Discussion:
Booting hangs after name ans password entered
(too old to reply)
William Unruh
2024-04-07 06:09:40 UTC
Permalink
Running Mga9, Plasma, with startKDE. When I log in nothing happens and
the screen is frozen and never starts up Plasma. If I open a terminal
(AC-F2) and log in as myself, and run startx -- :2 everything works. If
I make a test user and log in as test user and enter the name and
password, everything works. This is a system in which my home directory
was taken over from Mga8. Clearly something is wrongly set up. ( and it
was working a few months ago). Where do I start looking for the
potential misconfiguration. There are 80GB in my home directory so I
certainly cannot look through everywhere. I cannot see any problem in my
journalctl -b
or in /var/log/{messages,syslog}
Any suggestions welcome
Bobbie Sellers
2024-04-07 15:05:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by William Unruh
Running Mga9, Plasma, with startKDE. When I log in nothing happens and
the screen is frozen and never starts up Plasma. If I open a terminal
(AC-F2) and log in as myself, and run startx -- :2 everything works. If
I make a test user and log in as test user and enter the name and
password, everything works. This is a system in which my home directory
was taken over from Mga8. Clearly something is wrongly set up. ( and it
was working a few months ago). Where do I start looking for the
potential misconfiguration. There are 80GB in my home directory so I
certainly cannot look through everywhere. I cannot see any problem in my
journalctl -b
or in /var/log/{messages,syslog}
Any suggestions welcome
I would check your user id number and see if it has been changed
from Mageia 8. If you confirm that this is the case then use chown to
regain access to /home/username. Make sure that your test user has
the a different level of id number. A lot of folks with PCLinuxOS
reported similar problems when the id number assigned to the user
changed from 500 to 1000.

Good luck.
bliss
--
bliss dash SF four ever at dsl extreme dot com
William Unruh
2024-04-07 22:52:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Bobbie Sellers
Post by William Unruh
Running Mga9, Plasma, with startKDE. When I log in nothing happens and
the screen is frozen and never starts up Plasma. If I open a terminal
(AC-F2) and log in as myself, and run startx -- :2 everything works. If
I make a test user and log in as test user and enter the name and
password, everything works. This is a system in which my home directory
was taken over from Mga8. Clearly something is wrongly set up. ( and it
was working a few months ago). Where do I start looking for the
potential misconfiguration. There are 80GB in my home directory so I
certainly cannot look through everywhere. I cannot see any problem in my
journalctl -b
or in /var/log/{messages,syslog}
Any suggestions welcome
I would check your user id number and see if it has been changed
from Mageia 8. If you confirm that this is the case then use chown to
regain access to /home/username. Make sure that your test user has
the a different level of id number. A lot of folks with PCLinuxOS
reported similar problems when the id number assigned to the user
changed from 500 to 1000.
Thanks. But nope. Same uid. And as I said doing
startx -- :2
from a console and Plasma comes up fine.

So, it's something between the login on the SDDM display manager and the
system trying to open the Plasma display. Unfortunately there is no
console at that point-- sddm covers it up with its own useless display.
David W. Hodgins
2024-04-07 23:28:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by William Unruh
So, it's something between the login on the SDDM display manager and the
system trying to open the Plasma display. Unfortunately there is no
console at that point-- sddm covers it up with its own useless display.
Until the cause can be found, try switching to another dm such as xdm.

Install the xdm package, and then use mcc to switch which dm is used.

Regards, Dave Hodgins
William Unruh
2024-04-08 00:05:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by David W. Hodgins
Post by William Unruh
So, it's something between the login on the SDDM display manager and the
system trying to open the Plasma display. Unfortunately there is no
console at that point-- sddm covers it up with its own useless display.
Until the cause can be found, try switching to another dm such as xdm.
Install the xdm package, and then use mcc to switch which dm is used.
Is htere any way of getting at it from the console mcc rather than the
gui mc?
Post by David W. Hodgins
Regards, Dave Hodgins
David W. Hodgins
2024-04-08 00:18:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by William Unruh
Post by David W. Hodgins
Post by William Unruh
So, it's something between the login on the SDDM display manager and the
system trying to open the Plasma display. Unfortunately there is no
console at that point-- sddm covers it up with its own useless display.
Until the cause can be found, try switching to another dm such as xdm.
Install the xdm package, and then use mcc to switch which dm is used.
Is htere any way of getting at it from the console mcc rather than the
gui mc?
You indicated startx was working, so why not run it from plasma?

If you want to run it from a console, use "su -" to switch to root and then
run drakdm. Use the tab key to switch between the buttons/list, and up/down
cursor keys to switch items within the list. Once xdm is highlighted, use
the tab key again to get to the ok button and press the enter key.

Regards, Dave Hodgins
faeychild
2024-04-08 03:35:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by William Unruh
Running Mga9, Plasma, with startKDE. When I log in nothing happens and
the screen is frozen and never starts up Plasma. If I open a terminal
(AC-F2) and log in as myself, and run startx -- :2 everything works. If
I make a test user and log in as test user and enter the name and
password, everything works. This is a system in which my home directory
was taken over from Mga8. Clearly something is wrongly set up. ( and it
was working a few months ago). Where do I start looking for the
potential misconfiguration. There are 80GB in my home directory so I
certainly cannot look through everywhere. I cannot see any problem in my
journalctl -b
or in /var/log/{messages,syslog}
Any suggestions welcome
Speaking from recent ghastly experiences
As a last resort I backed up: $HOME (.config .cache .local) and delete
the originals, then reboot. I got away with it

I was also recently gazumped by a full $HOME partition
--
faeychild
Running kde on 6.6.22-desktop-1.mga9 kernel.
Mageia release 9 (Official) for x86_64
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