Note that if you try starting hal before dhcdbd, hal will not start properly. Also, after starting dhcdbd, you will not be given another prompt. Rather, you will just be given a blank line. You can still start hal. Also, after starting hal, there is constant output (You are not given another command prompt). You can still start gdm like you normally would from the command line.
Is there any way to start these things automatically, so I don't have to boot into the command line every time?
I get this too.
Concurrency is set to 'none'.
# ls -l /etc/rc?.d/*dbus
/etc/rc1.d/K20dbus
/etc/rc2.d/S12dbus
/etc/rc3.d/S12dbus
/etc/rc4.d/S12dbus
/etc/rc5.d/S12dbus
# ls -l /etc/rc?.d/*hal
/etc/rc1.d/K16hal
/etc/rc2.d/S13hal
/etc/rc3.d/S12hal
/etc/rc4.d/S12hal
/etc/rc5.d/S12hal
#ls -l /etc/rc?.d/*dhcdbd d/K16dhcdbd d/S24dhcdbd d/S24dhcdbd d/S24dhcdbd d/S24dhcdbd d/S24dhcdbd d/K16dhcdbd
/etc/rc0.
/etc/rc1.
/etc/rc2.
/etc/rc3.
/etc/rc4.
/etc/rc5.
/etc/rc6.
By running the following commands, I was able to then start GDM and log in without getting the error:
/etc/init.d/dbus start
/etc/init.d/dhcdbd start
/etc/init.d/hal start
Note that if you try starting hal before dhcdbd, hal will not start properly. Also, after starting dhcdbd, you will not be given another prompt. Rather, you will just be given a blank line. You can still start hal. Also, after starting hal, there is constant output (You are not given another command prompt). You can still start gdm like you normally would from the command line.
Is there any way to start these things automatically, so I don't have to boot into the command line every time?