live CD ask to log in

9 réponses [Dernière contribution]
rova
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 07/04/2013

When i click "try trisquel with out installing" it load ut then it sk Me to log in why?????? Whats the efault ID for a live CD

oralfloss
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 06/20/2013

On 07/14/2013 11:44 PM, name at domain wrote:
> When i click "try trisquel with out installing" it load ut then it sk Me
> to log in why?????? Whats the efault ID for a live CD

It shouldn't. Re-burn the iso on a new CD.

rova
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 07/04/2013

but i checked the disk for errors and is with out errors, alsoe when i used it to install trisquel in my pc, it works fine...i love to compute in freedom...

oralfloss
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 06/20/2013

On 07/15/2013 12:18 AM, name at domain wrote:
> but i checked the disk for errors and is with out errors, alsoe when i
> used it to install trisquel in my pc, it works fine...i love to compute
> in freedom...
Make sure you are booting from the disc and not the drive then. If the
disc doesn't have any errors and it is still asking for a password there
is nothing we can do about it.

lembas
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 05/13/2010

Hardware issues can cause this. Can you get to VT1?

Press Ctrl+Alt+F1 when you see the password prompt. If you can, you can then try

sudo service gdm stop
sudo service gdm start

heir4c
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 09/07/2013

ThanX. These commands solve my problem with the login issue.

heir4c
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 09/07/2013

Double post, Sorry

Mzee
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 07/10/2013

I had this problem as well and solved it by just restarting the system again. This solved the problem somehow magically.

rova
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 07/04/2013

Yeah sometimes you can think you have a ghost in there lol

ADFENO
Hors ligne
A rejoint: 12/31/2012

Note: Please read this comment carefully. Take long pauses after the dots, separating the following phrases from those which came before.

I guess this is a problem similar to the one I had.

When you're asked to select your language and then select Try Trisquel without installing and many other options. Highlight Try Trisquel without installing, then press F6, you should see a list with the word nomodeset, select this word (if the list doesn't have the mentioned word, or if you don't see a list, press Escape and try one of the neighboring keys, that is, F5 or F7).

After selecting nomodeset, this word will be marked with an X. Now, just exit the list (by pressing Escape, if you didn't do it yet). Select Try Trisquel without installing and you should at least be able to use or install GNU+Linux Trisquel, although you won't have higher screen resolutions available.

In the case of the live CDs, the nomodeset option will be disabled each time the live operating system is shut down.

After installing GNU+Linux Trisquel, if you can't go past the login screen when starting the installed operating system, you'll have two options:

First option

Start your live CD (you may have to use the method above), enter the recently installed operating system's partition (by double clicking Computer and then double clicking on the file system containing your GNU+Linux installation (if you're not sure, try to remember where you asked for the installer to save it). Inside this partition, double click on a folder called etc, then on X11, in this folder, try to find a file named exactly xorg.conf, if the file exists, please continue reading, otherwise, go to the other option. Press the right mouse button inside the folder's content and left click Open with a terminal, then type:

sudo mv "xorg.conf" "xorg.conf~"

Due to the fact that you're using a live operating system, it won't ask for your password, but most of the times, it does.

Now, restart your computer and try to start the installed operating system. If something unusual happens, start your computer using the live operating system, go to the folder where the xorg.conf file was, open the folder with a terminal and type:

sudo mv "xorg.conf~" "xorg.conf"

If you need more information about each one of this commands, just type:

man sudo

Or:

man mv

Second option

The second option is a workaround for those people who must not waste any important time, but this comes with the price of limited graphical quality. Start your computer using the live operating system, open the partition of the recently installed operating system, open the boot folder, then the grub folder. Right click the folder's content and select Open with a terminal and type:

sudo nano "grub.cfg"

You will see a simple text editor called Nano. This text editor opened the grub.cfg file. This file has informations which, along other things, makes the GRUB (your operating system boot loader) display a list of available operating systems, as well as, to control how they will start.

What we're going to do here is simply as equal as what we did in the very beginning of this comment. While Nano has grub.cfg opened, press Ctrl+W. Notice that, below Nano's window, you should see a word similar to Search and a blinking pointer. If so, type:

menuentry 'Trisquel GNU/Linux

If you want to search for more matches, press Ctrl+W and see if Nano's window shows you something more. In this case, I'm assuming that you just have one match.

Below menuentry 'Trisquel GNU/Linux, you'll see various lines which are distant from the start of the line mentioned above. These lines make reference to the menu entry above, that said, to the Trisquel GNU/Linux menu entry. One of these lines starts with the word linux, place the blinking pointer in this line, and between the words quiet and splash, then type:

nomodeset

Remember to separate each word with one space. The text should change from this:

quiet splash

To this:

quiet nomodeset splash

Now press Ctrl+O. If Nano asks if you want to overwrite the existing file, press Y.

Now just start your computer using the recently installed operating system. When GRUB appears, and if you have more than one operating system installed, remember to select the exact menu entry which you edited.

Now you should be able to go past the login screen.

-- End --

The problem with the second option is that, if you update your operating system, and if this update changes the kernel version of the operating system, or if it says that it updated grub, you'll have to redo the second option.

Best regards, ADFENO.
Have a nice day.