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After installing Arch and struggling a bit to get the gui environment (gnome) to work I am now in a situation where the distro works fine but boots directly into a gnome session.
I would like to be able to stop X and I have tried various recommended commands. The only one that works seems to be "kill -15 X" (after doing Ctrl+Alt+F2), which ends X but sort of stops mid-process without ever going back to any command line prompt.
I copied etc/skel/.xinitrc into my home folder and uncommented "exec xterm", while re-commented "exec gnome-session". This did not make any difference at all so perhaps I'm not even using that script?
As I had some difficulties installing X (or rather get it to work) I may have installed a whole plethora of packages that I may not need. There are references to Wayland for instance, packages I installed. But am I actually using them? How can I find out?
I would like Arch to boot into a command line environment and then I'd start X from there - if that is what I want!
Any pointers in any direction regarding the above are welcome!
Cheers!
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What guide did you follow to install? The beginner's guide and the Xorg page contain the relevant information. Following just them should have allowed you avoid the mess you're in. Just saying that you've installed a whole plethora of packages will not help...it makes it near impossible to help.
You ought to read this. It sounds like you installed a display manager and set up auto-login?
Last edited by nullified (2015-02-20 17:26:59)
"We may say most aptly, that the Analytical Engine weaves algebraical patterns just as the Jacquard-loom weaves flowers and leaves." - Ada Lovelace
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Check the pacman log to see what have you installed.
wayland is a dependency for many packages, e.g. mesa.
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If your .xinitrc is not being parsed, you must be using a display manager:
# systemctl stop display-manager.service
Should stop it immediately and drop you to the console.
# systemctl disable display-manager.service
Will disable it completely from the next boot.
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Tried with Head_on_a_Stick's suggestions.
First as normal user and got the following message:
Failed to stop display-manager.service: Interactive authentication required.
Then as root and got this:
Failed to stop display-manager.service: Unit display-manager.service not loaded.
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Well, following the user-guide would get you exactly where you wanted to be, so you must have enabled gdm or some other display manager manually instead? What does systemctl tell you about services that auto-start and sound like a display-manager to you?
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pkill -x Xorg
ping 127.0.0.1
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Please don't bump 5 year old threads: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Co … bumping%22
Closing.
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