Difference between revisions of "KDE on VMWare"
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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: | ||
+ | <pre style="color:red"> | ||
: ''Section "Extensions"'' | : ''Section "Extensions"'' | ||
:: ''Option "Composite" "Disable"'' | :: ''Option "Composite" "Disable"'' | ||
: ''EndSection'' | : ''EndSection'' | ||
+ | /pre> | ||
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 06:26, 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 /pre> 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.