16.04 recent install low graphics mode error
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3
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I recently installed 16.04 on a pen drive and it keeps on coming up with a running in low graphics mode pop up and wont let me do anything. I'm not the greatest with terminal. help would be appreciated.
EDIT: I also cannot get to grub menu when I hold shift during boot it takes me to what looks like a terminal.
Also don't believe I have a user name or password.
16.04
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I recently installed 16.04 on a pen drive and it keeps on coming up with a running in low graphics mode pop up and wont let me do anything. I'm not the greatest with terminal. help would be appreciated.
EDIT: I also cannot get to grub menu when I hold shift during boot it takes me to what looks like a terminal.
Also don't believe I have a user name or password.
16.04
1
To fix this, please follow the guide How to fix “The system is running in low-graphics mode” error?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:38
At the boot screen where you choose "Try Ubuntu", please press F6, which will allow you to add boot options. Addnomodeset
to the end of the options, and then boot into "Try Ubuntu" as usual. Does that help?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:48
F6 doesnt seem to do anything :/, I am running the pen drive on a dell inspiron 1122 in case that matters.
– TB94
May 2 '16 at 7:14
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I recently installed 16.04 on a pen drive and it keeps on coming up with a running in low graphics mode pop up and wont let me do anything. I'm not the greatest with terminal. help would be appreciated.
EDIT: I also cannot get to grub menu when I hold shift during boot it takes me to what looks like a terminal.
Also don't believe I have a user name or password.
16.04
I recently installed 16.04 on a pen drive and it keeps on coming up with a running in low graphics mode pop up and wont let me do anything. I'm not the greatest with terminal. help would be appreciated.
EDIT: I also cannot get to grub menu when I hold shift during boot it takes me to what looks like a terminal.
Also don't believe I have a user name or password.
16.04
16.04
edited May 2 '16 at 3:43
asked May 2 '16 at 3:28
TB94
1614
1614
1
To fix this, please follow the guide How to fix “The system is running in low-graphics mode” error?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:38
At the boot screen where you choose "Try Ubuntu", please press F6, which will allow you to add boot options. Addnomodeset
to the end of the options, and then boot into "Try Ubuntu" as usual. Does that help?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:48
F6 doesnt seem to do anything :/, I am running the pen drive on a dell inspiron 1122 in case that matters.
– TB94
May 2 '16 at 7:14
add a comment |
1
To fix this, please follow the guide How to fix “The system is running in low-graphics mode” error?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:38
At the boot screen where you choose "Try Ubuntu", please press F6, which will allow you to add boot options. Addnomodeset
to the end of the options, and then boot into "Try Ubuntu" as usual. Does that help?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:48
F6 doesnt seem to do anything :/, I am running the pen drive on a dell inspiron 1122 in case that matters.
– TB94
May 2 '16 at 7:14
1
1
To fix this, please follow the guide How to fix “The system is running in low-graphics mode” error?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:38
To fix this, please follow the guide How to fix “The system is running in low-graphics mode” error?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:38
At the boot screen where you choose "Try Ubuntu", please press F6, which will allow you to add boot options. Add
nomodeset
to the end of the options, and then boot into "Try Ubuntu" as usual. Does that help?– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:48
At the boot screen where you choose "Try Ubuntu", please press F6, which will allow you to add boot options. Add
nomodeset
to the end of the options, and then boot into "Try Ubuntu" as usual. Does that help?– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:48
F6 doesnt seem to do anything :/, I am running the pen drive on a dell inspiron 1122 in case that matters.
– TB94
May 2 '16 at 7:14
F6 doesnt seem to do anything :/, I am running the pen drive on a dell inspiron 1122 in case that matters.
– TB94
May 2 '16 at 7:14
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
I faced the same infamous "Low graphics mode" issue after upgrading to 16.04 out of my curiosity from 14.* LTS. I tried installing/uninstalling graphics drivers (open source/official), configuring/reconfiguring various desktop managers, trying various previous kernels, installing/reinstalling GL/mesa drivers via apt-get
, removing ~/.*authority
, creating xorg.conf
, changing/fixing/blacklisting graphics kernel modules and so on, but nothing worked
Finally, I saw that /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf
didn't have any greeter-session at all. So, added greeter-session=unity-greeter
and then got the lightdm
login page instead of flickering black screen saying "System program problem..." dialog box appearing and
disappearing every few seconds.
Then, I got into another infamous issue - login loop. For this, I switched the desktop environment to GNOME metacity as none of the other worked - Ubuntu, Unity8 Mir, Gnome Compiz, etc. Finally, I was able to login, but "system settings" was having issues - unity-control-center and gnome-control-center were crashing with SegFault.
So, I installed the latest built mesa driver from mesa-12.* sources (only half built as there was some llvm error but installed the so far stuff anyway which included
the intel drivers as I saw), and at last "system settings" opened successfully.
You faced a login loop issue since removed .Xauthority files under your profile.
– SAGAR Nair
Oct 9 at 13:10
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
I faced the same infamous "Low graphics mode" issue after upgrading to 16.04 out of my curiosity from 14.* LTS. I tried installing/uninstalling graphics drivers (open source/official), configuring/reconfiguring various desktop managers, trying various previous kernels, installing/reinstalling GL/mesa drivers via apt-get
, removing ~/.*authority
, creating xorg.conf
, changing/fixing/blacklisting graphics kernel modules and so on, but nothing worked
Finally, I saw that /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf
didn't have any greeter-session at all. So, added greeter-session=unity-greeter
and then got the lightdm
login page instead of flickering black screen saying "System program problem..." dialog box appearing and
disappearing every few seconds.
Then, I got into another infamous issue - login loop. For this, I switched the desktop environment to GNOME metacity as none of the other worked - Ubuntu, Unity8 Mir, Gnome Compiz, etc. Finally, I was able to login, but "system settings" was having issues - unity-control-center and gnome-control-center were crashing with SegFault.
So, I installed the latest built mesa driver from mesa-12.* sources (only half built as there was some llvm error but installed the so far stuff anyway which included
the intel drivers as I saw), and at last "system settings" opened successfully.
You faced a login loop issue since removed .Xauthority files under your profile.
– SAGAR Nair
Oct 9 at 13:10
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I faced the same infamous "Low graphics mode" issue after upgrading to 16.04 out of my curiosity from 14.* LTS. I tried installing/uninstalling graphics drivers (open source/official), configuring/reconfiguring various desktop managers, trying various previous kernels, installing/reinstalling GL/mesa drivers via apt-get
, removing ~/.*authority
, creating xorg.conf
, changing/fixing/blacklisting graphics kernel modules and so on, but nothing worked
Finally, I saw that /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf
didn't have any greeter-session at all. So, added greeter-session=unity-greeter
and then got the lightdm
login page instead of flickering black screen saying "System program problem..." dialog box appearing and
disappearing every few seconds.
Then, I got into another infamous issue - login loop. For this, I switched the desktop environment to GNOME metacity as none of the other worked - Ubuntu, Unity8 Mir, Gnome Compiz, etc. Finally, I was able to login, but "system settings" was having issues - unity-control-center and gnome-control-center were crashing with SegFault.
So, I installed the latest built mesa driver from mesa-12.* sources (only half built as there was some llvm error but installed the so far stuff anyway which included
the intel drivers as I saw), and at last "system settings" opened successfully.
You faced a login loop issue since removed .Xauthority files under your profile.
– SAGAR Nair
Oct 9 at 13:10
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I faced the same infamous "Low graphics mode" issue after upgrading to 16.04 out of my curiosity from 14.* LTS. I tried installing/uninstalling graphics drivers (open source/official), configuring/reconfiguring various desktop managers, trying various previous kernels, installing/reinstalling GL/mesa drivers via apt-get
, removing ~/.*authority
, creating xorg.conf
, changing/fixing/blacklisting graphics kernel modules and so on, but nothing worked
Finally, I saw that /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf
didn't have any greeter-session at all. So, added greeter-session=unity-greeter
and then got the lightdm
login page instead of flickering black screen saying "System program problem..." dialog box appearing and
disappearing every few seconds.
Then, I got into another infamous issue - login loop. For this, I switched the desktop environment to GNOME metacity as none of the other worked - Ubuntu, Unity8 Mir, Gnome Compiz, etc. Finally, I was able to login, but "system settings" was having issues - unity-control-center and gnome-control-center were crashing with SegFault.
So, I installed the latest built mesa driver from mesa-12.* sources (only half built as there was some llvm error but installed the so far stuff anyway which included
the intel drivers as I saw), and at last "system settings" opened successfully.
I faced the same infamous "Low graphics mode" issue after upgrading to 16.04 out of my curiosity from 14.* LTS. I tried installing/uninstalling graphics drivers (open source/official), configuring/reconfiguring various desktop managers, trying various previous kernels, installing/reinstalling GL/mesa drivers via apt-get
, removing ~/.*authority
, creating xorg.conf
, changing/fixing/blacklisting graphics kernel modules and so on, but nothing worked
Finally, I saw that /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf
didn't have any greeter-session at all. So, added greeter-session=unity-greeter
and then got the lightdm
login page instead of flickering black screen saying "System program problem..." dialog box appearing and
disappearing every few seconds.
Then, I got into another infamous issue - login loop. For this, I switched the desktop environment to GNOME metacity as none of the other worked - Ubuntu, Unity8 Mir, Gnome Compiz, etc. Finally, I was able to login, but "system settings" was having issues - unity-control-center and gnome-control-center were crashing with SegFault.
So, I installed the latest built mesa driver from mesa-12.* sources (only half built as there was some llvm error but installed the so far stuff anyway which included
the intel drivers as I saw), and at last "system settings" opened successfully.
edited Sep 19 '16 at 12:56
Zanna
49.1k13123234
49.1k13123234
answered Sep 19 '16 at 12:00
user194850
You faced a login loop issue since removed .Xauthority files under your profile.
– SAGAR Nair
Oct 9 at 13:10
add a comment |
You faced a login loop issue since removed .Xauthority files under your profile.
– SAGAR Nair
Oct 9 at 13:10
You faced a login loop issue since removed .Xauthority files under your profile.
– SAGAR Nair
Oct 9 at 13:10
You faced a login loop issue since removed .Xauthority files under your profile.
– SAGAR Nair
Oct 9 at 13:10
add a comment |
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1
To fix this, please follow the guide How to fix “The system is running in low-graphics mode” error?
– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:38
At the boot screen where you choose "Try Ubuntu", please press F6, which will allow you to add boot options. Add
nomodeset
to the end of the options, and then boot into "Try Ubuntu" as usual. Does that help?– user533208
May 2 '16 at 3:48
F6 doesnt seem to do anything :/, I am running the pen drive on a dell inspiron 1122 in case that matters.
– TB94
May 2 '16 at 7:14