When I login, nothing happens.
I am presented with my desktop wallpaper.

No Dash, no Launcher, nothing.
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When I login, nothing happens. I am presented with my desktop wallpaper.
No Dash, no Launcher, nothing. |
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You just need to turn the Unity plugin back on. The problem is this is a pain in the bottom because you've now got no graphical method to do this. So:
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A solution good for me (has solved the same problem): in a terminal:
and then
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In 13.04 and 14.04:
Reboot if it doesn't work right away. |
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For 12.10 and below:Press Ctrl+Alt+T for a terminal and run You also may then need to run a |
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It is a good idea to check your graphics driver is configured to use hardware acceleration and it is configured to use OpenGL. Try searching Ask Ubuntu and Ubuntu Forums for information specific to your GPUs and Ubuntu flavour. For hybrid graphics users see the last section "Hybrid Graphics" below. You might want to run the compizconfig-settings-manager For 12.04 And Newer
If unity still does not load try:
Reboot if it doesn't work right away. For 11.10 And OlderIf you hope into a TTY (Ctrl+Alt+F1 through F6) and run:
It will reset Unity back on TTY 7 (Ctrl+Alt++F7). You can also try just:
But that won't work if a windows manager is already running on display 0 (it will give you an error, just use If Unity absolutely refuses to restart try this: Install
Than run it on display 0:
You should then have Gnome 2 style panels on your desktop, which you can use to logout. Hybrid GraphicsSome very useful information and further reading for hybrid graphics users can be found here. Once GPUs are configured appropriately for 3D acceleration and OpenGL you can:
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The easiest way to do this is to press Ctrl+Alt+T to get a terminal and then issue:
and your unity session will come back before your eyes.. This technique is better than re-launching ccsm, because you can get into OP's error condition without even accidentally de-selecting unity in ccsm; you can get it simply by accidentally pressing the "preferences" button in ccsm. |
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I had this problem too. I solved it with deleting the content of the ~/.config/compiz-1/compizconfig file and relog.
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I have had exactly the same issue. If you have Compiz Config Settings Manager installed it may be that the Unity Desktop Plugin is disabled. Log in to a Unity 2D desktop and check that it is enabled in CCSM like this,
Unity Shell will not load in the default desktop if the tickbox is not checked and you will get the session in your picture. |
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Developers are always fixing bugs, so an alternative is to wait, and to follow progress on bug fixing (subscribe to Unity development in Launchpad).
UPDATE: I was able to resolve this by using (This is adapted from this Ubuntu Forums post.)
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I have an Asus U36SD using an "Optimus" (Intel + Nvidia GPUs) set-up. I had Ubuntu 12.04 working just fine, but upgrading to 12.10, this problem appeared and persisted in 13.04. I have managed to fix it trough the following steps:
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The original poster of the duplicate question, solved in editing his own question:
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For 13.10:Just to insure everything is installed:
Next, reload everything:
I just tried this and it works! Source: https://askubuntu.com/a/204784/54037 If all else fails:Remember, always make backups! However, sometimes a fresh install is good, reinstall Ubuntu? |
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It seems there's a problem with 12.04 Unity 3D and the current Nvidia drivers. See this post (Unity 3d no longer works after installing 12.04) for details of how to work round the problem. I have a 32 bit Pentium 4 3.06 GHz Compaq D520SFF, with an Nvidia GeForce 6200, running kernel 3.2.0-24-generic-pae, and had exactly the same problem (2D works, 3D doesn't), and downgrading the Nvidia drivers got 3D working for me in a couple of minutes. |
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For the icons, it is due to Nautilus. Write EDIT 10/10/2013: for Nautilus you can also type Alt + F2 to open Unity command line prompt and write |
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I had a similar problem: unity with 14.04 in combination with IBM Notes9 resulted in some strange behavior (mouse clicks would stop working). My workaround for that was to open a terminal and restart unity by typing The last time I did that, it totally corrupted unity - the no dash, no launcher no nothing. I think I tried EVERY suggestion that is listed on this page - none of it did help. But a coworker finally had the answer that worked for me: Afterwards, unity was back alive. Obviously all prior configuration changes to unity were gone, but that is what And the big advantage of this solution: it requires you to only add a single package and to redo your unity config changes - but you do not have to reset compiz, install ccsm, or follow all the other lengthy activities. Update: the other solution I find very helpful nowadays comes from here - the point: sometimes you have to remove (or even better: pull in a "working" backup) of your ~/.config/dconf/user file. |
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If you hope into a tty (Ctrl+Alt+F1 through F6) and run:
It will reset Unity back on tty 7 (Ctrl+Alt++F7). You can also try just:
But that won't work if a windows manager is already running on display 0 (it will give you an error, just use If Unity absolutely refuses to restart try this: Install
Than run it on display 0:
You should then have Gnome 2 style panels on your desktop, which you can use to logout. I find Unity to be really buggy on 13.04 with my Nvidia card.. YMMV. |
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I have had about 3 times where I needed the Ctrl+Alt+F1 to not loose work and it messed up... I have nvidia also. I would like to suggest this: Ctrl+Alt+F1 (ok, blank screen) Type your login, hit Enter, then password (all in blank screen) type this now:
will have to type password again and Enter
this will open a X session at Ctrl+Alt+F8 (will jump to it automatically)
now create a new empty text file called
save it, change its permissions to executable, and run it, you will get a truly relieving terminal that makes you remember why Linux is good ! :D after you finish, remember to Ctrl+Alt+F1, hit Ctrl+C (will end the new X session), type exit, Enter, will end the terminal (blank screen) session. if you think you missed typing exit, just hit Ctrl+C and type again, don’t do it too fast. so you can improve it, make a script to let you type as little as possible, but anyway you will still have to type a lot while the screen is blank, but it is better than nothing :) Still looking for definitive Ctrl+Alt+F1 proper solution Ubuntu 12.04 + nvidia. |
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If you use an acceleration graphics card alongside the default graphics card, it's possibly due to the installation of their drivers. A few updates of acceleration graphics cards drivers in systems that have two graphics card tend to present unstable behavior in some systems. I have an Nvidia card and an Intel card. It used to happen with me when I installed Nvidia drivers. Launcher and panel would disappear from the the desktop. If you use an Nvidia card, installing Bumblebee could be a temporary solution: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Bumblebee |
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The first answer works fine, except I needed to install Unity itself:
then run:
and enable Unity :) |
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I had pretty much the same problem under 12.04. Unity was slow with my aged GPU, so I was using Unity 2d as my desktop for months. For no apparent reason, it suddenly refused to display launchpad and title bar (for all users). Reenabling Unity in CCSM as sugggested here was part of the solution, but none of the other measures suggested here, there or in several other related threads, including, but not limited to:
helped me to completely resolve these symptoms under 12.04 (64 bit).
would not work for me. After delivering a variety of error and information messages, it would always hang at:
as shown in the log posted in the thread titled "unity has vanished" for unity run with no arguments. I noticed that the error message delivered by:
was similar to some of the errors reported by error while loading shared libraries: libGL.so.1: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory. After extensive searching, I found the following solution:
This not only allowed both unity_support_test-p and |
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When I accidentally upgraded from 12.04 LTS Ubuntu to 13.04, I too had to face the same issues such as missing side menu bar, no window options, not being able to switch between applications (alt-tab) and I couldn't even drag windows on the screen. After following so many options I ended up with the following set of commands to fix these issues.
reboot (you can use
reboot (you can use
I actually removed aspell because of conflicting dependency. This might not have any correlation between this issue. I think re-installing lightdm and resetting compiz helped me in fixing this. |
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It happens when you login with another tty and try, as the same user, to start X (with startx or initx) . For example, Ubuntu runs in tty7. With Ctrl+Alt+F1 tty1 opens. Log in as the same user, and run startx. Go back to tty7, logout and login. You only get the desktop wall paper. To solve the problem, choose tty1, login, remove the .Xauthority file in your home directory, logout, login. Solved. |
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I am having the same issue, and solved by following using
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I tried many of the solutions mentioned in this thread as well as others. Finally this worked for me:
then
Thanks everybody for contributing. |
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Today I've encountered situation where user of my script has decided to launch it by placing the call to script into his Scripts by nature are sequential, so I've done the same thing,called the script from The solution was to remove appropriate line from the Link to original script and discussion here: https://askubuntu.com/a/739631/295286 |
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This happened to me as well in Ubuntu 16.04 after an upgrade of unity and compiz packages. None of the above worked. The only way I found to have launchers and dashes back was to remove (while NOT logged into Unity) the directory .cache in my home. |
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I had the same issue after doing Press ctrl - alt - F1 to get to the terminal, then:
That fixed it for me after hours of pulling my hair out. |
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I had this Problem, I tried a load of things and even enabled unity, but nothing worked. First, you need to open TTY (ctrl+alt+F1) and login. Now use
Close TTY with ctrl+alt+F7, then use (in terminal)
After that, use
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I had the same problem and all the suggestions above failed for me. I made the following steps:
Then, you don't need KDE anymore. ;-) |
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I had recently edited my So if you've recently modified your |
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$ mv ~/.config/dconf/user ~/.config/dconf/user.old– r3x Jul 8 '15 at 19:04