No, the keyboard don't working again....

I'm not interested to have xorg, only a machine that works as i want.

Il sabato 28 novembre 2015, Rich Freeman <ri...@gentoo.org> ha scritto:

> On Sat, Nov 28, 2015 at 6:12 AM, mr_L4N <serverp...@gmail.com
> <javascript:;>> wrote:
> > I've add rescue in grub2 setting, same error with others many strange
> > problems, the last with resolv.conf. What's happens? I want to modify it
> to
> > add mine dns servers; open the file, modify it, but is impossible to save
> > because system says "file not exist".
> >
>
> Is your keyboard working?  Simply by adding rescue to your kernel
> line?  Or did you resolve the other issue (if so I'm curious as to
> what it turned out to be).
>
> Are you SURE you were switching to another virtual console earlier?
> This means text mode with just a login prompt and no x11.  If keyboard
> works with rescue and not otherwise you might still be looking at an
> x11 console (hit ctrl-alt-F1 to switch).
>
> As far as resolv.conf goes: If you're using networkd then you need to
> start/enable systemd-resolved (if it isn't already started), and then
> do an "ln -s /run/systemd/resolve/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf" to
> create it.  Most other network managers directly modify the file in
> /etc, but systemd-resolved maintains a file in /run instead (on the
> principle that daemons shouldn't be storing temporary state in /etc).
> Getting the network up wasn't really the purpose of those notes
> (especially since everybody has their own preferences for network
> managers).
>
> > BTW i want to repeat all the step from the first with a new installation,
> > only a question: why you emerge @world before the kernel? I always
> emerged
> > kernel before, but Probably isn't the better choice.
> >
>
> That in particular is unlikely to matter.  However, I often use a
> preconfigured world file in new installations that happens to have the
> kernel in it, so emerging @world brings in the kernel anyway.  I do
> like to update @world before I go installing too much stuff because
> you create the risk of having to rebuild things if some key dependency
> gets updated later during the install.  Also, I always do an emerge
> @world, but I don't always install a kernel (such as when installing a
> container/chroot).  So, updating @world is part of the core install
> process in my thinking, and installing a kernel is just a supplement
> needed on systems that don't already have a kernel.
>
> But, again, that detail isn't likely to matter since the kernel just
> installs a bunch of sources that aren't linked to anything, and even a
> built kernel is statically linked for obvious reasons.
>
> --
> Rich
>
>

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