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Yo! So as the title says, for some odd reason when I try to boot a Desktop Environment like Xfce and/or LXQt whether it's through GDM or startx my laptop monitor decides to pack things up and call it a day and turns off. However, on the other hand, Gnome works perfectly well and I have no issues running Gnome. I'm hoping y'all could maybe give me some pointers in what might end up being wrong? Here's what I've done so far:
I've tried deleting the Sessions folder via
rm -r ~/.cache/sessions/
command and regenerating said folder. The results all come out the same.
I've also tried stopping GDM and running
startxfce4
that did not work either.
At that point I figured that it might be something with Nvidia, perhaps having issues with the DE's. So I went to Nvidia Trouble shooting.
1. I tried adding
xrandr --auto
to my xinitrc to no avail.
2. Then I added the
rcutree.rcu_idle_gp_delay=1
Kernel Parameter
3. Then I tried to add the nvidia module directly to my mkinitcpio file
4. After none of the above worked I tried both 2 & 3 together.
5. Finally I tried un-installing and reinstalling nvidia and that did not work either.
So, at this point I don't feel like it's a nvidia problem.
I've even tried logging onto these same DE's as root so I don't think it's a permission problem either.
I should add, that Arch recognizes that the DE is running, since I am no longer able to open another DE, but even though that's the case, nothing can be seen.
Last edited by uhIDunno (2018-10-14 17:38:09)
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So Wayland works but X doesn't. Post your Xorg log.
Moving to NC...
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So Wayland works but X doesn't. Post your Xorg log.
Moving to NC...
I'm not too sure on how I would post my Xorg log since it's so much text. How would I do that? I try journalctl -ar and I get pretty much everything the system does, but I can't seem to find a way to specifically get the X-Org log. Edit, so I actually can't find the X-Org log under my share directory.
Last edited by uhIDunno (2018-10-12 18:23:48)
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So, I don't know if this works, but I was able to get this onto a pastebin: http://www.rafb.me/results/bXHtgN75.html
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That's your journal, not your Xorg log. How did you install Arch?
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That's your journal, not your Xorg log. How did you install Arch?
Well, I used MBR over Gpt and I used X-org over Wayland. Though I followed the guide step by step. I didn't have any problems until recently. Xfce and LXDE / LXQt both ran. Then they stopped for a while. Then I temporarily fixed it with a system update. Then it broke again. System is currently 100% up to date though.
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Then please paste the Xorg log: without it no-one can assist you.
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You have to add at least one additional line to your .xinitrc or relevant GDM startup files https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NVIDIA_Optimus
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Then please paste the Xorg log: without it no-one can assist you.
So I followed the wiki which lead me to this: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=184639
Which also lead me to this: https://who-t.blogspot.com/2014/03/view … alctl.html
Leading me to the command of
journalctl -e _COMM=Xorg
Which outputs this:
http://www.rafb.me/results/SgRn6u43.html
I'm not sure if I'm doing something wrong, but it's only outputting a single line.
[es@archlinux ~]$ nano ~/.local/share/xorg/
[es@archlinux ~]$ ~/.local/share/xorg/
bash: /home/es/.local/share/xorg/: No such file or directory
It states that the xorg file just doesn't exist.
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If you are running on the nvidia driver your xorg would be root started and the log would be in /var/log/ Xorg.0.log. In doubt just post/look at the log of GDM
journalctl -b -u gdm
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If you are running on the nvidia driver your xorg would be root started and the log would be in /var/log/ Xorg.0.log. In doubt just post/look at the log of GDM
journalctl -b -u gdm
Inputting
journalctl -b -u gdm
outputs:
-- Logs begin at Wed 2018-09-26 20:45:40 EDT, end at Fri 2018-10-12 23:28:12 ED>
Oct 12 23:26:20 archlinux systemd[1]: Starting GNOME Display Manager...
Oct 12 23:26:20 archlinux systemd[1]: Started GNOME Display Manager.
Oct 12 23:26:20 archlinux gdm-launch-environment][528]: accountsservice: Could >
Oct 12 23:26:27 archlinux gdm-password][771]: accountsservice: Could not get cu>
Oct 12 23:26:33 archlinux gdm-password][771]: pam_unix(gdm-password:session): s>
lines 1-6/6 (END)
Though I did take a look at /var/log/Xorg.0.log and it gave me this: http://www.rafb.me/results/Q5RiJv19.html
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There isn't much point pasting severely truncated files.
Please read the wiki and make some effort to help yourself. The systemd page explains how to include the full lines and for the Xorg log just paste the entire log, using the method from the link I posted above.
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There isn't much point pasting severely truncated files.
Please read the wiki and make some effort to help yourself. The systemd page explains how to include the full lines and for the Xorg log just paste the entire log, using the method from the link I posted above.
I see what you mean, by it was not much information, sorry about that. I believe I managed to get it to paste the whole thing here: http://www.rafb.me/results/RrbtsG72.html
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So you're running Xorg on the nvidia chip, but outputs are only attached to the intel one.
If you really want to do this, you've to redirect the output.
Start by really reading up https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NVIDIA_Optimus
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Okay, quick update. I don't even know why things are working, however, after a small system update(8MB) every Desktop Environment except for LXDE and LXQt are currently working. I think I can close the thread or something? I don't use forums very often so, I'm not really sure.
I talked this whole situation over with a friend of mine and he suggested trying to plug-in the laptop to another monitor and it worked fine. So I don't know whether that was the fix or if the small update from last night was the fix. Because I didn't really do anything to fix the problem.
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Which packages were updated? There was a short time during which the nvidia-utils package didn't include a configuration option that helps with optimus setups. If your post was done while having that version of the utils package that would explain this. That wouldn't be a small update though.
If you consider this as [SOLVED] you can mark it as such by editing the title in your first post and prepending that info there, you might have to shorten your title a little if it's too long to add that.
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Which packages were updated? There was a short time during which the nvidia-utils package didn't include a configuration option that helps with optimus setups. If your post was done while having that version of the utils package that would explain this. That wouldn't be a small update though.
If you consider this as [SOLVED] you can mark it as such by editing the title in your first post and prepending that info there, you might have to shorten your title a little if it's too long to add that.
So this is the update prior to the problem fixing itself:
[2018-10-13 01:58] [PACMAN] Running 'pacman -Syu'
[2018-10-13 01:58] [PACMAN] synchronizing package lists
[2018-10-13 01:59] [PACMAN] starting full system upgrade
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] transaction started
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] upgraded ncurses (6.1-3 -> 6.1-4)
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] upgraded bison (3.0.5-1 -> 3.1-1)
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] upgraded libx11 (1.6.6-2 -> 1.6.7-1)
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] upgraded flatpak (1.0.3-1 -> 1.0.4-1)
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] upgraded libnautilus-extension (3.30.1-1 -> 3.30.2-1)
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] upgraded nautilus (3.30.1-1 -> 3.30.2-1)
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] upgraded openal (1.19.0-2 -> 1.19.1-1)
[2018-10-13 02:00] [ALPM] transaction completed
The big one being that libx11 was updated but a friend and I checked the open source update and it had nothing to do with Nvidia updates. Just some update about a Firefox fix not much else.
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