Package: xinit
Version: 1.0.7-1
Severity: normal
When running startx with a full /var I discovered ALT didn't work. I
initially thought this was some higher level package like gtk or xfce that
was causing the problem but in fact it was X and specifically startx which
keeps going when xkbcomp
On Tue, Feb 13, 2007 at 02:21:57AM +0100, Brice Goglin wrote:
Did you have a chance to try to reproduce this bug?
Right this is indeed fixed in xserver-xorg. I tested against
1:7.1.0-7
I'm not quite sure what to do to the bug though? Reassign it to
xserver-xorg, mark it fixed in that version
Hi Julien,
On Fri, Feb 02, 2007 at 05:27:08PM +0100, Julien Cristau wrote:
/tmp/.ICE-unix is supposed to be created by /etc/init.d/x11-common at
startup. Is any of you able to reproduce this problem recently?
Yeah I think we can probably close this. If you deliberately remove it
and don't
On Sat, Jan 13, 2007 at 02:34:42AM +0100, Brice Goglin wrote:
About 2 years ago, you reported a bug to the Debian BTS regarding a
corrupted display on an external monitor with a siliconmotion board. A
patch got proposed, apparently fixing the problem. Did you reproduce
this problem recently?
On Wed, Feb 16, 2005 at 02:10:20PM +, Simon Huggins wrote:
Using the siliconmotion driver and attaching an external display I get
corrupted pixels on the right hand side (note not on the bottom as well)
beyond where the display would have stopped.
e.g. my internal display does 1024x768
Package: xserver-xfree86
Version: 4.3.0.dfsg.1-10
Tags: patch
Using the siliconmotion driver and attaching an external display I get
corrupted pixels on the right hand side (note not on the bottom as well)
beyond where the display would have stopped.
e.g. my internal display does 1024x768 and
[Please honour my Mail-Followup-To]
Hi,
I'm trying to work out what the intended purpose of x-window-manager is.
This is prompted by bug 194195.
wdm thinks that x-window-manager should provide an X session with a way
to launch applications and so on.
xfwm4 ships as an alternative to
7 matches
Mail list logo