Hi gilpel; I am no hardware expert; but maybe I can suggest some things to double check and to remove and reinstall. On Mon, 2009-08-24 at 09:36 +0500, gilpel@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > I'm trying :) But I never enabled rpmfusion-nonfree-updates-testing, and I > installed the new update for kernel 2.6.29.6-217.2.8.fc11.x86_64. > First some very basic stuff. I am going to assume that by now you are getting flustered, frustrated and flumexed. You have probably already done the stuff listed below; but take a deep breath and start again. 1) Can you boot under one of the kernels? 2) Do you have yumex installed? I use yumex when the operations are simple, when I want to keep them simple and when I want to think visually. Therefore, it is handy, to me, for double checking stuff. 3) Check on the gnome menu Applications => System Tools => nVidia Display Settings. Under X server Information; System Information write down the NVIDIA Driver Version: so you have it handy if things go south. 4) Using Nautilus (or whatever your file browser is) go to /etc/X11/xorg.conf and check and note down the Driver in the Section "Device". Also check the driver in xorg.conf.backup and xorg.conf.livna-config-backup. This so you can go to a different xorg.config file if you have to rescue latter. Keep these backups. 5) Optionally, as root cd to /etc/X11/ and remove any extra xorg.conf bakups just to keep things clean. I have the "nouveau' driver installed, just in case. I have a xorg.config.BU.vesa and a xorg.config.BU.nouveau for quick fixes from a text screen. > First time I rebooted, boot stopped, just where it used to with -217.2.7: > "r8169: eth0: link up" . I checked if there was any akmod left to mess > things up and all I found was /var/cache/akmods. I supposed this was > unrelated, but I deleted it just the same. Now, the boot process stops at > "atd". > 6) Optionally, test that the hardware is working by typing "vesa" or "nouveau" as the "Device" driver in xorg-conf and reboot. 7) Using yumex (you can use the yum command line of course) list the installed packages and search for kmod-nvidia. Click to un-check akmod-nvidia and any kmod-nvidia+kernel+version (185-18.14.x and any other version), then remove by Processing Queue. Any additional dependencies that need to be removed will be included. There should be about five or six. If there is more or some of the dependencies suggested look weird or dangerous don't continue but cancel and get back to this list. 8) When processing is done click on Available. Search for kmod-nvidia and select kmod-nvidia... 18.14 and kmod-nvidia...2.3...18.14. Again Process Queue. akmod, kmod-nvidia-for-other kernels, xorg-x11-drv-nvidia +version and xorg-x11-drv-nvidia-libs+version should be included in the dependencies list. Double check that all the version numbers are the same i.e. 185-18.14-x. If something different happens cancel and get back to the list. NB. Double check that akmods is installed; rpm -qa akmods. This is a different program from akmods-nvidia. To get it functioning again you have to restart; maybe a complete shutdown and a cold boot just to be sure. Maybe you don't have to double check if its installed or cold boot. I just don't know; but better safe than sorry. -- Regards Bill Fedora 11, Gnome 2.26.3 Evo.2.26.3, Emacs 23.1.1 -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines