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#1 2008-03-16 17:13:44

Reasons
Member
From: Washington
Registered: 2007-11-04
Posts: 572

Ctrl+Alt+Backspace not working

I almost never have to restart X so it wasn't until four months into this installation that I realized it didn't work. Would that just be a permissions issue somewhere?

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#2 2008-03-16 17:27:32

carlocci
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From: Padova - Italy
Registered: 2008-02-12
Posts: 368

Re: Ctrl+Alt+Backspace not working

You could check if you have Option "DontZap" "1" in the serverflags section of your xorg.conf
man xorg.conf for more details

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#3 2008-03-16 17:58:36

Reasons
Member
From: Washington
Registered: 2007-11-04
Posts: 572

Re: Ctrl+Alt+Backspace not working

I don't have it so that's not the problem.

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#4 2008-03-16 18:25:54

sajro
Member
Registered: 2008-03-02
Posts: 56

Re: Ctrl+Alt+Backspace not working

Does Ctrl+Alt+F1 work? Or opening a terminal and typing "killall xorg" (if you're using xorg for x)? I'm pretty new at the more technical side of Linux, but I think these should work. (I turned off my X once wit C-A-F1 so I know it does something!)

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#5 2008-03-16 18:33:23

Reasons
Member
From: Washington
Registered: 2007-11-04
Posts: 572

Re: Ctrl+Alt+Backspace not working

All the virtual terminals work and for me it's killall X which has to be done as root.

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#6 2008-03-16 20:05:30

Reasons
Member
From: Washington
Registered: 2007-11-04
Posts: 572

Re: Ctrl+Alt+Backspace not working

A quick check in the xfce settings said it is using ctrl alt escape, but that too doesn't work and I can't edit it.

Screenshot:
http://xs125.xs.to/xs125/08110/2008-03- … rot390.png

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#7 2008-03-18 02:03:13

dav7
Member
From: Australia
Registered: 2008-02-08
Posts: 674

Re: Ctrl+Alt+Backspace not working

sajro: Ctrl+Alt+F1 thru F6 (vc1 thru vc6) are text consoles. Arch typically runs X on vc7, so you can guess which Ctrl+Alt+F? combo switches back to X tongue

Reasons: Ooh, what GTK theme is that? :sucker:

Last edited by dav7 (2008-03-18 02:03:26)


Windows was made for looking at success from a distance through a wall of oversimplicity. Linux removes the wall, so you can just walk up to success and make it your own.
--
Reinventing the wheel is fun. You get to redefine pi.

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