xdm
> > also open a hidden console on /dev/tty1, which one can
> > access by pressing CTRL-ALT-F1 when the xdm display is
> > active. You can then log in, make any needed changes, and
> > reboot.
>
>That is a good idea, but I was afraid that it would mess
>around with X. I tried it once (I'm using RH8.0), and it
>seemed to hose my X server.
I don't know what you mean by "mess around". This approach leaves X for a
vt console, and you never go back to X. Depending on details incidental to
the original question, switching to a vt then trying to switch BACK to X
might cause problems you could characterize as "seemed to hose my X
server". But since the purpose is to allow the user to disable launching of
xdm, who cares? Any "hosing" will not survive a reboot. And how much more
"hosed" can this X get than what the original poster described?
BTW, it is possible that the "hidden console" is on some other vt, not F1,
so this experiment should try at least all of F1-F6 before giving up. (I
seem to recall that Slackware used to put it on F6, but I'm not sure, and
it has been a long time since I switched away from Slackware).
> > Finally, if even that does not work, at the lilo prompt
> > (assuming we're talking about an install that uses lilo),
> > instead of accepting the default load, you can usually
> > enter "linux single" to boot/init into single-user mode
> > with a console rather than X presented.
>
>I assumed Linux was the lone OS on the PC, so there was no
>bootloader.
This comment is meaningless; every system has a bootloader (otherwise it
will not boot) ... or, to be exact, every system that boots from a hard
disk does. (You *can* create a rescue floppy that loads the Linux kernel
directly, but this is hardly a normal boot method, even for systems that
run a single OS.)
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 16:39 ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2003-05-11 13:51 ` sean
2003-05-11 21:14 ` renaming really long filenames Chuck Gelm
1 sibling, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: sean @ 2003-05-11 13:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
> BTW, it is possible that the "hidden console" is on some other vt, not F1, so
> this experiment should try at least all of F1-F6 before giving up. (I seem to
>recall that Slackware used to put it on F6, but I'm not sure, and it has been
> long time since I switched away from Slackware).
Actually, it's not unusual to have six differnt console screens available;
it depends on the settings in inittab, at least on the distros I'm currently
familiar with... (X Windows comes up on the next available screen...)
Jame
--- BBBS/LiI v4.01 Flag-4
* Origin: http://bbs.rocasa.org (1:120/546)
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* renaming really long filenames
2003-05-10 16:39 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-11 13:51 ` sean
@ 2003-05-11 21:14 ` Chuck Gelm
2003-05-11 21:44 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-19 16:11 ` Stephen Samuel
1 sibling, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Chuck Gelm @ 2003-05-11 21:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
Howdy, Y'all:
I have some very long filenames that I would like to shorten.
The filenames contain 'spaces' and some characters with tics or
apostrophes, and tildes over them. I tried to change them from
a console session, but I don't know how to generate those special
characters from the keyboard...and I really don't want to type
the long filenames anyway. :-|
OBTW, I have no GUI (X windows) on this computer.
Is there a way to remove all characters < 023h && > 06fh
from these filenames?
find - sed - mv ???
Regards, Chuck
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: renaming really long filenames
2003-05-11 21:14 ` renaming really long filenames Chuck Gelm
@ 2003-05-11 21:44 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-19 16:11 ` Stephen Samuel
1 sibling, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2003-05-11 21:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
At 05:14 PM 5/11/2003 -0400, Chuck Gelm wrote:
> Howdy, Y'all:
>
> I have some very long filenames that I would like to shorten.
>The filenames contain 'spaces' and some characters with tics or
>apostrophes, and tildes over them. I tried to change them from
>a console session, but I don't know how to generate those special
>characters from the keyboard
You precede the special character with a backslash, in general. Sometimes,
you put the name in quotes instead of, or in addition, to that. Examples:
touch "some name"
will create a file with the two-word name "some name"
mv some\ name some\ other\ name
will change its name to the 3-word name "some other name".
>...and I really don't want to type
>the long filenames anyway. :-|
>OBTW, I have no GUI (X windows) on this computer.
>
> Is there a way to remove all characters < 023h && > 06fh
>from these filenames?
>
>find - sed - mv ???
Well, if I had this problem, I'd use a Perl program to iterate through the
filenames in the directory, change each one to its special-character-free
equivalent, and do a mv from the old name to the new name. Using Perl would
also give me a language powerful enough easily to check each revised name
for uniqueness before doing he mv, so I didn't accidently overwrite a file.
Chapter 9 of _Perl Cookbook_ (an ORA book) has some examples of how to use
Perl to process filenames, though on a quick scan, I didn't see an example
that was an exact fit to your problem.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: renaming really long filenames
2003-05-11 21:14 ` renaming really long filenames Chuck Gelm
2003-05-11 21:44 ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2003-05-19 16:11 ` Stephen Samuel
2003-05-20 22:16 ` Chuck Gelm
1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Samuel @ 2003-05-19 16:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Chuck Gelm; +Cc: linux-newbie, ray
My solution would be something like:
for i in * ; do mv "./$i" "`echo ./$i | tr -d '\00-\042\173-\377<>|' `" ; done
Note: I'm deleting characters starting at 7bH, not 6fH -- 6F is in the middle
of the lower case alphabet, so it doesn't make sense.
Other things to note:
I'm using octal (base 8) characters in the string, not hex
the backquote (`) says to run the command and use the output as the
parameter to (in this case) the 'mv' command.
I'm using './filename' to handle the possibility of a filename starting with
a '-' and being mistaken for an option. './' says "in the current directory",
so it's something of a no-op, but guarantees that the name won't start with a '-'.
the double quotes around "./$i" make sure that spaces (and other greeblies) in the
original filename don't get interpreted as work breaks.
Chuck Gelm wrote:
> Howdy, Y'all:
>
> I have some very long filenames that I would like to shorten.
> The filenames contain 'spaces' and some characters with tics or
> apostrophes, and tildes over them. I tried to change them from
> a console session, but I don't know how to generate those special
> characters from the keyboard...and I really don't want to type
> the long filenames anyway. :-|
> OBTW, I have no GUI (X windows) on this computer.
>
> Is there a way to remove all characters < 023h && > 06fh
> from these filenames?
>
> find - sed - mv ???
>
> Regards, Chuck
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
> the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs
--
Stephen Samuel +1(604)876-0426 samuel@bcgreen.com
http://www.bcgreen.com/~samuel/
Powerful committed communication, reaching through fear, uncertainty and
doubt to touch the jewel within each person and bring it to life.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-10 16:09 ` Amin
2003-05-10 16:39 ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2003-05-19 17:51 ` Stephen Samuel
2003-05-19 18:49 ` Richard Adams
1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Samuel @ 2003-05-19 17:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Amin, linux-newbie
Amin wrote:
> On Sat, May 10, 2003 at 08:42:05AM -0700, Ray Olszewski
> wrote:
>
>
>>I did not see the original posting, and I can't find it
>>anywhere. Amin's response does not indicate whether the
>>original posting mentioned the Linux distro involved, and
>>he does not do so. And Amin's advice is not
>
>
> Sorry, I found the original post in Google Groups:
> http://groups.google.com/groups?q=mlist.linux.newbie&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&btnG=Google+Search
>
> And here it is:
>
> From: Workman (david.rust@watkinsmfg.com)
> Subject: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
> Newsgroups: mlist.linux.newbie
> This is the only article in this thread
> View: Original Format
> Date: 2003-03-30 08:00:16 PST
.....
>>log in). In that case ... typically, distros that run xdm
>>also open a hidden console on /dev/tty1, which one can
>>access by pressing CTRL-ALT-F1 when the xdm display is
>>active. You can then log in, make any needed changes, and
>>reboot.
>
>
> That is a good idea, but I was afraid that it would mess
> around with X. I tried it once (I'm using RH8.0), and it
> seemed to hose my X server.
ctrl-alt-F1 should not mess with X (It's messed up,
anyways, so who cares). It simply moves you to a different
virtual terminal. X is still running. ctrl-altF7 (on redhat)
will move you back to the X screen. It might be a differnt
screen number for Turbo Linux... (just go through all 12
ctrl-alt-F[n] sequences if you can't find it).
>>Finally, if even that does not work, at the lilo prompt
>>(assuming we're talking about an install that uses lilo),
>>instead of accepting the default load, you can usually
>>enter "linux single" to boot/init into single-user mode
>>with a console rather than X presented.
>
>
> I assumed Linux was the lone OS on the PC, so there was no
> bootloader.
There will be a boot loader... be it Lilo, GRUB, or whatever.
watch the boot sequence closely.
--
Stephen Samuel +1(604)876-0426 samuel@bcgreen.com
http://www.bcgreen.com/~samuel/
Powerful committed communication, reaching through fear, uncertainty and
doubt to touch the jewel within each person and bring it to life.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-19 17:51 ` How do I stop GUI from autoloading? Stephen Samuel
@ 2003-05-19 18:49 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-19 19:07 ` Stephen Samuel
0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Richard Adams @ 2003-05-19 18:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stephen Samuel, Amin, linux-newbie
On Monday 19 May 2003 19:51, Stephen Samuel wrote:
> Amin wrote:
> > On Sat, May 10, 2003 at 08:42:05AM -0700, Ray Olszewski
> >
> > wrote:
> >>I did not see the original posting, and I can't find it
> >>anywhere. Amin's response does not indicate whether the
> >>original posting mentioned the Linux distro involved, and
> >>he does not do so. And Amin's advice is not
> >
> > Sorry, I found the original post in Google Groups:
> > http://groups.google.com/groups?q=mlist.linux.newbie&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl
> >=en&btnG=Google+Search
NOt having been around much latly i missed ost of this thread, however i did
read the above message in google, As Far As I Can See, the best thing to do
here is to boot into either runlevel 1 or 3, as mentioned there will be a
boot loader presant, be it lilo or grub, (i dont use grub) but i can give an
example of howto do it with lilo.
At the lilo boot prompt "Hit any key" to stop the boot(ing) timer, you now
have time to think, what one needs to do is to choose the "linux Option" and
enter either a "1" or "3" after it, example;
You can choose from
Linux
or
Dos
choose Linux it will be highlighted at the :Boot" prompt, add a "1" or a "3"
after it, 1 or 3 is the runlevel if any askes...
When booted into one or 3 they are both console modes, do the following;
cd /etc
vi inittab
(Got to something like line 20) a line which looks like);
id:4:initdefault:
{OR}
id:5:initdefault:
Edit that line to;
id:3:initdefault:
save the file, now on the next boot linux will boot into console mode.
Find your problem at ease now and then when you are sure you can boot properly
change /etc/inittab back to runlevel 4 or 5 which ever your distro uses.
--
Regards Richard.
pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-19 18:49 ` Richard Adams
@ 2003-05-19 19:07 ` Stephen Samuel
2003-05-19 19:55 ` Richard Adams
0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Samuel @ 2003-05-19 19:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Richard Adams; +Cc: Amin, linux-newbie
Richard Adams wrote:
> On Monday 19 May 2003 19:51, Stephen Samuel wrote:
>>Amin wrote:
>>>On Sat, May 10, 2003 at 08:42:05AM -0700, Ray Olszewski
>>>wrote:
> choose Linux it will be highlighted at the :Boot" prompt, add a "1" or a "3"
> after it, 1 or 3 is the runlevel if any askes...
> When booted into one or 3 they are both console modes, do the following;
> cd /etc
> vi inittab
> (Got to something like line 20) a line which looks like);
> id:4:initdefault:
> {OR}
> id:5:initdefault:
> Edit that line to;
> id:3:initdefault:
> save the file, now on the next boot linux will boot into console mode.
>
> Find your problem at ease now and then when you are sure you can boot properly
> change /etc/inittab back to runlevel 4 or 5 which ever your distro uses.
This solution presumes that X startup is controlled by the runlevel.
I presume that you know about TurboLinux. I really only know RedHat.
Apparently, some versions of Linux use methods other than run level
to control X-Windows startup.
--
Stephen Samuel +1(604)876-0426 samuel@bcgreen.com
http://www.bcgreen.com/~samuel/
Powerful committed communication, reaching through fear, uncertainty and
doubt to touch the jewel within each person and bring it to life.
-
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-19 19:07 ` Stephen Samuel
@ 2003-05-19 19:55 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-19 20:39 ` Stephen Samuel
2003-05-19 21:14 ` Ray Olszewski
0 siblings, 2 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Richard Adams @ 2003-05-19 19:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stephen Samuel; +Cc: Amin, linux-newbie
On Monday 19 May 2003 21:07, Stephen Samuel wrote:
> This solution presumes that X startup is controlled by the runlevel.
> I presume that you know about TurboLinux. I really only know RedHat.
> Apparently, some versions of Linux use methods other than run level
> to control X-Windows startup.
Name one that does not use /etc/inittab, i do not posess to know everything,
but i have never seen one which does not use the inittab method.
--
Regards Richard
pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-19 19:55 ` Richard Adams
@ 2003-05-19 20:39 ` Stephen Samuel
2003-05-19 21:06 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-19 21:14 ` Ray Olszewski
1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Samuel @ 2003-05-19 20:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Richard Adams; +Cc: Amin, linux-newbie
Richard Adams wrote:
> On Monday 19 May 2003 21:07, Stephen Samuel wrote:
>
>
>>This solution presumes that X startup is controlled by the runlevel.
>>I presume that you know about TurboLinux. I really only know RedHat.
>>Apparently, some versions of Linux use methods other than run level
>>to control X-Windows startup.
>
>
> Name one that does not use /etc/inittab, i do not posess to know everything,
> but i have never seen one which does not use the inittab method.
I don't personally know of one, but I'm aware that it's definitely
possible, and there's no reason to not do it (other than the fact that
it'd confuse oldies like you and me). Since I haven't played with
that many flavours of Linux, I can only accept as truth that there
are some that do it in different ways.
I'm not talking about the initstate value in inittab, here.
I'm talking about there being an xdm startup entry in inittab
for level 5 .
Solaris is a non-linux example where the 'normal' states are
2 (non-networked) and 3(networked) and the use of X is
determined via a different mechanism. Somebody who wanted to
put together a version of Linux that looked as much like
Solaris as posible would then be following the Solaris
mechanism.
--
Stephen Samuel +1(604)876-0426 samuel@bcgreen.com
http://www.bcgreen.com/~samuel/
Powerful committed communication, reaching through fear, uncertainty and
doubt to touch the jewel within each person and bring it to life.
-
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-19 20:39 ` Stephen Samuel
@ 2003-05-19 21:06 ` Richard Adams
0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Richard Adams @ 2003-05-19 21:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stephen Samuel; +Cc: Amin, linux-newbie
On Monday 19 May 2003 22:39, Stephen Samuel wrote:
> Richard Adams wrote:
> > On Monday 19 May 2003 21:07, Stephen Samuel wrote:
> >>This solution presumes that X startup is controlled by the runlevel.
> >>I presume that you know about TurboLinux. I really only know RedHat.
> >>Apparently, some versions of Linux use methods other than run level
> >>to control X-Windows startup.
> >
> > Name one that does not use /etc/inittab, i do not posess to know
> > everything, but i have never seen one which does not use the inittab
> > method.
>
> I don't personally know of one, but I'm aware that it's definitely
> possible, and there's no reason to not do it (other than the fact that
> it'd confuse oldies like you and me). Since I haven't played with
> that many flavours of Linux, I can only accept as truth that there
> are some that do it in different ways.
There is no doubt about the means to do it in many ways, thats the heart of
linux.
> I'm not talking about the initstate value in inittab, here.
> I'm talking about there being an xdm startup entry in inittab
> for level 5 .
Not in Slackware theres not, at least not directly mentioned, all slackware
does is call /etc/rc.d/rc.4 when runlevel 4 is defined as initdefault4, note
slackware uses init 4 for X and not 5.
/etc/rc.d/rc.4 is editable to start which ever enviroment one wants, just like
SysVinit systems allow in thier files which are in /etc/sysconfig i belive.
On another note it used to be like you say, however things change, i seemingly
like you think about how it used to be but upon deeper study one sees the
changes which we have never seen.
Thanks anyway for you input.
>
> Solaris is a non-linux example where the 'normal' states are
> 2 (non-networked) and 3(networked) and the use of X is
> determined via a different mechanism. Somebody who wanted to
> put together a version of Linux that looked as much like
> Solaris as posible would then be following the Solaris
> mechanism.
I have never used solaris so i cannot compare the two, anyway we are taking
linux here and not another operating system.
--
Regards Richard
pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-19 19:55 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-19 20:39 ` Stephen Samuel
@ 2003-05-19 21:14 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-20 5:23 ` Richard Adams
1 sibling, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2003-05-19 21:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
At 09:55 PM 5/19/2003 +0200, Richard Adams wrote:
>On Monday 19 May 2003 21:07, Stephen Samuel wrote:
>
> > This solution presumes that X startup is controlled by the runlevel.
> > I presume that you know about TurboLinux. I really only know RedHat.
> > Apparently, some versions of Linux use methods other than run level
> > to control X-Windows startup.
>
>Name one that does not use /etc/inittab, i do not posess to know everything,
>but i have never seen one which does not use the inittab method.
A normal Debian install (Woody or Sid, maybe older versions too) starts xdm
from an /etc/init.d script that is symlinked to runlevels the usual way.
The standard practice is to leave the system at runlevel 2 and run an S99xdm .
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-19 21:14 ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2003-05-20 5:23 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-20 6:19 ` Ray Olszewski
0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Richard Adams @ 2003-05-20 5:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
On Monday 19 May 2003 23:14, Ray Olszewski wrote:
> At 09:55 PM 5/19/2003 +0200, Richard Adams wrote:
> >On Monday 19 May 2003 21:07, Stephen Samuel wrote:
> > > This solution presumes that X startup is controlled by the runlevel.
> > > I presume that you know about TurboLinux. I really only know RedHat.
> > > Apparently, some versions of Linux use methods other than run level
> > > to control X-Windows startup.
> >
> >Name one that does not use /etc/inittab, i do not posess to know
> > everything, but i have never seen one which does not use the inittab
> > method.
>
> A normal Debian install (Woody or Sid, maybe older versions too) starts xdm
> from an /etc/init.d script that is symlinked to runlevels the usual way.
> The standard practice is to leave the system at runlevel 2 and run an
> S99xdm .
But does Debian define the runlevel in /etc/inittab ?.
--
Regards Richard
pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-20 5:23 ` Richard Adams
@ 2003-05-20 6:19 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-20 22:26 ` Chuck Gelm
0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Ray Olszewski @ 2003-05-20 6:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
At 07:23 AM 5/20/2003 +0200, Richard Adams wrote:
>On Monday 19 May 2003 23:14, Ray Olszewski wrote:
> > At 09:55 PM 5/19/2003 +0200, Richard Adams wrote:
> > >On Monday 19 May 2003 21:07, Stephen Samuel wrote:
> > > > This solution presumes that X startup is controlled by the runlevel.
> > > > I presume that you know about TurboLinux. I really only know RedHat.
> > > > Apparently, some versions of Linux use methods other than run level
> > > > to control X-Windows startup.
> > >
> > >Name one that does not use /etc/inittab, i do not posess to know
> > > everything, but i have never seen one which does not use the inittab
> > > method.
> >
> > A normal Debian install (Woody or Sid, maybe older versions too) starts xdm
> > from an /etc/init.d script that is symlinked to runlevels the usual way.
> > The standard practice is to leave the system at runlevel 2 and run an
> > S99xdm .
>
>But does Debian define the runlevel in /etc/inittab ?.
What does "define the runlevel" mean, Richard?
The usual practice (RH and its offshoots, Slackware) is to define in
/etc/inittab a distinct runlevel that starts an xdm process directly from a
line of this form:
6:23:respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty6
(the example starts a tty, so it's only illustrative). As I recall, RH and
its ilk do it from runlevel 5, while Slackware does it from runlevel 4.
So to start xdm from these distros, you change this line in inittab --
id:2:initdefault:
-- to read either
id:5:initdefault:
or
id:4:initdefault:
Debian, in contrast, creates a script /etc/init.d/xdm that starts the xdm
process on the next available vt (usually 7, in practice). It them symlinks
that script to the standard multiuser runlevel, runlevel 2 and does not
change the initdefault line in inittab.
This has operational consequences. The important one, for purposes of this
thread, is that you cannot change the X startup either by editing inittab
or by specifying a runlevels a lilo parameter (the symlinks are the same
for runlevels 2, 3, 4, and 5 on a standard Debian install). You must change
or remove the symlink to xdm in runlevel 2 (again, on a standard Debian
install). This is inconvenient in the cases where xdm so trashes the video
subsystem that you cannot CTRL-ALT-F* back to a console (it happens) ...
your only option (unless you have a remote login capability, say through
ssh) is to boot/init into runlevel 1 and fix things there.
I don't know if any distro other than Debian does it that way. I'd
speculate that the Debian derivatives do, but there are not nearly so many
of them as there are RH derivatives, so it may not actually come up much.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: renaming really long filenames
2003-05-19 16:11 ` Stephen Samuel
@ 2003-05-20 22:16 ` Chuck Gelm
0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Chuck Gelm @ 2003-05-20 22:16 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stephen Samuel; +Cc: linux-newbie, ray
Hi, Stephen:
Hey, this looks great! Thanks. I'll read up with
"man tr". I am thinking that I would like to translate
spaces to underscores and non-alphanumeric to null.
Stephen Samuel wrote:
>
> My solution would be something like:
>
> for i in * ; do mv "./$i" "`echo ./$i | tr -d '\00-\042\173-\377<>|' `" ; done
>
> Note: I'm deleting characters starting at 7bH, not 6fH -- 6F is in the middle
> of the lower case alphabet, so it doesn't make sense.
>
> Other things to note:
> I'm using octal (base 8) characters in the string, not hex
> the backquote (`) says to run the command and use the output as the
> parameter to (in this case) the 'mv' command.
>
> I'm using './filename' to handle the possibility of a filename starting with
> a '-' and being mistaken for an option. './' says "in the current directory",
> so it's something of a no-op, but guarantees that the name won't start with a '-'.
>
> the double quotes around "./$i" make sure that spaces (and other greeblies) in the
> original filename don't get interpreted as work breaks.
>
> Chuck Gelm wrote:
> > Howdy, Y'all:
> >
> > I have some very long filenames that I would like to shorten.
> > The filenames contain 'spaces' and some characters with tics or
> > apostrophes, and tildes over them. I tried to change them from
> > a console session, but I don't know how to generate those special
> > characters from the keyboard...and I really don't want to type
> > the long filenames anyway. :-|
> > OBTW, I have no GUI (X windows) on this computer.
> >
> > Is there a way to remove all characters < 023h && > 06fh
> > from these filenames?
<snip>
> --
> Stephen Samuel +1(604)876-0426 samuel@bcgreen.com
> http://www.bcgreen.com/~samuel/
> Powerful committed communication, reaching through fear, uncertainty and
> doubt to touch the jewel within each person and bring it to life.
-
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-20 6:19 ` Ray Olszewski
@ 2003-05-20 22:26 ` Chuck Gelm
2003-05-21 22:47 ` Riley Williams
0 siblings, 1 reply; 24+ messages in thread
From: Chuck Gelm @ 2003-05-20 22:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: linux-newbie
# These are the default runlevels in Slackware:
# 0 = halt
# 1 = single user mode
# 2 = unused (but configured the same as runlevel 3)
# 3 = multiuser mode (default Slackware runlevel)
# 4 = X11 with KDM/GDM/XDM (session managers)
# 5 = unused (but configured the same as runlevel 3)
# 6 = reboot
# Default runlevel. (Do not set to 0 or 6)
id:3:initdefault:
HTH, Chuck
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
* RE: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
2003-05-20 22:26 ` Chuck Gelm
@ 2003-05-21 22:47 ` Riley Williams
0 siblings, 0 replies; 24+ messages in thread
From: Riley Williams @ 2003-05-21 22:47 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Chuck Gelm, linux-newbie
Hi Chuck.
On Red Hat, they are as follows...
0 = halt
1 = single user mode
2 = non-network text mode
3 = networked text mode
4 = unused
5 = X-Windows
6 = halt
...and either 3 or 5 can be the default.
Best wishes from Riley.
---
* Nothing as pretty as a smile, nothing as ugly as a frown.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: linux-newbie-owner@vger.kernel.org
> [mailto:linux-newbie-owner@vger.kernel.org]On Behalf Of Chuck Gelm
> Sent: Tuesday, May 20, 2003 11:27 PM
> To: linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org
> Subject: Re: How do I stop GUI from autoloading?
>
>
> # These are the default runlevels in Slackware:
> # 0 = halt
> # 1 = single user mode
> # 2 = unused (but configured the same as runlevel 3)
> # 3 = multiuser mode (default Slackware runlevel)
> # 4 = X11 with KDM/GDM/XDM (session managers)
> # 5 = unused (but configured the same as runlevel 3)
> # 6 = reboot
>
> # Default runlevel. (Do not set to 0 or 6)
> id:3:initdefault:
>
> HTH, Chuck
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 24+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2003-05-21 22:47 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 24+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2003-05-10 10:09 How do I stop GUI from autoloading? Amin
2003-05-10 13:29 ` Charlotte Miller
2003-05-10 15:09 ` Chuck Gelm
2003-05-10 15:42 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-10 16:09 ` Amin
2003-05-10 16:39 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-11 13:51 ` sean
2003-05-11 21:14 ` renaming really long filenames Chuck Gelm
2003-05-11 21:44 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-19 16:11 ` Stephen Samuel
2003-05-20 22:16 ` Chuck Gelm
2003-05-19 17:51 ` How do I stop GUI from autoloading? Stephen Samuel
2003-05-19 18:49 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-19 19:07 ` Stephen Samuel
2003-05-19 19:55 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-19 20:39 ` Stephen Samuel
2003-05-19 21:06 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-19 21:14 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-20 5:23 ` Richard Adams
2003-05-20 6:19 ` Ray Olszewski
2003-05-20 22:26 ` Chuck Gelm
2003-05-21 22:47 ` Riley Williams
2003-05-10 15:43 ` Amin
2003-05-10 15:50 ` Brian P. Bilbrey
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