You are not logged in.
In the GDM installation instructions on the wiki, it tells me to run the following to start GDM at boot-time:
# systemctl enable gdm
I have run this, but I still boot in terminal-mode.
In addition, to create the necessary configuration file, I run:
# touch /etc/dconf/db/gdm.d/01-background
But apparently, no such file or directory exists. Upon further observation, I found that /dconf doesn't even exist in /etc!
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Offline
Offline
Not an Installation issue, moving to NC...
Offline
# systemctl enable gdm
worked out of the box (however I still boot into a terminal).
The wiki directed me to xprofile for autostarting; it says that:
"All of these execute, directly or indirectly, ~/.xinitrc (usually copied from /etc/skel/.xinitrc),or /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc if it does not exist."
However, none of these files/directories exist on my system. What action should I take?
Thanks!
Offline
The wiki makes it clear that you don't use .xinitrc with GDM. Any applications or changes that you would run from that file are instead placed in ~/.xprofile.
Offline
# ~/.xprofile
yields
-bash: /root/.xprofile: No such file or directory
Did I botch my install (or, rather, am I being stupid again)?
Offline
First, ~/.xprofile is a file, not a command - so you will not be able to execute it the way you just tried. Second, you should be looking at the file in your user's home folder, not root's.
Third, given the above issues, I highly doubt you will be happy with archlinux. Perhaps you should get your feet wet with some other distros first.
"UNIX is simple and coherent..." - Dennis Ritchie, "GNU's Not UNIX" - Richard Stallman
Offline
Why are you trying to boot X with root?
Create that file for your user, if it doesn't exist.
Offline