You are not logged in.
Hi, all!
I'm just doing a fresh install and having done my first reboot, I am trying desperately to configure X, before installing xfce.
I have an ATI Radeon card and a Sun-GDM5410 21" CRT monitor. Unfortunately, when I do 'startx', I get a message on my monitor saying
'Out of scan range...change timing signal'
I've tried created custom Xorg files instead of letting Xorg work it out, itself. This didn't solve the problem. So as not to further confuse myself, I have rm'd these files and have let X manage itself, again.
I've read and re-read the Xorg and ATI wiki guides, and Google'd around, but I can't get around this.
Any help really appreciated.
Cheers,
Chris.
Last edited by chris_debian (2011-02-05 18:00:28)
Offline
Most important thing to diagnose this would be to post your Xorg log. And could you describe what you did in the custom xorg conf file to try and fix it?
Nai haryuvalyë melwa rë
Offline
If you haven't installed Xorg, how can you start X ?
There's no such thing as a stupid question, but there sure are a lot of inquisitive idiots !
Offline
If you haven't installed Xorg, how can you start X ?
Apologies, I meant to type 'xfce'.
Chris.
Offline
Most important thing to diagnose this would be to post your Xorg log. And could you describe what you did in the custom xorg conf file to try and fix it?
Hi,
Haven't posted my xorg.log because I haven't been able to get it from that machine, yet. As you know, I can't cut and paste into anything yet and haven't installed any other tools.
With regard to xorg.conf, I tried to set-up a 'monitor' section with some default resolution and refresh rates that I have successfully used with other distros.
I currently have a LiveCD running LMDE, on the Arch box, so I could use that to get any good information that may help diagnose the problem.
Hope this helps.
Thanks,
Chris.
Offline
Please delete
Last edited by skunktrader (2011-02-04 18:11:08)
Offline
I did. I think it may be something to do with module that are loaded, possibly kms?
This is what the lsmod looks like from the LMDE installation; I'm using the Radeon driver for my ATI card.
mint@mint ~/Desktop $ uname -a
Linux mint 2.6.32-5-686 #1 SMP Tue Jun 1 04:59:47 UTC 2010 i686 GNU/Linux
mint@mint ~/Desktop $ lsmod
Module Size Used by
ppdev 4058 0
lp 5570 0
sco 5857 2
bridge 32987 0
stp 996 1 bridge
bnep 7444 2
rfcomm 25167 0
l2cap 21705 6 bnep,rfcomm
crc16 1027 1 l2cap
bluetooth 36327 6 sco,bnep,rfcomm,l2cap
speedstep_lib 2468 0
cpufreq_userspace 1480 0
cpufreq_stats 1940 0
cpufreq_powersave 602 0
cpufreq_conservative 4018 0
binfmt_misc 4907 1
fuse 43758 1
arc4 974 2
ecb 1405 2
rt61pci 15720 0
crc_itu_t 1035 1 rt61pci
snd_intel8x0 19523 2
rt2x00pci 3773 1 rt61pci
snd_ac97_codec 79148 1 snd_intel8x0
ac97_bus 710 1 snd_ac97_codec
snd_pcm_oss 28671 0
snd_mixer_oss 10461 1 snd_pcm_oss
rt2x00lib 19029 2 rt61pci,rt2x00pci
snd_pcm 47214 3 snd_intel8x0,snd_ac97_codec,snd_pcm_oss
led_class 1757 1 rt2x00lib
radeon 508914 2
snd_seq_midi 3576 0
mac80211 123258 2 rt2x00pci,rt2x00lib
ttm 33378 1 radeon
snd_rawmidi 12505 1 snd_seq_midi
cfg80211 87601 2 rt2x00lib,mac80211
drm_kms_helper 18305 1 radeon
snd_seq_midi_event 3684 1 snd_seq_midi
rfkill 10264 4 bluetooth,cfg80211
snd_seq 35463 2 snd_seq_midi,snd_seq_midi_event
drm 112020 4 radeon,ttm,drm_kms_helper
eeprom_93cx6 963 1 rt61pci
i2c_algo_bit 3497 1 radeon
i2c_i801 6462 0
snd_timer 12258 2 snd_pcm,snd_seq
tpm_tis 5496 0
tpm 8137 1 tpm_tis
parport_pc 15799 1
snd_seq_device 3673 3 snd_seq_midi,snd_rawmidi,snd_seq
i2c_core 12696 5 radeon,drm_kms_helper,drm,i2c_algo_bit,i2c_i801
pcspkr 1207 0
tpm_bios 3569 1 tpm
shpchp 21220 0
evdev 5609 10
rng_core 2178 0
parport 22554 3 ppdev,lp,parport_pc
snd 34363 13 snd_intel8x0,snd_ac97_codec,snd_pcm_oss,snd_mixer_oss,snd_pcm,snd_rawmidi,snd_seq,snd_timer,snd_seq_device
pci_hotplug 18065 1 shpchp
soundcore 3450 1 snd
button 3598 0
processor 26599 0
snd_page_alloc 5045 2 snd_intel8x0,snd_pcm
squashfs 16647 1
loop 9757 2
aufs 107674 1
nls_utf8 908 1
isofs 24608 1
ide_generic 801 0 [permanent]
ide_core 59618 1 ide_generic
usbhid 27980 0
hid 50629 1 usbhid
sg 15968 0
sr_mod 10770 1
sd_mod 25869 0
crc_t10dif 1012 1 sd_mod
cdrom 26487 1 sr_mod
ata_generic 2019 0
ata_piix 17640 1
floppy 40923 0
thermal 9206 0
uhci_hcd 16057 0
e100 22317 0
mii 2714 1 e100
libata 115665 2 ata_generic,ata_piix
ehci_hcd 27763 0
usbcore 98402 4 usbhid,uhci_hcd,ehci_hcd
scsi_mod 101401 4 sg,sr_mod,sd_mod,libata
nls_base 4541 3 nls_utf8,isofs,usbcore
thermal_sys 9378 2 processor,thermal
Last edited by chris_debian (2011-02-04 21:51:16)
Offline
please use [code ] [/code ] tags when pasting long files or outputs.
There's no such thing as a stupid question, but there sure are a lot of inquisitive idiots !
Offline
please use [code ] [/code ] tags when pasting long files or outputs.
My apologies. When I posted, I looked for, but did not see any formatting options.
Chris.
Offline
just edit the post and enclose your existing output listed with the tags without spaces.
There's no such thing as a stupid question, but there sure are a lot of inquisitive idiots !
Offline
just edit the post and enclose your existing output listed with the tags without spaces.
Indeed, thank you. I'm writing this on my 'phone, and that's not easy to correct. Will do correction when I get to my PC.
Thanks,
Chris.
Offline
Inxsible wrote:just edit the post and enclose your existing output listed with the tags without spaces.
Indeed, thank you. I'm writing this on my 'phone, and that's not easy to correct. Will do correction when I get to my PC.
Thanks,
Chris.
Ahh ! Fair enough !
There's no such thing as a stupid question, but there sure are a lot of inquisitive idiots !
Offline
Haven't posted my xorg.log because I haven't been able to get it from that machine, yet. As you know, I can't cut and paste into anything yet and haven't installed any other tools.
Perhaps if you were able to copy the log to a flash drive or something, then either use a livecd or another computer to then pull the log from the flash drive.
Nai haryuvalyë melwa rë
Offline
Some progress :-)
I won't mark the post as [SOLVED] until I have an Xsession running properly, as a user.
For others with this problem, this is what I did.
Learning from a previous Gentoo installation (which I do occasionaly for the challenge!), I looked at this Xorg guide:
http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/xorg-config.xml#doc_chap3
Particularly the section entitled 'Automatic Generation of xorg.conf'
I did
Xorg -configure
followed by
X -retro -config /root/xorg.conf.new
This gave me a black screen with a cursor (X) that I could move (result!). No 'out of range' message.
I then did
cp /root/xorg.conf.new /etc/X11/xorg.conf
and got twm running with three terminal windows!!! :-)
I should mention that if X fails to start because xclock couldn't be found (or xterm or any of sample app.), just go into
/etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc
and comment out the relevant line. This happens because Arch doesn't have that application installed. I suppose you could install the app, if you think it will be useful in the future.
Well it looks like my X keyboard settings are mapped to US and I need gb, but in the big scheme of things, I am happy.
I must say a big thank you at this point to the people that did the work on the Gentoo wiki and also to the people that have helped with this forum post.
Cheers,
Chris.
Offline