Difference between revisions of "KDE on VMWare"

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(Created page with "= Solution to Get KDE on Slackware Linux Working on a VMWare Virtual Machine = After spending many hours searching for solutions to get the KDE windows manager working on Slack...")
 
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Edit /etc/X11/xorg.conf and add this to the end of the file:  
 
Edit /etc/X11/xorg.conf and add this to the end of the file:  
  
<nowiki> <pre>Section "Extensions"</pre>
+
: ''Section "Extensions"''
<pre>    Option "Composite" "Disable"</pre>
+
:: ''Option "Composite" "Disable"''
<pre>EndSection</pre>
+
: ''EndSection''
</nowiki>
 
  
 
Save, close, and launch Xwindows using startx, or if your default runlevel is 5, you can just reboot,
 
Save, close, and launch Xwindows using startx, or if your default runlevel is 5, you can just reboot,
 
or you can use telinit 5 from runlevel 3, command prompt only, to switch to runlevel 5 and login to the gui.
 
or you can use telinit 5 from runlevel 3, command prompt only, to switch to runlevel 5 and login to the gui.

Revision as of 06:23, 8 November 2011

Solution to Get KDE on Slackware Linux Working on a VMWare Virtual Machine

After spending many hours searching for solutions to get the KDE windows manager working on Slackware 13.37 on a VMWare virtual machine. Finally, I discovered the solution!

t turns out that using the default "composite" extentions will not work on a VM. In order to get KDE to work in a virtual machine, you have to explicitly disable composite extensions in the xorg.conf configuration file.

Edit /etc/X11/xorg.conf and add this to the end of the file:

Section "Extensions"
Option "Composite" "Disable"
EndSection

Save, close, and launch Xwindows using startx, or if your default runlevel is 5, you can just reboot, or you can use telinit 5 from runlevel 3, command prompt only, to switch to runlevel 5 and login to the gui.