by rhodry on Sun May 06, 2012 11:39 pm
My experience on ALL Asus laptops that I have installed LMDE to is that "sgfxi" must be run TWICE to work.
The first run through simply downloads the nvidia driver, removes the nouveau module and blacklists it. On reboot, it then returns to cli (no X, but no broken system). You simply login again and run "sgfxi" again. This time it detects the driver, builds & loads the module, sets xorg.conf and offers to 1. Start Desktop or 2. Quit at the end. No need to reboot this time, just start the desktop. This has worked without fail on every install and is the ONLY way I install kernel/video drivers on Debian based OS's; and, it has never 'broken' a system yet.
In addition, I use "smxi" to remove all 'meta' packages dealing with either kernel or video drivers. This way I control these changes on my system. Once you have a kernel/driver combination that works for your hardware, why would you want to change it if the hardware does not change? The only time I have ever been forced to change the kernel/graphics driver options is when Xorg got updated in Sid/Unstable to a version that no longer worked with the old stuff. Updates with Smxi simply brought it all up to date.
cheers,
rhodry.
Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass...
it's about learning to dance in the rain.