On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 8:26 AM, Michael Mol <mike...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 11:48 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés <can...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
>> On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 10:45 PM, Canek Peláez Valdés <can...@gmail.com> 
>> wrote:
>>> On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 9:35 PM, Michael Mol <mike...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> So, I botched the upgrade to udev-191. I thought I'd followed the
>>>> steps, but I apparently only covered them for one machine, not both.
>>>>
>>>> The news item instructions specified that I had to remove
>>>> udev-postmount from my runlevels. I didn't have udev-postmount in my
>>>> runlevels, so I didn't remove it. Turns out, that dictum also applies
>>>> to udev-mount. So after removing that[1], I was able to at least boot
>>>> again.
>>>>
>>>> Udev also complained about DEVTMPFS not being enabled in the
>>>> kernel.[2]  I couldn't get into X, but I could log in via getty and a
>>>> plain old vt, so I enabled it, rebuilt the kernel, installed it and
>>>> rebooted...and now that's presumably covered.
>>>>
>>>> I'm now able to get into X, but when I try to run an xterm, it fails.
>>>> Checking ~/.xsession_errors, I find:
>>>>
>>>> xterm: Error 32, error 2: No such file or directory
>>>> Reason: get_pty: not enough ptys
>>>
>>> Do you have CONFIG_LEGACY_PTYS=y?  If so, do you really need it? A
>>> little over a year ago[1] I had an annoying issue for having that
>>> option enabled in my kernel, with a lot of virtual ttys reported in
>>> systemctl. This is a shot in the dark (I really don't know if it's
>>> related to your problem), but perhaps having the LEGACY_PTYS option
>>> enabled somehow depleted your available pseudo terminals (which any X
>>> terminal needs to run)? I suppose screen is also out of the question
>>> for the same reason.
>
> No, I don't have CONFIG_LEGACY_PTYs. I do have UNIX98 PTYs, and I
> tried enabling alternate namespaces, but that didn't help either.
>
>>
>> Also related, if you have LEGACY_PTYS:
>>
>> "LEGACY_PTY_COUNT:
>>
>> The maximum number of legacy PTYs that can be used at any one time.
>> The default is 256, and should be more than enough.  Embedded
>> systems may want to reduce this to save memory.
>>
>> When not in use, each legacy PTY occupies 12 bytes on 32-bit
>> architectures and 24 bytes on 64-bit architectures."
>
> Yeah, I'm not using CONFIG_LEGACY_PTY, so LEGACY_PTY_COUNT doesn't
> even make itself available in menuconfig.

Hm. Some googling suggests this might be a permissions issue.

I do have consolekit enabled, but I'm using gdm, so I'd expect that to
take care of itself. (Although screen fails to launch from vt1, so
it's not a consolekit problem.)

--
:wq

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