On Thu, 2012-03-29 at 09:57 +0100, Lars Hecking wrote: > brick writes: > > Hi > > > > My system is CentOS 6. I need to edit xorg.conf. But it can't be find in > > /etc/X11. Where is it? How can I get the default setting? > > /var/log/Xorg.0.log will tell you which configuration Xorg is currently > using, which devices are autodetected etc. If you need to change only > particular parts of the config, you can drop a .conf file with the > corresponding Section into /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d. > > E.g. if you needed a UK keyboard instead of the default US, you could use > something along the lines of > > # cd /etc/X11/corg.conf.d > # cat keyboard.conf > Section "InputDevice" > Identifier "Keyboard0" > Driver "kbd" > Option "XkbModel" "pc105" > Option "XkbLayout" "gb" > EndSection > # If you know what you need, adding a separate conf file in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/ is the cleanest way to go. If you need some type of custom setup, however, you can generate an xorg.conf using "Xorg -configure". The X server must not be running when you do this. ## Go to run level 3 init 3 ## Generate xorg.conf Xorg -configure ## The configuration file will be stored in "root" user's home (/root) >From there you can modify it as needed then move it to /etc/X11/ and "init 5" to test. You can test your changes by jumping in and out of run level 5. >From Xorg(1) man page: -configure When this option is specified, the Xorg server loads all video driver modules, probes for available hardware, and writes out an initial xorg.conf(5) file based on what was detected. This option currently has some problems on some platforms, but in most cases it is a good way to bootstrap the configuration process. This option is only available when the server is run as root (i.e, with real-uid 0). ./Cal _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos