I forgot one thing... the /root/.bash_history file had nothing important to
see... only few commands without importance...

2011/3/29 Debian_bug_report <invisiblemanguard-debianbugrep...@yahoo.com.br>

> Sorry for the delay, but I did all you request and compress in the .zip
> file attached to you.
>
> Regards.
>
> 2011/3/1 Bernhard R. Link <brl...@debian.org>
>
>  * Debian_bug_report <invisiblemanguard-debianbugrep...@yahoo.com.br>
>> [110301 14:57]:
>> > My problem happen after I did the distro upgrade... I pass 2 months out
>> of
>> > my debian distro, and I used the testing version (Squeeze), but I return
>> > yesterday to my debian distro and the Squeeze becomes stable... so I did
>> > the change to Debian testing again (now called Wheezy)...
>>
>> A full upgrade is a very complicated thing to reproduce. And you seem to
>> have 3rd party repositories, so there are packages from other people
>> that might have bugs, so finding this will be complicated.
>>
>> > so I rename all my source packages like this source.list:
>> >[...]
>> > #mirror multimídia
>> > deb http://ftp.br.debian.org/debian-multimedia/ testing main
>> > #deb http://ftp.debian-unofficial.org/debian testing main contrib
>> non-free
>> >
>> > #mirror wine:
>> > #deb http://www.lamaresh.net/apt/ squeeze/main
>>
>> As those are 3rd party repositories, there is some probability the bug
>> is there.
>>
>> > So, I went to my Lxterminal and type: "sudo aptitude update". After I
>> type:
>> > "sudo aptitude safe-upgrade".
>> >
>> > The system make a download of 839mb of data. Everything was made without
>> any
>> > errors reported... I not use any login manager... I do my login in getty
>> and
>> > after I start my X and window manager (fluxbox). So, when I restart my
>> > machine
>> > and try to start my X with the command "startx", the system returns the
>> > error:
>> > "xinit: connection to X server lost" and after said "Wait for X server
>> to
>> > shut
>> > down" and stayed with prompt flashing again. So, I tried invoke X with
>> root
>> > and
>> > I had sucess! When I went to the .xsession-errors I saw this error:
>> >
>> > Xsession: X session started for invisiblemanguard at Ter Fev 22 16:36:02
>> BRT
>> > 2011
>> > exec: 58: /usr: Permission denied
>>
>> Could you check the actual permissions of those directories?
>> Perhaps the output of "ls -la /" would be best.
>>
>> Where things are mounted might also be interesting, i.e. the /etc/fstab
>> and the /proc/mounts files.
>>
>> Other information interesting might be the /var/log/dpkg.* files
>> covering the interesting timespan.
>>
>> (Saving /root/.bash_history and looking into it for anything interesting
>> might also be sensible).
>>
>>        Bernhard R. Link
>>
>
>
>

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