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How do you change the resolution of the login screen in Ubuntu 9.10 (Karmic)?

Edit: keep in mind that I need to change the resolution of the login screen, as explained below.

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what is your login-manager (gdm, kdm, slick etc)? – akira Jan 22 '10 at 4:55
I am using gdm. – George Edison Jan 22 '10 at 6:36
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3 Answers

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What you want to do is change the GDM LOGIN Screen resolution?

Read this and please accept the correct answer.

Justin was kind of correct except the fact that GDM uses the modeline from your xorg.conf. The priority runs from left to right, so if you add "1280x960" as the first entry and remove any items you don't want (who needs half of them anyway, 768x600 or whatever it was, madness.) you should be fine for GDM.

    SubSection "Display"
        Depth       24
        Modes       "1280x960" "1024x768"
    EndSubSection
EndSection

Let me know if you need further explanation.

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This worked fine. Thanks :) – George Edison Mar 18 '10 at 0:20
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I believe you need to configure your xorg.conf to include the proper modes.

edit /etc/X11/xorg.conf

Section "Screen"
    Identifier  "Default Screen"
    Device      "NVIDIA Corporation NV43 [GeForce 6600 GT]"
    Monitor     "17P3"
    DefaultDepth    24

    [...]

    SubSection "Display"
        Depth       24
        Modes       "1024x768" "1280x960" "640x480" "800x600"
    EndSubSection
EndSection

Where the first Mode is the default resolution.

If you have an ATI card you may try this as well.

sudo aticonfig --resolution=0,1280x1024,1024x768,800x600

Where 0 is the first screen, and the resolutions are in order of preferred first.

Try adding this as a subsection to the 'Screen' section in your xorg.conf

SubSection "Display"
        Virtual 1280 800
EndSubSection
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...and this will just change the login resolution, right? – George Edison Jan 21 '10 at 19:11
Not really...resolution is a global setting. – Bobby Jan 21 '10 at 19:25
That's not what I need though. – George Edison Jan 21 '10 at 19:40
Once I'm logged on, everything is fine, but the login screen has the wrong resolution. – George Edison Jan 21 '10 at 19:41
@George: Ohhh... in that case try it! I thought you wanted different resolutions and not the same, sorry. – Bobby Jan 24 '10 at 18:21
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If you don't have a special X11 configuration but you do happen to have a file /etc/X11/xorg.conf, you might want to try moving it aside and see what happens. Usually X11 should configure itself properly these days and in my experience having stuff in /etc/X11/xorg.conf often causes problems.

To try without the file:

sudo mv /etc/X11/xorg.conf /etc/X11/xorg.conf.backup

and restart.

If it doesn't help move it back:

sudo mv /etc/X11/xorg.conf.backup /etc/X11/xorg.conf

and restart once more.

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