On Sun, 8 Sep 2013, Bart Schaefer wrote: > On Sun, Sep 8, 2013 at 6:19 AM, Michael Hennebry > <hennebry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Sun, 8 Sep 2013, Robert Nichols wrote: >> >>> On 09/08/2013 12:31 AM, Michael Hennebry wrote: >>>> Sommetimes, for no apparent reason, my mouse cursor will become >>>> four arrows and suddenly I cannot do anything with my desktop. >>>> I can move the cursor and that is it. >> >> I could use cntrl-alt-backspace to kill the session, >> but that seems too much like giving up. >> This has happened to me before. >> I'd like a different solution. > > Did you try unplugging the mouse and plugging it back in? (Obviously, > if wireless USB, unplug the receiver) No. Next time. > If you have gpm running for console mouse services, try restarting (or > just plain stopping) that. It hasn't happened to me for a long time, > but at one point for me gpm was occasionally getting into a bad state > and turning off the mouse device, which would cause the X server to > lose track of it as well. I don't now. ps -e | grep gpm produces an empty list. I eventually gave up and used cntrl-alt-backspace. I'll try to remember the suggestions the next time it happens. BTW when I had started another session with XFCE, it was missing a couple things: the hibernate option on logout the icon to control whether my computer would interact with the network. -- Michael hennebry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx "On Monday, I'm gonna have to tell my kindergarten class, whom I teach not to run with scissors, that my fiance ran me through with a broadsword." -- Lily _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos