Okay, obligatory homestar references aside, I broke something.  I had 
the bright idea to update my nvidia graphics drivers, just in case it 
would help.  Of course, the driver can't update if X is running; I had a 
hard time figuring out how to get it to boot without X (it's Redhat 9, 
so that's sort of `built in' when you install it). 

What I eventually did was create a .xinitrc file in my home directory, 
and left it blank, figuring that it would then not boot X at all, which 
it didn't.  That all went fine.  But, when I deleted my blank .xinirc 
file, and rebooted, it still didn't start gdm on boot.  Of course, all I 
need to do is type `startx', and then X starts up (but in /tty8, not 
/tty7... that confused me for a minute). 

Anyone have an idea what I broke, and an easy way to fix it?  I guess I 
could just write a new script and have the only line be `startx', but 
I'd rather do it properly, so X runs in tty7 like it's `supposed' to.

adv(Thanks)ance,
Phil


_______________________________________________
TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota
http://www.mn-linux.org tclug-list at mn-linux.org
https://mailman.real-time.com/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list