On 2015-04-08, David Both <dboth@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The easy way to restart gdm is when you are on the login screen itself > or the desktop simply press Ctrl-Alt-Backspace. This works for Upstart > in CentOS 6.x but will not work for CentOS 7.x which uses Systemd. The > service command does not work for gdm. However, logging out of the > desktop will restart gdm. It works for the graphical login exactly > like the gettys in a TTY environment. Thanks for the suggestion. Logging out and keying ctrl-alt-backspace both restart X, certainly, but I'm not so sure about gdm. I'm not at a CentOS 6 machine right now so I can't confirm one way or the other. > > On 04/08/2015 06:36 AM, Liam O'Toole wrote: >> On 2015-04-04, Bill Maltby (C4B) >> <centos4bill@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> On Sat, 2015-04-04 at 11:12 +0100, Nux! wrote: >>>> 100% with Digimer here. <snip> All this energy should be put into >>>> contributing towards to the project, testing, helping out >>>> community. >>> Well, I used to agree. But when a bug report filed in December goes >>> untouched entering April, which I don't recall happening prior to RH >>> subsuming the project, it takes away impetus to ever file one again >>> from lowly end users like me I think. >>> >>> http://bugs.centos.org/view.php?id=7972 >> Thanks for drawing my attention to that bug. I encountered it the >> other day after switching from runlevel 5 to 3 (and back again) on a >> CentOS 6.6 machine. >> >> The purpose of the runlevel switch was to restart gdm. Is there a >> better way? >> > > -- Liam _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos