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Re: How to arrange for booting to console



On Mon, 19 Sep 2016, David Wright wrote:

Date: Mon, 19 Sep 2016 15:48:35
From: David Wright <deblis@lionunicorn.co.uk>
Reply-To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: How to arrange for booting to console
Resent-Date: Mon, 19 Sep 2016 19:48:54 +0000 (UTC)
Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org

On Sat 17 Sep 2016 at 02:34:11 (-0400), Jude DaShiell wrote:
On Fri, 16 Sep 2016, David Wright wrote:

Date: Fri, 16 Sep 2016 09:38:31
From: David Wright <deblis@lionunicorn.co.uk>
Reply-To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: How to arrange for booting to console
Resent-Date: Fri, 16 Sep 2016 13:43:51 +0000 (UTC)
Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org

I missed this reply until Lisi bumped the thread.
These are my opinions, based of the pathetically little I know.

On Sun 11 Sep 2016 at 18:52:59 (-0400), Harry Putnam wrote:
The Wanderer <wanderer@fastmail.fm> writes:

On 2016-09-11 at 17:04, Harry Putnam wrote:

How can I arrange to boot to console mode rather than X.   With the
ability to startx when I feel like it.


[...]

The way I usually do it is to uninstall gdm, kdm, xdm, et cetera; those
are the packages which hook in to provide a graphical login prompt. With
none of them present, what you get is the traditional text-mode login
prompt, and your configured shell after login.


[...]

That sounds promissing.

It ought to. It's the display managers that start X. If they're not
there, you've to start it yourself with startx.

Used one of the methods below and quickly
realized I was expecting a nice big framebuffered text console with a
much higher resolution than the standard.

But you got ... what?

If you want to know whether you're looking at a nice big framebuffered
text console, install fbset and type
$ fbset
If you see something like:

mode "1280x800"
  geometry 1280 800 1280 800 32
  timings 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
  accel true
  rgba 8/16,8/8,8/0,0/0
endmode

then you are.

BTW What's the "standard" resolution of which you speak?

(Previously my OS of choice
was gentoo), But of course all that has to be setup.... as I recall it
is done with a few extra bits on the kernel line grub.conf....

Using grub2 I'm thoroughly lost what or where one would edit to allow
                                   ?????????????
a console frame buffer.

[snipped my response which was not grub-related]

edit /etc/default/grub then run grub-mkconfig to apply your changes
like this:
grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg

That's the "where"; what's the "what" ?

Cheers,
David.

Almost forgot, after doing edit as root run update-grub as root and you should be good to go.



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