I use 16x32 font which is large.
Should xterm give the option of using the same fonts as for the console?
This would be of value if one has already set up the fonts for the
console, (as I have) since the default console fonts seem to also be way
too small.
David Lawyer
Package: xserver-xorg-core
Version: 1.12.4-5_i386
When I type startx, the xserver crashes. I found on the internet that
others report a crash due to the vgahw module (actually libvgahw.so). Note
that this module is part of the core package. Heres the log:
[ 13059.599]
X.Org X Server 1.12.4
On Sat, Dec 18, 2004 at 08:37:34PM -0500, Branden Robinson wrote:
retitle 283764 xfree86-common: Xsession can barf if user has aliased ls to
force colors on
thanks
On Tue, Nov 30, 2004 at 11:14:40PM -0800, David Lawyer wrote:
Package: xfree86-common
Version: 4.3.0.dfsg.1.-1
Version
to support colors and the run_parts() can't seem to cope with the
control codes which are embedded in the file names to create colors.
One word command fixes it.
What was frustrating was that there were no error messages.
David Lawyer
cache (in the memory of
the video card). Elsewhere, it states that version 3.2 fixed the bug by
providing a workaround if the bug is detected. Well, it's not fixed for
me. The video card worked fine with MS Windows, so the card is OK.
David Lawyer
I'm using a Gateway 2000
On Thu, Nov 14, 2002 at 02:21:07PM -0600, Warren Turkal wrote:
On Friday 15 November 2002 01:40 am, David Lawyer wrote:
for F in $(command ls $1); do
The command ls insures that ls is not a shell function but the real ls
command.
The following may be another solution
for F in $(ls
On Thu, Nov 14, 2002 at 02:21:07PM -0600, Warren Turkal wrote:
On Friday 15 November 2002 01:40 am, David Lawyer wrote:
for F in $(command ls $1); do
The command ls insures that ls is not a shell function but the real ls
command.
The following may be another solution
for F in $(ls
with the
file names. The result is that X exits. To fix this change the line to:
for F in $(command ls $1); do
The command ls insures that ls is not a shell function but the real ls
command.
David Lawyer
.
David Lawyer
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