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Date:      Sat, 30 Oct 2004 23:51:07 -0700
From:      Jay O'Brien <jayobrien@att.net>
To:        FreeBSD - questions <questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: How to get out of GNOME? (resolved)
Message-ID:  <41848B5B.8090008@att.net>
In-Reply-To: <20041031060947.GB21723@grimoire.chen.org.nz>
References:  <41842DAB.7080901@att.net> <57d710000410301715351b45a5@mail.gmail.com> <418436F8.8060703@att.net> <200410301854.48655.mnavarre@cox.net> <418446BA.6070503@att.net> <41846D21.4030305@bellsouth.net> <418477CD.8090903@att.net> <20041031060947.GB21723@grimoire.chen.org.nz>

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Jonathan Chen wrote:

> On Sat, Oct 30, 2004 at 10:27:41PM -0700, Jay O'Brien wrote:
> 
>>Andrew Jones wrote:
>>
>>>Jay O'Brien wrote:
>>>
>>>>Ok, what DO I do to shut down gnome if I don't want it running?
>>>>
>>>
>>>ctrl+alt+backspace. It crashes the xserver though, but it'll exit.
>>
>>Nope. It doesn't work for me. With gdm/X running, ctl+alt+bksp goes 
>>first to black screen then comes back with a new logon window. If I 
>>do it enough times, it reports to the virtual terminal "The display 
>>server has been shut down about 6 times in the last 90 seconds, it 
>>is likely that something bad is going on. I will wait for two minutes 
>>before trying again on display :0." and then it comes back on. 
> 
> 
> Turn the gdm entry in /etc/ttys to "off". kill -HUP 1. Then kill the
> gdm process.

There is no gdm entry in /etc/ttys. kill -HUP 1 doesn't seem to have 
any effect. However.....

In top, killing XFree86 or gdmlogin restarts GNOME. killing them both 
results in a "No such process" error on gdmlogin process and GNOME 
restarts. However, killing the gdm binary that is in "poll" state 
does the job; killing it causes all four of the processes to drop 
out of the top display. 

Interesting. Thanks everyone, your suggestions helped me find an 
answer that works. I don't think it should be this difficult, tho!

Jay 




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