297

Note:

This is an attempt to create a canonical question that covers all instances of "low-graphics mode" error that occurs to a user, including but not limited to installation of wrong drivers, incorrect or invalid lightdm greeters, low disk space, incorrect installation of graphics card like ATI and Nvidia, incorrect configuration of xorg.conf file while setting up multiple monitors among others.

If you are experiencing the "low-graphics mode" error when trying to login but none of the following answers work for you, please do ask a new question and then update the answers of this canonical question as and when your new question gets answered.


When I try to boot into my computer, I am getting this error:

The system is running in low-graphics mode

Your screen, graphics cards, and input device settings could not be detected correctly. You will need to configure these yourself.

fail-safe X mode

How do I fix the failsafe X mode and login into my computer?


Answer index:

8
  • What happens when the message you see here is almost impossible to read? And I can forget about being able to see the terminal in the Ctrl-Alt-F1 trick. Jun 6, 2013 at 16:23
  • I tried to add to the master question but apparently am too much of a newb to be useful.
    – peejaybee
    Sep 29, 2013 at 0:26
  • ok i tried everything on this page, but the fix for me was to make some more room. "df -h" showed sda1 as 100% so then i run "du / | sort -g" and found trash was like 30gig... 80% of harddrive, so i did "rm -fr ~/user/.blah/trash" and followed up with another df -h showing 14%, so a final reboot and i was back in.
    – scott
    Jan 18, 2014 at 6:24
  • @Braiam I realize this is old, but... this question is protected. It's pretty obviously visible. Mar 15, 2015 at 0:17
  • I had the same problem but i fixed it from this link thegeekyland.blogspot.com/2014/07/ubuntu-1404-lenovo-g510.html Aug 2, 2015 at 8:01

46 Answers 46

151
+500

Will try to answer the ones I can:

Assuming the answer by Jokerdino was already checked: The greeter is invalid

Issues with Nvidia or AMD/ATI graphics

This happens when a driver has a problem installing correctly (Most cases). For this do the following:

  1. Boot PC leaving SHIFT pressed to make the GRUB Menu show.

    Grub menu

  2. Select Recovery Mode which will continue booting correctly until the Recovery Menu appeares.

  3. Select from the recovery menu failsafeX.

    recovery menu, yes it's german please replace :( wasn't able to get it in english by changing system language and doing update-grub

  4. In some cases failsafeX will load fine (You lucky dog), for others (Me) it will give an error along the lines of "The system is running in low-graphics mode" and will stay there forever. When this happens, press CTRL+ALT+F1 to go to the terminal. Type in your Username and Password.

    low graphics mode error message

  5. Reinstall the drivers depending on your case:

    • Nvidia

      sudo apt-get install nvidia-current - More stable/tested version sudo apt-get install nvidia-current-updates - More up-to-date version

      For other cases see this answer for details and follow the links there to help you along the way.

    • AMD/ATI

      The simple way is to sudo apt-get install fglrx. If this does not work keep reading.

      Go to AMDs support site and download the driver you need. (If you have a newer card, you may want to download be the latest beta driver instead of the stable one. You would need to compare release dates and read through release notes to find out which driver version supports which chips.) Put the downloaded driver in some folder and rename it to "amd-gpu.run" to simplify name. Go to the folder where you downloaded the file and type chmod +x amd-gpu.run to give it Executable Permission. Now just simply run ./sh amd-gpu.run and follow the onscreen steps.

      After rebooting all problems should be solved. If you test 'Additional Drivers' with a problem like this it will finish downloading the package but then it will give an error. It also gives the same error if you use 'Software Center' and 'Synaptic'. The only way was to go to the failsafeX option and do the workaround about changing to the tty1 terminal and doing it via command line.

Note that if the problem occured after installing an unsupported driver from the amd site then you may have to first delete the driver you had installed. For this, run in the tty session (i.e) in the terminal screen you get after pressing CTRL+ALT+F1 :

sudo aticonfig --uninstall

(If this command didnt work then check this site . Look under the "Uninstalling the AMD Catalyst™ Proprietary Driver" heading.) After doing this, you may reboot with the command :

sudo shutdown -r now

Now you must get back access to the Unity desktop(Of course with the AMD driver uninstalled). Then you can get to this site which clearly helps in choosing the right AMD driver for your System specifications. Also read the release notes for the latest driver for your graphic card(Especially check if your system satisfies all the system requirements). Then after downloading your driver installer(the .zip file) get to this site and follow the instructions to install your driver. Your driver must be installed and it should work successfully.

I also need to add that I do not recommend downloading the Drivers from the Nvidia site since they:

 * Might create additional problems with Ubuntu
 * Are not updated automatically
 * Are not tested thoroughly in Ubuntu

Always use the nvidia-current package or the nvidia-current-updates one. These are tested and approved already for the Ubuntu version you are using and will give less errors and incompatibility bugs.

Issues with Intel graphics

For Intel it is recommended to do the following after doing all the steps mentioned above but before installing anything (When you are in the Terminal). You can choose Xorg-Edgers which is a PPA that brings many improvements, latest video drivers and more:

Warning: This PPA is very unstable for some things. So do it with that in mind.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:xorg-edgers/ppa -y

After that sudo apt-get update and you should receive several updates. X-Swat currently does not have Intel drivers in the latest versions of Ubuntu.


Update log

UPDATE 1: Added this extensive answer to solve many of the problems that might end with the error mentioned here: How do I install the Nvidia drivers?

UPDATE 2: AMD is no longer releasing (stable) graphics drivers on a monthly basis and not all graphics chips are supported by their Linux drivers upon product release. At the time of this update the latest stable driver is almost 5 months older than the latest beta driver. You should look at the release notes to check if there is a driver that supports your graphics chip and the software versions you are using (X.org xserver or Mir).


Like always please test and give feedback so I can enhance my answer since others will be also reading it. The better it is, the more people it will help.

31
  • 1
    After trying all the other solutions, that's the one that worked for me. Thanks!
    – Matthieu
    Mar 21, 2013 at 22:34
  • 1
    Upgrading from 12.04 to 13.10 with Radeon 3000: I had to remove and purge the fglrx, then remove "nomodeset" from my /etc/default/grub, then update-grub. To remove fglrx {sudo apt-get remove --purge xorg-driver-fglrx fglrx*} {sudo apt-get install --reinstall libgl1-mesa-glx libgl1-mesa-dri xserver-xorg-core} {sudo dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg}. Also had to add "radeon.audio=1" to /etc/default/grub Mar 25, 2014 at 13:57
  • 1
    This worked wonderfully on a Lenovo ultrabook using AMD. I have one small suggestion though - please include a section on how to enable wireless internet from the CLI. I originally opted to do an offline install (slow internet speed at the office) and of course couldn't apt-get anything. Googling for CLI wifi connections turned up pages far too complex for someone new to Linux like me. Ultimately I had to drop the partition and start from scratch with an online install.
    – Drew
    Jun 26, 2014 at 23:38
  • 1
    ctrl+alt+f1 doesn't give me a terminal Aug 27, 2014 at 0:54
  • 3
    I had kept an additional kernel having one step lower version. When the screen i.stack.imgur.com/5kllk.png showed up, I selected the lower kernel and could login in normally. Though I still did see some system errors. I corrected them later.
    – maan81
    Aug 24, 2015 at 9:14
78

I solved this problem by reinstalling ubuntu-desktop.

When the message that "your system is running in low-graphics mode" appears, press Ctrl+Alt+F1, then login with your credentials.

And then, run the following commands:

  • sudo apt-get install --reinstall ubuntu-desktop
  • sudo reboot
16
  • 2
    when i give this command!i got memory is full no more space available! Apr 4, 2013 at 14:33
  • 6
    This may help when the problem is to do with the desktop, but usually for me this type of problem comes from a combination of the graphics drivers and a kernel upgrade. In this case the other answers here are more appropriate, with particular reference to @Luis.
    – Bobble
    Jun 12, 2013 at 6:06
  • 1
    For me it started with the network-manager-gnome being on version 0.9.4.1-0ubuntu2.4, which meant that 'Edit Connections...' was greyed out. When I forced 0.9.4.1-0ubuntu2 in Synaptic Package Manager, it decided for 'ubuntu-desktop' and 'unity-greeter' to be removed. I hadn't realized at first, I was just happy to have the 'Edit Connections...' option back in the downgraded applet. Well, until the next restart where nothing seemed to help. After following this advice, I can use my system again, but of course 'Edit Connections...' is greyed out again...
    – bug313
    Mar 25, 2015 at 12:02
  • 1
    My issue not solved after reinstalling desktop, what i can do more
    – Shiv Singh
    Jul 29, 2015 at 13:53
  • 1
    this worked. First I reinstalled my nvidia drivers then used this. Thanks a tom Jan 8, 2018 at 19:44
52

The greeter is invalid

This is a bug in LightDM and a bug report has already been filed.

The reason why you end up with this failsafe X is because the pantheon-greeter you installed along with the elementary desktop is now not available and LightDM is not able to identify an alternative greeter.

As a workaround, you can edit the LightDM conf file and correct the error.

Run the following command in a terminal:

sudo nano /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf

and change the line

greeter-session=pantheon-greeter

to

greeter-session=unity-greeter

and save it.

After changing the file, reboot and you will now be greeted with Unity greeter.

14
  • 3
    This doesn't help in my case. I already have the unity-greeter in /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf
    – Sauli
    Oct 23, 2013 at 11:23
  • 2
    @Sauli but are you sure that the unity-greeter package is installed on your machine? In my case, after an upgrade to 13.10, lightdm.conf indeed mentioned unity-greeter, although I only had lightdm-gtk-greeter installed. You might want to check which greeter is installed on your machine (e.g. through synaptic).
    – Virgile
    Oct 24, 2013 at 11:53
  • 2
    I ran into this problem after following the instructions from the easylinuxtipsproject page on converting from ubuntu to xubuntu. In this case, the following changes needed to be made in /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf: change user-session from ubuntu to xubuntu and change greeter-session from unity-greeter to lightdm-gtk-greeter May 10, 2015 at 15:39
  • 2
    That file doesn't exist on my Ubuntu 16.10 - only /etc/init/lightdm.conf which doesn't contain the string "greeter".
    – user643722
    Jan 14, 2017 at 15:08
  • 1
    This made the trick after reinstalling nvidia drivers Jan 8, 2018 at 19:31
38

You have too many files on your computer, and have exhausted disk space

Try moving personal files off the computer onto a USB drive.


To check whether this is the issue:

  1. Press Ctrl + Alt + F1
  2. Type df -h
  3. If you see that there is no space available on the root (/) then you need to free some space.

To free space you can:

  1. sudo apt-get autoclean
  2. Look for large directories with sudo du -sc /*/* |sort -g and delete unwanted content,
  3. Clean your home directory using a combination of

    cd ~   
    du -sc * |sort -g
    rm myLargeFile
    

When this is done, restart: shutdown -r now

8
  • It is a valid reason. If you exhaust disk space. Ubuntu will run in low graphics mode. I tested this in virtual machine.
    – Web-E
    Nov 23, 2012 at 10:46
  • 3
    Thanks! This did the job for me. Initially I did not think of checking the remaining space on the SSD.
    – Andre
    May 5, 2013 at 0:31
  • Happens also in 13.04. This is definitely a usability bug since there is no message anywhere that can give a clue about the disk space issue.
    – Avio
    Jul 18, 2013 at 6:32
  • My issue now is that in recovery mode it is mounting the disk in read only mode so I'm unable to delete any files to resolve the issue. Any idea how to resolve this?.
    – Abby
    Sep 14, 2013 at 4:22
  • I guess this may have been related to my case. I was running out of space on /root. But freeing space with clean or autoclean didn't solve the wholw problem nor did repartitioning and allocating more space.
    – Sauli
    Oct 23, 2013 at 11:28
25

When this happens there is often an error message indicating why it failed to start X.

Look in your /var/log/Xorg.0.log.old or /var/log/Xorg.0.log. The error (if there is one) will be at the tail end of the file. Another good place to look is the log files in /var/log/gdm/* (or /var/log/lightdm/* in oneiric and later).

Did you happen to manually install fglrx prior to noticing the problem? If it was not uninstalled properly it can cause weird random issues. Directions for purging fglrx are available at here.

Is your video card an AGP model? If so, a common issue with ati agp cards is having an incorrect AGPMode. Sometimes you can adjust this setting in your BIOS (which perhaps windows screwed with?) There is also a setting in /etc/X11/xorg.conf for adjusting it in X.

21

It is not related to Nvidia drivers. Because by default Ubuntu uses non-Nvidia drivers even though you might have Nvidia GPUs. I have an Nvidia GPU too.

My Ubuntu used to boot fine until something happened which caused the same issue. After reading posts, reading logs and little bit trial and error, turns out the problem is related to lightdm GUI server.

I don't know solution to the problem but there is a quick work around in 3 steps. This will save you from reinstalling Ubuntu.

  1. When the error shows up, hit Ctrl+Alt+F1. This will open the command line interface. Login as root.

  2. Remove a particular X11 config file. This file is not really required.

    rm /etc/X11/xorg.conf.failsafe
    

    Somehow, the existence of the above X11 configuration file causes the OS to throw that error.

  3. Restart lightdm GUI server.

    service lightdm restart
    

This will restart the lightdm GUI server and voila your desktop is back!

5
  • 1
    I did exactly this and it worked for me, not sure if this is worth mentioning(using a nvidia gtx860m)
    – jayeshkv
    Jul 14, 2015 at 1:58
  • This was the answer that ultimately solved it for me (along with doing sudo apt-get upgrade etc.). Using NVIDIA GeForce 7025. Sep 28, 2015 at 17:50
  • This worked for me. Shocking.
    – rjmoggach
    Dec 3, 2017 at 3:46
  • This works for me but when I restart the system the file is created again and system goes into low graphics mode. Is there a work around this? How can I stop from creating this file? Jun 11, 2018 at 18:08
  • This seems to have worked, and seems much less intrusive than the reinstall of the desktop.
    – kcrisman
    Aug 7, 2018 at 22:10
17

Let's assume, arrogantly, that it is a problem with your X display manager.

Enter the terminal (you can use a virtual console if you cannot use a graphical terminal window), the one you said that you have access to, and enter the following:

sudo apt-get install gdm

. . . and choose gdm.

Then type:

sudo service gdm restart

(Or ... start instead of restart.)

According to https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1070150 this is a way to workaround a bug with lightdm.

Before typing that, you may need to first stop the other display manager that is running. This is usually LightDM:

sudo service lightdm stop

If you have trouble getting GDM to start, and this is an installed system rather than a live environment, then you can just reboot and it will start automatically because you configured it as the default display manager. (You should be able to shut down and restart normally. Otherwise, one way to reboot if the GUI is not working properly is to press Ctrl+Alt+Delete while on a virtual console.)

4
  • This did work for me, but could you please explain why it would work?
    – Radagasp
    Feb 2, 2015 at 13:08
  • I'm sorry, I'm not an expert. I just posted a solution I found for myself. Feb 2, 2015 at 20:19
  • This didn't work for me and got me further off, now I don't even get the low graphics error but just a black screen.
    – Ansjovis86
    Apr 7, 2017 at 15:07
  • Don't do this solution if you already have lightdm. My system got screwed up as I was running two such services. Luckily I got out of the mess with switching back to lightdm by running this command: sudo dpkg-reconfigure gdm3
    – Ansjovis86
    Apr 7, 2017 at 21:49
13

Only for ATI graphics cards

When the message that "your system is running in low-graphics mode" appears:
Press Ctrl+Alt+F1 to see the terminal one. Then login with your credentials, and then run the following commands:

sudo apt-get install fglrx    
sudo reboot

The same can be done from the recovery mode (after enabling networking), if your Ubuntu completly refuses to enter anything but recovery mode.

0
13

Follow these commands:

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get -d install --reinstall gdm
sudo apt-get remove --purge gdm

(I ran this command above, but was told by the system to use # sudo apt-get autoremove instead, after the #sudo apt-get remove --purge gdm command.)

sudo apt-get install gdm

select GDM when prompted

sudo reboot

That fixed it for me :)

It took very long to start after the reboot, 10+ mins. But I got in eventually.

0
12

I have recently received a similar issue with myPangolin Performance laptop. The folks at System 76 told me to do the following:

Click Okay and then select the option to get a terminal. (alternatively you can press ctr+alt+f1 to bring up another tty)

sudo chown lightdm:lightdm -R /var/lib/lightdm
sudo chown avahi-autoipd:avahi-autoipd -R /var/lib/avahi-autoipd
sudo chown colord:colord -R /var/lib/colord

reboot

These commands did the trick for me.

1
  • Anyone, reading this, have messed up with /var permission, should try this.
    – Ajeeb.K.P
    Mar 21, 2016 at 10:01
10
  • If you have a problem with the restricted (closed source) driver , then try to remove it.

Open a terminal and give this command

gksudo software-properties-gtk 

Goto Additional drivers and remove the dirver. You have to mark the Using X.Org X server -- Nouveau.

Then Reboot.

enter image description here

  • If you have not access at all to the Desktop Environment then use the Recovery Mode.

To remove the Nvidia current driver in Ubuntu 12.10

enter image description here

enter image description here

Select the Network and your root partition will mounted as Read-Write.

enter image description here

Select the Root enter image description here

And then give these commands with order

apt-get remove --purge nvidia-current 
rm /etc/X11/xorg.conf 
apt-get install ubuntu-desktop
reboot

The last command will reboot your system and hopefully you will login normally in next reboot with the Open Source nouveau driver.

  • If you have problem with the open source driver (nouveau) , in the same manner (from recovery mode) try to install the restricted (Nvidia) driver with these commands

When you reach the Root selection and after select root

To install nvidia-current driver.

 apt-get install linux-source 
 apt-get install linux-headers-$(uname -r)
 apt-get install nvidia-current 
 nvidia-xconfig 
 reboot

According to this answer : Ubuntu 12.10 Desktop does not show when I installed nvidia drivers! may need to install or reinstall the linux-headers to get the restricted Nvidia drivers work properly.

4
  • This is not a problem with the restricted or closed driver. It came just after i had a fresh install of 12.10 on my laptop. Oct 20, 2012 at 6:41
  • Then try to do the opposite . Follow the guide from recovery mode and install the restricted driver , when you reach the root environment give these commands apt-get install nvidia-current and nvidia-xconfig and reboot I edited my answer.
    – NickTux
    Oct 20, 2012 at 6:46
  • Didn't work on my laptop :( Oct 24, 2012 at 14:35
  • You are a legend, man. This solved my problems. It astounds me that after TWELVE years they still haven't included a solid default multi-monitor installation for one of the TWO most common graphics card types in the world.
    – Swader
    Oct 25, 2012 at 21:21
7

This problem destroyed my morning. It turns out that if your root filesystem runs out of space then Ubuntu will boot into low graphics mode and it's hard to figure out why since the xorg log shows nothing wrong. To find out from the command line if you're low on space type

df -h

Sample output from my machine:

Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda6        18G   10G  6.6G  61% /
udev            3.9G  4.0K  3.9G   1% /dev
tmpfs           3.9G  108K  3.9G   1% /tmp
tmpfs           1.6G  1.2M  1.6G   1% /run
none            5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
none            3.9G  1.3M  3.9G   1% /run/shm
none            100M   16K  100M   1% /run/user
/dev/sda4       317G   33G  285G  11% /media/data
/dev/sda1       197M   16M  182M   8% /boot/efi

If your / mount has a high Use% (90%+) then this could be your problem. In my case, ~/.xsession.errors had grown to fill most of my partition and caused me to fall into low-graphics mode. Found my answer for that in this Ubuntuforums thread:

rm ~/.xsession-errors
mkdir ~/.xsession-errors
6

Try delete your /etc/X11/xorg.conf and restart.

Before restart, run

sudo apt-get install xserver-xorg-video-ati xserver-xorg-video-radeon
0
5

I had a similar problem.

When I was booting my PC, i was getting the following message: “Ubuntu is running in low-graphics mode”

When I used startx on the command prompt however, everything was fine and i could start the xserver.

Now I found out that for some strange reason GDM has been uninstalled (it took me hours to realize that), i did fix the problem by reinstalling gdm with:

apt-get install gdm

now everything's running. Hope this helps you.

5

Well, I had the same problem and solved it.

  1. Start ubuntu with recovery mode from grub then choose filesystem check followed by enable networking.

  2. Choose root option to get to terminal. Now uninstall the old drivers

    sh /usr/share/ati/fglrx-uninstall

  3. Then reinstall the drivers following the methods for precise from this website https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BinaryDriverHowto/ATI.

  4. After that everything works out just fine, I suggest you do

    apt-get update && apt-get upgrade && apt-get autoremove

    -everytime you complete a step. Good luck.

0
5

Install gdm from the default Ubuntu repositories. OIn 16.04 and later gdm has been updated to gdm3. GDM provides the equivalent of a "login:" prompt for X displays: it asks for a login and starts X sessions.

During the installation of gdm you will be asked to select either gdm (or gdm3 in 16.04 and later) or lightdm as the default login display manager. Select gdm.


NVIDIA graphics

nvidia-current has been discontinued in Ubuntu 18.04 and later in favor of the proprietary NVIDIA graphics driver that is shown by ubuntu-drivers devices and installed by sudo ubuntu-drivers install. The name of the Nvidia driver package starts with nvidia-driver-. Search for all available Nvidia driver packages with apt search nvidia-driver-*

AMD graphics

fglrx has been discontinued in Ubuntu 16.04 and later in favor of the built-in AMD graphics driver.

4

You said that you were stuck in low graphics mode and now you say that you can only get a command prompt. What happens when you type: startx

If you are stuck in a command prompt all is not lost. You can still reconfigure xserver with: sudo dpkg --reconfigure --phigh xserver-xorg

2
  • 2
    dpkg-reconfigure xorg no longer does anything useful, since X is generally much better at detecting your hardware than our crufty old maintainer scripts were.
    – RAOF
    Nov 2, 2010 at 5:50
  • not allays true @RAOF, I have some old hardware that can not be properly detected unless I reinstall xorg completely.
    – Mateo
    Nov 30, 2012 at 22:15
4

I had the same problem with an Acer Aspire 3810tg. I solved it by doing the following:

  • Do a normal boot
  • Press Ctrl-Alt-F1 on the "Your system is running in low-graphics mode" screen
  • Download the correct driver from http://support.amd.com/us/gpudownload/Pages/index.aspx, in my case (ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4330): wget http://www2.ati.com/drivers/linux/amd-driver-installer-12-4-x86.x86_64.run which should also cover your case (Mobility Radeon HD 4xxx Series)
  • chmod 755 amd-driver-installer-12-4-x86.x86_64.run to make the file executable
  • sudo ./amd-driver-installer-12-4-x86.x86_64.run and follow the standard steps
  • You might need to run: sudo aticonfig --initial, but that was not necessary for me.

In my case the driver installation finished with an error, but it still worked. I hope this helps.

0
4

Which ubuntu version are you running? Did you installed graphics drivers before the problem or is it a post clean-os-install issue? Giving some more info would be helpful for us to help you.

If you messed with the graphic drivers before the problem came up, get to the login screen, press Ctrl+Alt+F1, login, then:

  • sudo apt-get purge nvidia-*
  • sudo apt-get autoremove
  • sudo apt-get linux-source linux-headers-generic
  • sudo apt-get install nvidia-current
  • sudo nvidia-xconfig
  • sudo shutdown -r now

Of course, if you have an ATI videocard you have to change the nvidia-* and nvidia-current for your ATI drivers package.

2
  • What are you expecting to do with sudo apt-get linux-source linux-headers-generic, apt-get will return error.
    – Braiam
    Jul 26, 2013 at 1:31
  • similar to this answer, and after trying several other answers: dpkg -l | grep nvidia then remove purge every single package from this list, e.g. sudo apt-get remove --purge nvidia finally, sudo apt-get install nvidia-current sudo shutdown -r now
    – cdvel
    Apr 10, 2017 at 2:17
3

Phenomenon: I first saw Booting without full network configuration message that never ended. After Action-1 below, I faced The system is running in low-graphics mode issue.

Action-1: Force to shutdown the machine (by keeping power button pressed as normal). Choose recovery boot.

Effective solution: Remove & install xserver-xorg, inspired by this thread.


Edit) after creating xorg.conf and had it read in xserver, I faced the same issue again. This time, in addition to re-install xserver-xorg, I had to create /etc/X11/xorg.conf file (I did so by copying the backup file I already made).

1
  • @guntbert agreed. I updated my answer.
    – IsaacS
    Apr 2, 2013 at 21:08
3

I just had to disable Internal Graphics Board on BIOS display.

Using ga-z87n/ga-h87n (GIGABYTE) motherboard.

3

Or, the most likely of the reasons with old PC's is:

Your graphic card just do not support unity.

Try Lubuntu/Xubuntu instead.

Unity requires: Any graphics card with OpenGL 1.4 support (All GPUs released today by either NVidia, AMD or Intel; GPUs released by NVidia and AMD over the last 5 years; GPUs released by Intel after the GMA 950). If you card don't meet this requirements, then is just that you can't use Unity (yet).

1

Try to boot from grub using a different parameter or even booting an older kernel from the list.

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BootOptions

See the section on kernel options. Something like: xforcevesa

Good luck! :)

1

Follow these commands:

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get -d install --reinstall gdm
sudo apt-get remove --purge gdm
sudo apt-get install gdm
sudo apt-get remove --purge xserver-xgl compiz compiz-plugins compiz-core compiz-manager csm cgwd cgwd-themes
sudo apt-get install --reinstall compiz compiz-core compiz-fusion-plugins-extra compiz-fusion-plugins-main compiz-gnome compiz-plugins libcompizconfig0
sudo dpkg-reconfigure -phigh xserver-xorg

choose the driver 'ati' and when you get to monitor resolution choose the resolution you want to run and any resolution ABOVE that resolution should be removed. Once that is done issue the following:*

sudo reboot

You will most likely get errors on specific packages. Repeat the command removing the problem package until it works.

There will be a time where you will be without the desktop, so have another internet connected device nearby to reference this from or to Google with in case of emergency.

This worked for me, hope this helps.

*If you are never prompted, just skip this.

1
  1. Press CTRL+ALT+F1 to open a terminal
  2. log in
  3. look at the end of your /var/log/Xorg.0.log
  4. if the message error is Cannot run in framebuffer mode. Please specify busIDs. then run the following commands:

    sudo apt-get install --reinstall lightdm
    sudo reboot
1

I had the same problem but this method works for me.

When you get The system is running low-graphics mode error,press ctrl+alt+F1 ,it will take you to the console.
Then it will asks for username and passwordto login,give that.Once you logged in to the console run the below command,

sudo rm /etc/X11/xorg.conf
sudo service lightdm restart

It will get you back to the GUI login.Why this problem occurs means,after you installed graphics drivers,it creates xorg.conf file in /etc/X11 folder.Which prevents the system from GUI login.

0

I had a special case of this problem, where I somehow caused the removal of some packages. I only noticed the actual problem after some time spent looking at the problem.

So:

  1. Log into the text mode console
  2. Enter the command: sudo apt-get install ubuntu-desktop

This will ensure all the needed packages are installed. Without some of those, symptoms like those described here may occur.

0

I had the issue when I upgraded from 11.10 on my Acer Aspire One AO-722. I also had the propriety ATi/AMD driver installed from 11.10, which carried over to the 12.04 installation. I followed this guide to remove the proprietary drivers and use the Open Source drivers. http://wiki.cchtml.com/index.php/Ubuntu_Oneiric_Installation_Guide#Removing_Catalyst.2Ffglrx Everything seems to be working now.

1
  • 1
    Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! Whilst this may theoretically answer the question, it would be preferable to include the essential parts of the answer here, and provide the link for reference.
    – fossfreedom
    May 7, 2012 at 8:58
0

You need to install the kernel headers manually then reinstall nvidia for some reason then the nvidia drivers will work

2
  • The modules for the driver have to be build for the individual kernel to use and this is why the kernel headers have to be installed. Usually they are pulled in via dependencies when installing the drivers.
    – LiveWireBT
    Oct 23, 2012 at 4:10
  • It didn't work for me. I installed the headers and then the drivers as mentioned :( Oct 24, 2012 at 14:36
0

Your Memory may be bad.

If you experience Low graphics mode intermittently like I was.

  1. Run a memory check to check for memory errors.

  2. Buy New memory(Make sure it is the right type for your computer)

  3. Run the memory test again, to make sure all is good.

The Low Graphics Mode error should now be gone.

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