this post was submitted on 31 Oct 2024
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I highly doubt that but, in case you're telling the truth, let me explain.
EndeavourOS is popular and based on Arch Linux which is another popular rolling release distro. Rolling releases don't have actual releases btw. They just update ISOs once in a while and call it releases.
What was a red flag for me in your message was the part about NVidia. I literally said my GPU is not NVidia and you asked what NVidia GPU I had. That sounded very much like trolling.
Also I think I saw you reply to one of my joke comments so I thought this could be your own one.
thanks for explaining and i think i can understand your perspective.
if i understand you correctly: the lemmyverse has likewise made me weary and i had the realization that my paranoia of trolls where at an all time high because of the election.
i read through your post quickly the first time about because of that paranoia and made many assumptions based on my own experiences. as i said earlier; i haven't touched this area of my knowledge in several years and all of the questions always seemed to involve the word nvidia in the past and i assumed this was one of them.
i'm geniune in my effort to reach out and i think can prove it by trying to help: we need more information. Do you have access to the system's logs that would contain the package installation details?
Ok, mister/miss, thank you for such an advanced explanation and absence of fight creation.
I have access to the system via CLI but idk where I can find the logs. After all I don't even know how to use curl or grep. I'm not a very advanced user.
i'm going to assume that endeaveros is using systemd so you'll need journalctl and sudo at a minimum.
do you have access to both? as in can you run both commands?
I can run all commands. I just can't start the GUI. I'd also assume that commands like btop (TTY tools that require full color or image support) won't work.
Also I can't access anything after a GUI login attempt without a reboot so if the logs aren't saved, I can't access them.
in your shoes: i would run
journalctl -f
to watch the logs scroll by on screen in one virtual terminal (whatever the systemd equivalent is nowadays; it was alt+ctrl+f1 through f7 back i the sysv-init days) and try to log in again on the base xserver virtual terminal and try to watch for errors/failures/warnings messages from that those scrolling logs.journalctl is a unifiied logging system that comes with systemd so your logs are likely to persist there and it has built in tools to help you narrow it down if you see anything in the logs.
When I try to log in, the screen goes black with artifacts and switching to another terminal to see logs is impossible.
when you use an xserver, it occupies one of those virtual terminals that i referenced in my last message.
most distros use 7 virtual terminals and the xserver is usually dedicated to one of them and that means you can use the keyboard shortcuts of alt+ctrl+f1 through alt+ctrl+f7 to switch from your xserver and into a bash prompt where you can then log in without the xserver and execute that command to look at the logs.
you can toggle between all 7 terminals at any time without impacting each other; you can use those keyboard shortcuts to help you troubleshoot this and all xserver problems in an "alt-tab" like fashion switching back and forth between the xserver and six other terminals where you can do things like execute commands; look at logs; & modify configs.
I don't think you understand what I say so I guess you won't be able to help me.
your call and good luck