Gnome, KDE won"t Open
am 12.08.2004 08:05:34 von heisspf
Hi,
RedHat 9.1, Kernel 2.2.20-20, 118 KRAM, 435 K swap
On my motherboard the connection for the keyboard died for which reason I
could no longer boot.
I bought a USB adopter, connected keyboard and mouse to it and I could boot
again with kb and mouse working properly.
However, now I cannot start gnome nor kde from the concole. Both crash just
before the panels should open. I can start twm and from there open
applications like abiword, gnumeric. When I open gnome-panel or kicker from
within twm causes a crash when then trying to open an application from those
panels.
Opening gnome or kde via gdm or xdm causes a reboot.
Has this strange behavior anything to do with this USB connection of the
kb/mouse and what would be needed then to correct it or is it just a
coincidence meaning further trouble?
Thanks & regards
--
Peter
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Re: Gnome, KDE won"t Open
am 12.08.2004 08:23:21 von Richard Adams
On Thursday 12 August 2004 08:05, Peter wrote:
> Has this strange behavior anything to do with this USB connection of the
> kb/mouse and what would be needed then to correct it or is it just a
> coincidence meaning further trouble?
I would imagen it has everything to do with the problem, you would need to
edit your X configuration file and change the subsction(s) for at least your
mouse. Checl the keybpard entry as well altho' it should be ok.
> Thanks & regards
> --
> Peter
--
If the Linux community is a bunch of thieves because they
try to imitate windows programs, then the Windows community
is built on organized crime.
Regards Richard
pa3gcu@zeelandnet.nl
http://people.zeelandnet.nl/pa3gcu/
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Re: Gnome, KDE won"t Open
am 13.08.2004 11:21:01 von heisspf
On Thu, 12 Aug 2004, Peter wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> RedHat 9.1, Kernel 2.2.20-20, 118 KRAM, 435 K swap
should read Kernel 2.4.20-20
>>
>> On my motherboard the connection for the keyboard died for which reason I
>> could no longer boot.
>The reason for it dying may also be important here, possibly a mobo prob??
Yes, it is a mobo problem.
>>
>> I bought an USB adopter, connected keyboard and mouse to it and I could boot
>> again with kb and mouse working properly.
>So can u beg borrow (or steal ) a keyboard n mouse that connects to the
>native ports. If you can do that post the results
I just have to connect to the old outlets and, see above no more booting.
>>
>> However, now I cannot start gnome nor kde from the concole. Both crash just
>> before the panels should open. I can start twm and from there open
>> applications like abiword, gnumeric. When I open gnome-panel or kicker from
>> within twm causes a crash when then trying to open an application from those
>> panels.
>I'm slightly surprised you can get X running at all It should be
>looking for a keyboard and mouse attached where they were before 8-() or
>did you reconfigure it?
Yes I reconfigured to have USB support for hid, kb and mouse and changed to
the appropriate settings in XF86Config.
>>
>> Opening gnome or kde via gdm or xdm causes a reboot.
>That's what I would expect
>
>> Has this strange behavior anything to do with this USB connection of the
>> kb/mouse and what would be needed then to correct it or is it just a
>> coincidence meaning further trouble?
>impossible to say with any degree of certainty. Would need your error
>messages and configs plus a clear description of what has changed between
>your prior configuration and the current configuration. How were keyboard
>and mouse attached before? ps2 mouse or usb ditto for keyboard. Your
>XF86Config and the error messages would help enormously. dmesg and XF86
>logs would help too.
Kb and mouse were attached to the standard outlet of the mobo P6STMT which
seems to be of poor quality. It gave problems before with the SIS630ET
chipset, then the printer(whatever) mobo stopped working necessitating me to
buy a printer card and now the kb went puff. Before that last event happened
the machine was made the house training computer for the kids and wifes for
which reason there is no Internet connection and no floppy drive. Therefore it
is difficult to supply dmesg etc logs.
dmesg shows no errors whatsoever, neither the bootlog nor messages. The
XF86config.log differs on the last line:
when trying to startx gnome-session and it crashes the last line of XF86Config
is: (II)SIS(0):SISDisplayPowerManagementSet(0)
whereas when starting twm there is no such last line.
lsmod shows that the modules for usbhid, usbmouse and usbkb are all properly
loaded and as I said kb and mouse work faultlessly with this USB adapter.
>
> Thanks & regards
> Peter
>
> -
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Re: Gnome, KDE won"t Open
am 13.08.2004 19:07:05 von Ray Olszewski
Peter -- I don't have your first message here to refer back to, so let me
first summarize what I believe your problem report is, in case I am
misinterpreting, or misremembering, something of consequence.
When your system used a PS/2 keyboard and PS/2 mouse, you were able to
startx and xdm/gdm into gnome (or KDE) with no problem.
You switched to a USB keyboard and mouse, and now the system cannot startx,
or xdm/gdm, into either Gnome or KDE. In both cases, the system
spontaneously reboots during the load process. You can, however, startx
into twm, and axdm and gdm themselves work properly.
With that summary, and the details you offer below, I have a few thoughts.
1. Are you using a powered USB hub or unpowered connections? (More
generally, what do you mean by "I bought an USB adopter"?) If the second,
might this be a power supply problem? Possibly Gnome uses a video mode that
demands more of some voltage than your P/S can provide when it is also
powering USB devices. Possibly starting its power management detects or
triggers some marginal problem. I admit this is fishing, but over the
years, most of my experiences witrh spontaneous reboots ended up being
traced back to power supplies that delivered too little peak power.
2. You report the last message you see before the reboot, and it involves
DisplayPowerManagement. But a spontaneous reboot may be caused by whatever
the system tries to do *after* that, with the reboot occurring before the
STDERR display is updated. Do you have a way to check what a normal,
successful startx with Gnome would report after this "last" message?
3. While I understand the difficulties in posting error messages and logs
from a ssytem with neither a floppy drive not a LAN connection, surely you
understand the difficulties in trying to help without them. Temporarily
adding a floppy or a NIC to a system is about 10 minutes' work, and around
here either device costs less that $US10. So you might consider having
something on hand for these sorts of troubleshooting situations.
4.Have I correctly identified your mobo as the following?
http://www.baber.com/baber/411/ecs_p6stmt.htm
If so, I note that it has onboard video. Since this mobo has already failed
in two other respects, have you considered the possibility that some of its
higher-res SVGA modes also have failed? (Are you using twm at 640x480 but
Gnome at 1024x768, for example? Or even more extreme, are you using
different X servers for the two?)
5. I'm having trouble understanding this part of your report:
>>When I open gnome-panel or kicker from
>> within twm causes a crash when then trying to open an application from
those
>> panels.
What actual application(s) do you try? What sort of "crash" occurs? (The
system hangs? It spontaneously reboots? Something else?) What happens if
you try to open those same apps without using the Gnome or KDE interfaces
(for example, if you launch them from an xterm)?
6. This is a real long shot ... but your system isn't exactly overloaded
with RAM. (What is "KRAM", BTW? Or is that K=kilo, which I suppose (hope)
is just a typo ... surely the system has 118 MB RAM, 435 MB swap, not 118
and 435 KB.) Might this be a memory (or swap partition) problem? What does
"free" report about memory and swap usage just before you try to start
Gnome or KDE? Are you able to use swap successfully in other ways?
At 05:21 PM 8/13/2004 +0800, Peter wrote:
>On Thu, 12 Aug 2004, Peter wrote:
>
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> RedHat 9.1, Kernel 2.2.20-20, 118 KRAM, 435 K swap
>
>should read Kernel 2.4.20-20
>
> >>
> >> On my motherboard the connection for the keyboard died for which reason I
> >> could no longer boot.
>
> >The reason for it dying may also be important here, possibly a mobo prob??
>
>Yes, it is a mobo problem.
>
> >>
> >> I bought an USB adopter, connected keyboard and mouse to it and I
> could boot
> >> again with kb and mouse working properly.
>
> >So can u beg borrow (or steal ) a keyboard n mouse that connects to the
> >native ports. If you can do that post the results
>
>I just have to connect to the old outlets and, see above no more booting.
>
> >>
> >> However, now I cannot start gnome nor kde from the concole. Both crash
> just
> >> before the panels should open. I can start twm and from there open
> >> applications like abiword, gnumeric. When I open gnome-panel or kicker
> from
> >> within twm causes a crash when then trying to open an application from
> those
> >> panels.
>
> >I'm slightly surprised you can get X running at all It should be
> >looking for a keyboard and mouse attached where they were before 8-() or
> >did you reconfigure it?
>
>Yes I reconfigured to have USB support for hid, kb and mouse and changed to
>the appropriate settings in XF86Config.
>
> >>
> >> Opening gnome or kde via gdm or xdm causes a reboot.
>
> >That's what I would expect
>
> >
> >> Has this strange behavior anything to do with this USB connection of the
> >> kb/mouse and what would be needed then to correct it or is it just a
> >> coincidence meaning further trouble?
>
> >impossible to say with any degree of certainty. Would need your error
> >messages and configs plus a clear description of what has changed between
> >your prior configuration and the current configuration. How were keyboard
> >and mouse attached before? ps2 mouse or usb ditto for keyboard. Your
> >XF86Config and the error messages would help enormously. dmesg and XF86
> >logs would help too.
>
>Kb and mouse were attached to the standard outlet of the mobo P6STMT which
>seems to be of poor quality. It gave problems before with the SIS630ET
>chipset, then the printer(whatever) mobo stopped working necessitating me to
>buy a printer card and now the kb went puff. Before that last event happened
>the machine was made the house training computer for the kids and wifes for
>which reason there is no Internet connection and no floppy drive.
>Therefore it
>is difficult to supply dmesg etc logs.
>
>dmesg shows no errors whatsoever, neither the bootlog nor messages. The
>XF86config.log differs on the last line:
>when trying to startx gnome-session and it crashes the last line of
>XF86Config
>is: (II)SIS(0):SISDisplayPowerManagementSet(0)
>whereas when starting twm there is no such last line.
>
>lsmod shows that the modules for usbhid, usbmouse and usbkb are all properly
>loaded and as I said kb and mouse work faultlessly with this USB adapter.
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Displaying "ping" data with "tcpdump" ?
am 13.08.2004 21:46:53 von chuck gelm net
Hi, Everyone:
I am having difficulty displaying the pattern data
inside a 'ping' packet using 'tcpdump'.
I am sending a periodic 'broadcast' padded with 'data':
ping -f -i 3600 -p 204445204E43385120 #" DE NC8Q "
I want to display this data on a console. I am using
'tcpdump -i eth1 -v -X'
but this shows too much data/activity.
'tcpdump -i eth1 -v -X port 7' displays nothing.
Perhaps something other than 'tcpdump' would be more suitable?
1. How can I display only the 'echo request' packets?
2. How can I display only the 'echo reply' packets?
Regards, Chuck
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Re: Displaying "ping" data with "tcpdump" ?
am 13.08.2004 22:15:01 von Ray Olszewski
At 03:46 PM 8/13/2004 -0400, chuck gelm wrote:
>Hi, Everyone:
>
> I am having difficulty displaying the pattern data
>inside a 'ping' packet using 'tcpdump'.
>
> I am sending a periodic 'broadcast' padded with 'data':
>ping -f -i 3600 -p 204445204E43385120 #" DE NC8Q "
>
> I want to display this data on a console. I am using
>'tcpdump -i eth1 -v -X'
>but this shows too much data/activity.
>
>'tcpdump -i eth1 -v -X port 7' displays nothing.
>
>Perhaps something other than 'tcpdump' would be more suitable?
>
>1. How can I display only the 'echo request' packets?
tcpdump icmp[icmptype]=icmp-echo -v -X
>2. How can I display only the 'echo reply' packets?
tcpdump icmp[icmptype]=icmp-echoreply -v -X
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Re: Displaying "ping" data with "tcpdump" ?
am 14.08.2004 02:40:35 von chuck gelm net
Ray Olszewski wrote:
> At 03:46 PM 8/13/2004 -0400, chuck gelm wrote:
>
>> Hi, Everyone:
>>
>> I am having difficulty displaying the pattern data
>> inside a 'ping' packet using 'tcpdump'.
>>
>> I am sending a periodic 'broadcast' padded with 'data':
>> ping -f -i 3600 -p 204445204E43385120 #" DE NC8Q "
>>
>> I want to display this data on a console. I am using
>> 'tcpdump -i eth1 -v -X'
>> but this shows too much data/activity.
>>
>> 'tcpdump -i eth1 -v -X port 7' displays nothing.
>>
>> Perhaps something other than 'tcpdump' would be more suitable?
>>
>> 1. How can I display only the 'echo request' packets?
>
>
> tcpdump icmp[icmptype]=icmp-echo -v -X
>
>> 2. How can I display only the 'echo reply' packets?
>
>
> tcpdump icmp[icmptype]=icmp-echoreply -v -X
:-) Thanks, Ray.
Now I see it in the man page. :-|
I am 'playing' with some 802.11b (USA FCC Part 15) devices
and configuring them to use frequencies inside the USA Amateur
Radio assignment (USA FCC part 97).
Then I can legally use antennas other than the ones that came
with the device. I have some 24dbi gain dish antennas and I
want to try to use passive reflectors to overcome the
limitations of 'line of sight'.
This 'ping - tcpdump' will show that I am compling with the
'Station Identification' requirements.
Many thanks,
Chuck
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Re: Gnome, KDE won"t Open
am 14.08.2004 04:50:24 von heisspf
Thanks Ray! I just solved the problem.
ray@comarre.com said:
> Might this be a memory (or swap partition) problem? What does "free" report
> about memory and swap usage just before you try to start Gnome or KDE? Are
> you able to use swap successfully in other ways?
The bloke in the computer shop had the System Share Memory Size in the BIOS
set to 8. When I now reset it to the original 32 everything is working again
fine. I saw him fumbling around the BIOS, however he was so fast that I could
not follow.
I got the idea after your hint above when I noticed that the swap memory was
not really used after having opened in twm via xterm applications like
abiword, gnumeric, konqueror, gkrellm simultaneously, then trying to open
other applications I would get segmentation fault. After closing abiword,
gnumeric, etc they could not be reopened, segmentation fault. Even rebooting
would not completely finish and end with segmentation fault.
ray@comarre.com said:
> Have I correctly identified your mobo as the following?
> http://www.baber.com/baber/411/ecs_p6stmt.htm
yes
ray@comarre.com said:
> what do you mean by "I bought an USB adopter"?
That should naturally read adapter.
It plugs on one end into the USB socket of the mobo and has 2 sockets on the
other end, one for kb and one for mouse.
Regards
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