Gnome animations are not working on Debian The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InDual booting Debian and Windows 8?Black graphics glitch on CentOS7 GNOMEvmware debian sid gnome mouse not working keyboard is fineHardware accelaration on integrated Intel 5500 graphics and Debian result in unstable systemdebian 9, gnome 3.2 audio device selector not working sometimesUnable to Change Display Resolution on DebianUSB device (keyboard or mouse) shows in `lsusb` but does not work if it is the second USB device to be plugged inUbuntu 18.04.1 turns black randomlyDebug display manager not startingIntel HD Graphics is not working with Debian Stretch
Output the Arecibo Message
What does Linus Torvalds means when he says that git "never ever" tracks a file?
Why is Grand Jury testimony secret?
Why can Shazam do this?
Patience, young "Padovan"
Why is the maximum length of openwrt’s root password 8 characters?
Idiomatic way to prevent slicing?
A poker game description that does not feel gimmicky
Does light intensity oscillate really fast since it is a wave?
How to answer pointed "are you quitting" questioning when I don't want them to suspect
How can I fix this gap between bookcases I made?
aging parents with no investments
Where to refill my bottle in India?
Is "plugging out" electronic devices an American expression?
Is this food a bread or a loaf?
Is flight data recorder erased after every flight?
How to change the limits of integration
How to manage monthly salary
How was Skylab's orbit inclination chosen?
Springs with some finite mass
What are the motivations for publishing new editions of an existing textbook, beyond new discoveries in a field?
Time travel alters history but people keep saying nothing's changed
Extreme, unacceptable situation and I can't attend work tomorrow morning
"What time...?" or "At what time...?" - what is more grammatically correct?
Gnome animations are not working on Debian
The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InDual booting Debian and Windows 8?Black graphics glitch on CentOS7 GNOMEvmware debian sid gnome mouse not working keyboard is fineHardware accelaration on integrated Intel 5500 graphics and Debian result in unstable systemdebian 9, gnome 3.2 audio device selector not working sometimesUnable to Change Display Resolution on DebianUSB device (keyboard or mouse) shows in `lsusb` but does not work if it is the second USB device to be plugged inUbuntu 18.04.1 turns black randomlyDebug display manager not startingIntel HD Graphics is not working with Debian Stretch
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
I installed Gnome on Debian stretch stable, with kernel version 4.18 from stretch-backports
, and after logging in, the animations usually present on Gnome do not work, i.e. apps sliding into the applications menu, the blur on the bar at the top of the screen. However, if I go to a tty
, then type startx
, the Gnome desktop environment starts and the animations works. I have looked around, but haven't found any answers as to why this is happening, or how it can be fixed. Does anyone know how I can solve this issue?
I am starting Gnome via the graphics login screen, GDM, and am using an X11 session. I'm using a Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD Graphics 630.
linux debian gnome
|
show 4 more comments
I installed Gnome on Debian stretch stable, with kernel version 4.18 from stretch-backports
, and after logging in, the animations usually present on Gnome do not work, i.e. apps sliding into the applications menu, the blur on the bar at the top of the screen. However, if I go to a tty
, then type startx
, the Gnome desktop environment starts and the animations works. I have looked around, but haven't found any answers as to why this is happening, or how it can be fixed. Does anyone know how I can solve this issue?
I am starting Gnome via the graphics login screen, GDM, and am using an X11 session. I'm using a Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD Graphics 630.
linux debian gnome
Hi @wispi. What is your graphic card? Did you update the drivers after installation?
– user88036
Sep 22 '18 at 9:36
How are you starting your session? Via GDM? Are you trying to start a Wayland session? Try to click on the little gear in GDM and see if it's a X11 session or a Wayland session you are trying to start
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:42
1
@Goro I'm using an Intel Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD graphics 630, not a discrete graphics card. After some research, it seems that Debian already contains the necessary packages for Intel Graphics (xserver-xorg-video-intel). When using kernel 4.8, the default Debian stable kernel version, the resolution was stuck at 1024 x 768, but after updating the kernel to 4.18, it allowed me to set the correct resolution. When, for example, watching videos on YouTube in 4k, the content looks fine and the frame rate looks proper, so I think the problem is with Gnome, and not the drivers or GPU.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:50
1
@Bigon I'm starting Gnome with GDM (the Gnome login screen), and using Gnome on System X11. If I try to login with Wayland, the animations work, but are choppy.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:52
Are you using systemd? Do you have a logind session registered when you open your session? You can check with theloginctl
command
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 18:59
|
show 4 more comments
I installed Gnome on Debian stretch stable, with kernel version 4.18 from stretch-backports
, and after logging in, the animations usually present on Gnome do not work, i.e. apps sliding into the applications menu, the blur on the bar at the top of the screen. However, if I go to a tty
, then type startx
, the Gnome desktop environment starts and the animations works. I have looked around, but haven't found any answers as to why this is happening, or how it can be fixed. Does anyone know how I can solve this issue?
I am starting Gnome via the graphics login screen, GDM, and am using an X11 session. I'm using a Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD Graphics 630.
linux debian gnome
I installed Gnome on Debian stretch stable, with kernel version 4.18 from stretch-backports
, and after logging in, the animations usually present on Gnome do not work, i.e. apps sliding into the applications menu, the blur on the bar at the top of the screen. However, if I go to a tty
, then type startx
, the Gnome desktop environment starts and the animations works. I have looked around, but haven't found any answers as to why this is happening, or how it can be fixed. Does anyone know how I can solve this issue?
I am starting Gnome via the graphics login screen, GDM, and am using an X11 session. I'm using a Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD Graphics 630.
linux debian gnome
linux debian gnome
edited Sep 22 '18 at 18:58
wispi
asked Sep 22 '18 at 4:54
wispiwispi
1267
1267
Hi @wispi. What is your graphic card? Did you update the drivers after installation?
– user88036
Sep 22 '18 at 9:36
How are you starting your session? Via GDM? Are you trying to start a Wayland session? Try to click on the little gear in GDM and see if it's a X11 session or a Wayland session you are trying to start
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:42
1
@Goro I'm using an Intel Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD graphics 630, not a discrete graphics card. After some research, it seems that Debian already contains the necessary packages for Intel Graphics (xserver-xorg-video-intel). When using kernel 4.8, the default Debian stable kernel version, the resolution was stuck at 1024 x 768, but after updating the kernel to 4.18, it allowed me to set the correct resolution. When, for example, watching videos on YouTube in 4k, the content looks fine and the frame rate looks proper, so I think the problem is with Gnome, and not the drivers or GPU.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:50
1
@Bigon I'm starting Gnome with GDM (the Gnome login screen), and using Gnome on System X11. If I try to login with Wayland, the animations work, but are choppy.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:52
Are you using systemd? Do you have a logind session registered when you open your session? You can check with theloginctl
command
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 18:59
|
show 4 more comments
Hi @wispi. What is your graphic card? Did you update the drivers after installation?
– user88036
Sep 22 '18 at 9:36
How are you starting your session? Via GDM? Are you trying to start a Wayland session? Try to click on the little gear in GDM and see if it's a X11 session or a Wayland session you are trying to start
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:42
1
@Goro I'm using an Intel Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD graphics 630, not a discrete graphics card. After some research, it seems that Debian already contains the necessary packages for Intel Graphics (xserver-xorg-video-intel). When using kernel 4.8, the default Debian stable kernel version, the resolution was stuck at 1024 x 768, but after updating the kernel to 4.18, it allowed me to set the correct resolution. When, for example, watching videos on YouTube in 4k, the content looks fine and the frame rate looks proper, so I think the problem is with Gnome, and not the drivers or GPU.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:50
1
@Bigon I'm starting Gnome with GDM (the Gnome login screen), and using Gnome on System X11. If I try to login with Wayland, the animations work, but are choppy.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:52
Are you using systemd? Do you have a logind session registered when you open your session? You can check with theloginctl
command
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 18:59
Hi @wispi. What is your graphic card? Did you update the drivers after installation?
– user88036
Sep 22 '18 at 9:36
Hi @wispi. What is your graphic card? Did you update the drivers after installation?
– user88036
Sep 22 '18 at 9:36
How are you starting your session? Via GDM? Are you trying to start a Wayland session? Try to click on the little gear in GDM and see if it's a X11 session or a Wayland session you are trying to start
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:42
How are you starting your session? Via GDM? Are you trying to start a Wayland session? Try to click on the little gear in GDM and see if it's a X11 session or a Wayland session you are trying to start
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:42
1
1
@Goro I'm using an Intel Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD graphics 630, not a discrete graphics card. After some research, it seems that Debian already contains the necessary packages for Intel Graphics (xserver-xorg-video-intel). When using kernel 4.8, the default Debian stable kernel version, the resolution was stuck at 1024 x 768, but after updating the kernel to 4.18, it allowed me to set the correct resolution. When, for example, watching videos on YouTube in 4k, the content looks fine and the frame rate looks proper, so I think the problem is with Gnome, and not the drivers or GPU.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:50
@Goro I'm using an Intel Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD graphics 630, not a discrete graphics card. After some research, it seems that Debian already contains the necessary packages for Intel Graphics (xserver-xorg-video-intel). When using kernel 4.8, the default Debian stable kernel version, the resolution was stuck at 1024 x 768, but after updating the kernel to 4.18, it allowed me to set the correct resolution. When, for example, watching videos on YouTube in 4k, the content looks fine and the frame rate looks proper, so I think the problem is with Gnome, and not the drivers or GPU.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:50
1
1
@Bigon I'm starting Gnome with GDM (the Gnome login screen), and using Gnome on System X11. If I try to login with Wayland, the animations work, but are choppy.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:52
@Bigon I'm starting Gnome with GDM (the Gnome login screen), and using Gnome on System X11. If I try to login with Wayland, the animations work, but are choppy.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:52
Are you using systemd? Do you have a logind session registered when you open your session? You can check with the
loginctl
command– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 18:59
Are you using systemd? Do you have a logind session registered when you open your session? You can check with the
loginctl
command– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 18:59
|
show 4 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Given that the animations are working from the command line. Try to appended the following lines in /etc/rc.local
:
su - <username> - c startx
exit 0
This is a bad idea especially as GDM will already start and I would suggest to keep GDM
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:40
Thanks for the suggestion, but I still want to have the proper Gnome login screen.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:54
add a comment |
I solved this by installing and using vanilla-gnome-desktop on my ubuntu 18.04
New contributor
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "106"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f470661%2fgnome-animations-are-not-working-on-debian%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Given that the animations are working from the command line. Try to appended the following lines in /etc/rc.local
:
su - <username> - c startx
exit 0
This is a bad idea especially as GDM will already start and I would suggest to keep GDM
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:40
Thanks for the suggestion, but I still want to have the proper Gnome login screen.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:54
add a comment |
Given that the animations are working from the command line. Try to appended the following lines in /etc/rc.local
:
su - <username> - c startx
exit 0
This is a bad idea especially as GDM will already start and I would suggest to keep GDM
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:40
Thanks for the suggestion, but I still want to have the proper Gnome login screen.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:54
add a comment |
Given that the animations are working from the command line. Try to appended the following lines in /etc/rc.local
:
su - <username> - c startx
exit 0
Given that the animations are working from the command line. Try to appended the following lines in /etc/rc.local
:
su - <username> - c startx
exit 0
answered Sep 22 '18 at 9:43
user88036
This is a bad idea especially as GDM will already start and I would suggest to keep GDM
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:40
Thanks for the suggestion, but I still want to have the proper Gnome login screen.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:54
add a comment |
This is a bad idea especially as GDM will already start and I would suggest to keep GDM
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:40
Thanks for the suggestion, but I still want to have the proper Gnome login screen.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:54
This is a bad idea especially as GDM will already start and I would suggest to keep GDM
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:40
This is a bad idea especially as GDM will already start and I would suggest to keep GDM
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:40
Thanks for the suggestion, but I still want to have the proper Gnome login screen.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:54
Thanks for the suggestion, but I still want to have the proper Gnome login screen.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:54
add a comment |
I solved this by installing and using vanilla-gnome-desktop on my ubuntu 18.04
New contributor
add a comment |
I solved this by installing and using vanilla-gnome-desktop on my ubuntu 18.04
New contributor
add a comment |
I solved this by installing and using vanilla-gnome-desktop on my ubuntu 18.04
New contributor
I solved this by installing and using vanilla-gnome-desktop on my ubuntu 18.04
New contributor
New contributor
answered Apr 6 at 8:22
Eduard DrenthEduard Drenth
11
11
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Unix & Linux Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f470661%2fgnome-animations-are-not-working-on-debian%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Hi @wispi. What is your graphic card? Did you update the drivers after installation?
– user88036
Sep 22 '18 at 9:36
How are you starting your session? Via GDM? Are you trying to start a Wayland session? Try to click on the little gear in GDM and see if it's a X11 session or a Wayland session you are trying to start
– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 17:42
1
@Goro I'm using an Intel Core i5-8400 with Intel UHD graphics 630, not a discrete graphics card. After some research, it seems that Debian already contains the necessary packages for Intel Graphics (xserver-xorg-video-intel). When using kernel 4.8, the default Debian stable kernel version, the resolution was stuck at 1024 x 768, but after updating the kernel to 4.18, it allowed me to set the correct resolution. When, for example, watching videos on YouTube in 4k, the content looks fine and the frame rate looks proper, so I think the problem is with Gnome, and not the drivers or GPU.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:50
1
@Bigon I'm starting Gnome with GDM (the Gnome login screen), and using Gnome on System X11. If I try to login with Wayland, the animations work, but are choppy.
– wispi
Sep 22 '18 at 18:52
Are you using systemd? Do you have a logind session registered when you open your session? You can check with the
loginctl
command– Bigon
Sep 22 '18 at 18:59