dekkz...@gmail.com wrote: > On 05/13, Bob Proulx wrote: > > This following is on the problematic machine. > > Graphics: Card: Advanced Micro Devices [AMD/ATI] RV530/M56 GL [Mobility > > FireGL V5200] bus-ID: 01:00.0 > > Display Server: X.org 1.19.2 drivers: ati,radeon (unloaded: > > modesetting,fbdev,vesa) > > tty size: 232x75 Advanced Data: N/A for root > > Try running it as user not root then just comparing the 2 output gfx > details.
I thought I remember it complaining that it needed root when I ran it as non-root. Because that prevented it full access to the machine checks that it needed. No? I will try it again. In the meantime following parallel paths I think the problem was the missing firmware. You will see this in my next message. > You did the install? Yes. For a little more background that might or might not be interesting is that my 80 year old retired airplane mechanic's wife is the computer user in their family and has been using a MS-Windows machine. It had become very slow and difficult to maintain. So I gave them this T60p laptop running, I am embarrassed to say here, Ubuntu 16.04. The hardware may sound old but it was basically a brand new and never before used laptop despite the vintage with a large bright display. It had the best sized display for them to see and that is important. There were various reasons for using Ubuntu on that system instead of my preference of Debian. However on the big plus side she loved the system running a kiosk mode configuration with the cinamon desktop with the largest fonts and icons I could configure. The only program they ever run is a web browser. It was a good upgrade for them and they really liked it. That worked great for about two years until just recently when two things happened. One is that something happened to the graphics driver and it had this very odd flashing black rectangle problem whenever the display was being updated. Extremely visible and annoying. Two is that Ubuntu dropped all support for 32-bit hardware as of Ubuntu 18.04. There was no upgrade future. Of course I know 16.04 is supported a while longer. In any case I wanted to switch the system back to my preference of Debian and after backing everything up I installed Stretch 9 as a fresh installation. And that is when I ran into these graphics driver problems. (And an upgrade to Sid did not fix things.) But thanks to the help here I think I have the solution. More in a future message. > > [ 5.146] Current Operating System: Linux teaclub 4.9.0-6-686-pae #1 SMP > > Debian 4.9.82-1+deb9u3 (2018-03-02) i686 > > That date stamp looks like it's worth checking if you have the most > upto date Stretch 32-bit kernel, a new 64-bit one came out last week > due to spectre et al. That kernel should have been the latest available kernel at the time of the installation. However unexpected confusion can result when switching back and forth between machines and multiple installations and so forth. I think I am on track now. I am re-installing a pristine Stretch 9 to test the theory. Bob
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