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How to get Plymouth working with LUKS encryption after NVIDIA driver installation?



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InHow to fix plymouth (splash screen) in all Ubuntu releases!Why is the resolution incorrectly set on boot after installing the Nvidia drivers?How to install proprietary Nvidia driver in 12.04?Text gets displayed during boot after Nvidia installtionNvidia 840M driver installation Acer E5-571Cannot get right resolution with Nvidia driverUbuntu 16.04 - switching from nouveau to closed source driver, after LUKS auth purple screenCorrect steps to install NVidia driver + CUDA after fresh install of Ubuntu Desktop 16.04.02 LTSHow to enable text-mode LUKS passphrase prompt on boot?Ubuntu won't boot after upgrade to 18.04Using nvidia driver combined with encrypted system drive in Ubuntu 18.04



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0















When I first set my computer up with LUKS encryption, during boot, right after Grub2, Plymouth takes over and you get a nice graphical screen with the prompt to enter the passphrase. And that screens remain until the Ubuntu desktop opens.



Once I installed the NVIDIA driver for my video card, that graphical screen is gone, and right after Grub2, there is a text screen for passphrase entry, then once decryption takes place, the NVIDIA logo comes up. And on shutdown/restart, it also dumps into a text screen.



I've seen some solutions on fixing Plymouth after an NVIDIA driver is installed, but not sure if that works with LUKS encryption, and I don't want to risk screwing things up and not being able to decrypt the partition.



This is for Xubuntu 14.04.4










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bumped to the homepage by Community 19 mins ago


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  • I tried the fix presented here: askubuntu.com/questions/362722/… It did bring back the graphical screen, but the resolution was off even though I specified my laptop's resolution of 1600x900. Also there was an error once the desktop was launched: late resume failure [non-free: nvidia] I reverted to the snapshot I took just before trying this. Still looking for a working solution to this issue.

    – jub
    Jul 4 '16 at 2:46


















0















When I first set my computer up with LUKS encryption, during boot, right after Grub2, Plymouth takes over and you get a nice graphical screen with the prompt to enter the passphrase. And that screens remain until the Ubuntu desktop opens.



Once I installed the NVIDIA driver for my video card, that graphical screen is gone, and right after Grub2, there is a text screen for passphrase entry, then once decryption takes place, the NVIDIA logo comes up. And on shutdown/restart, it also dumps into a text screen.



I've seen some solutions on fixing Plymouth after an NVIDIA driver is installed, but not sure if that works with LUKS encryption, and I don't want to risk screwing things up and not being able to decrypt the partition.



This is for Xubuntu 14.04.4










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 19 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.















  • I tried the fix presented here: askubuntu.com/questions/362722/… It did bring back the graphical screen, but the resolution was off even though I specified my laptop's resolution of 1600x900. Also there was an error once the desktop was launched: late resume failure [non-free: nvidia] I reverted to the snapshot I took just before trying this. Still looking for a working solution to this issue.

    – jub
    Jul 4 '16 at 2:46














0












0








0








When I first set my computer up with LUKS encryption, during boot, right after Grub2, Plymouth takes over and you get a nice graphical screen with the prompt to enter the passphrase. And that screens remain until the Ubuntu desktop opens.



Once I installed the NVIDIA driver for my video card, that graphical screen is gone, and right after Grub2, there is a text screen for passphrase entry, then once decryption takes place, the NVIDIA logo comes up. And on shutdown/restart, it also dumps into a text screen.



I've seen some solutions on fixing Plymouth after an NVIDIA driver is installed, but not sure if that works with LUKS encryption, and I don't want to risk screwing things up and not being able to decrypt the partition.



This is for Xubuntu 14.04.4










share|improve this question














When I first set my computer up with LUKS encryption, during boot, right after Grub2, Plymouth takes over and you get a nice graphical screen with the prompt to enter the passphrase. And that screens remain until the Ubuntu desktop opens.



Once I installed the NVIDIA driver for my video card, that graphical screen is gone, and right after Grub2, there is a text screen for passphrase entry, then once decryption takes place, the NVIDIA logo comes up. And on shutdown/restart, it also dumps into a text screen.



I've seen some solutions on fixing Plymouth after an NVIDIA driver is installed, but not sure if that works with LUKS encryption, and I don't want to risk screwing things up and not being able to decrypt the partition.



This is for Xubuntu 14.04.4







nvidia plymouth luks






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jul 3 '16 at 22:41









jubjub

1116




1116





bumped to the homepage by Community 19 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 19 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.














  • I tried the fix presented here: askubuntu.com/questions/362722/… It did bring back the graphical screen, but the resolution was off even though I specified my laptop's resolution of 1600x900. Also there was an error once the desktop was launched: late resume failure [non-free: nvidia] I reverted to the snapshot I took just before trying this. Still looking for a working solution to this issue.

    – jub
    Jul 4 '16 at 2:46


















  • I tried the fix presented here: askubuntu.com/questions/362722/… It did bring back the graphical screen, but the resolution was off even though I specified my laptop's resolution of 1600x900. Also there was an error once the desktop was launched: late resume failure [non-free: nvidia] I reverted to the snapshot I took just before trying this. Still looking for a working solution to this issue.

    – jub
    Jul 4 '16 at 2:46

















I tried the fix presented here: askubuntu.com/questions/362722/… It did bring back the graphical screen, but the resolution was off even though I specified my laptop's resolution of 1600x900. Also there was an error once the desktop was launched: late resume failure [non-free: nvidia] I reverted to the snapshot I took just before trying this. Still looking for a working solution to this issue.

– jub
Jul 4 '16 at 2:46






I tried the fix presented here: askubuntu.com/questions/362722/… It did bring back the graphical screen, but the resolution was off even though I specified my laptop's resolution of 1600x900. Also there was an error once the desktop was launched: late resume failure [non-free: nvidia] I reverted to the snapshot I took just before trying this. Still looking for a working solution to this issue.

– jub
Jul 4 '16 at 2:46











1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














This worked: How to fix plymouth (splash screen) in all Ubuntu releases!



The mistake I made when I first tried it is not using the correct resolution. I used the native resolution of my monitor, 1600x1200. But apparently Grub and Plymouth can have a different max resolution than the monitor and video card.



Since hwinfo is not available on Ubuntu 14.04, I booted into Grub2, dropped to command line and ran vbeinfo. Max resolution listed was 1280x800x32.



So with that info, the solution is:



sudo apt-get install v86d
sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


Find this line:



#GRUB_GFXMODE=640x480


leave commented out and add:



GRUB_GFXMODE=1280x800x32 (use max resolution found using vbeinfo)
GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=keep


Save file, then in terminal:



echo FRAMEBUFFER=y | sudo tee /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash
sudo update-initramfs -u
sudo update-grub


This gave me the 'correct' looking resolution for Plymouth both at startup and shutdown. Everything looks like it did before installing the nvidia driver, apart from a brief flash of the nvidia logo between Plymouth and the desktop launching.



I think the 'late resume failure' error report is unrelated, as I did not encounter this error report this time around.






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    0














    This worked: How to fix plymouth (splash screen) in all Ubuntu releases!



    The mistake I made when I first tried it is not using the correct resolution. I used the native resolution of my monitor, 1600x1200. But apparently Grub and Plymouth can have a different max resolution than the monitor and video card.



    Since hwinfo is not available on Ubuntu 14.04, I booted into Grub2, dropped to command line and ran vbeinfo. Max resolution listed was 1280x800x32.



    So with that info, the solution is:



    sudo apt-get install v86d
    sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


    Find this line:



    #GRUB_GFXMODE=640x480


    leave commented out and add:



    GRUB_GFXMODE=1280x800x32 (use max resolution found using vbeinfo)
    GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=keep


    Save file, then in terminal:



    echo FRAMEBUFFER=y | sudo tee /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash
    sudo update-initramfs -u
    sudo update-grub


    This gave me the 'correct' looking resolution for Plymouth both at startup and shutdown. Everything looks like it did before installing the nvidia driver, apart from a brief flash of the nvidia logo between Plymouth and the desktop launching.



    I think the 'late resume failure' error report is unrelated, as I did not encounter this error report this time around.






    share|improve this answer





























      0














      This worked: How to fix plymouth (splash screen) in all Ubuntu releases!



      The mistake I made when I first tried it is not using the correct resolution. I used the native resolution of my monitor, 1600x1200. But apparently Grub and Plymouth can have a different max resolution than the monitor and video card.



      Since hwinfo is not available on Ubuntu 14.04, I booted into Grub2, dropped to command line and ran vbeinfo. Max resolution listed was 1280x800x32.



      So with that info, the solution is:



      sudo apt-get install v86d
      sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


      Find this line:



      #GRUB_GFXMODE=640x480


      leave commented out and add:



      GRUB_GFXMODE=1280x800x32 (use max resolution found using vbeinfo)
      GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=keep


      Save file, then in terminal:



      echo FRAMEBUFFER=y | sudo tee /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash
      sudo update-initramfs -u
      sudo update-grub


      This gave me the 'correct' looking resolution for Plymouth both at startup and shutdown. Everything looks like it did before installing the nvidia driver, apart from a brief flash of the nvidia logo between Plymouth and the desktop launching.



      I think the 'late resume failure' error report is unrelated, as I did not encounter this error report this time around.






      share|improve this answer



























        0












        0








        0







        This worked: How to fix plymouth (splash screen) in all Ubuntu releases!



        The mistake I made when I first tried it is not using the correct resolution. I used the native resolution of my monitor, 1600x1200. But apparently Grub and Plymouth can have a different max resolution than the monitor and video card.



        Since hwinfo is not available on Ubuntu 14.04, I booted into Grub2, dropped to command line and ran vbeinfo. Max resolution listed was 1280x800x32.



        So with that info, the solution is:



        sudo apt-get install v86d
        sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


        Find this line:



        #GRUB_GFXMODE=640x480


        leave commented out and add:



        GRUB_GFXMODE=1280x800x32 (use max resolution found using vbeinfo)
        GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=keep


        Save file, then in terminal:



        echo FRAMEBUFFER=y | sudo tee /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash
        sudo update-initramfs -u
        sudo update-grub


        This gave me the 'correct' looking resolution for Plymouth both at startup and shutdown. Everything looks like it did before installing the nvidia driver, apart from a brief flash of the nvidia logo between Plymouth and the desktop launching.



        I think the 'late resume failure' error report is unrelated, as I did not encounter this error report this time around.






        share|improve this answer















        This worked: How to fix plymouth (splash screen) in all Ubuntu releases!



        The mistake I made when I first tried it is not using the correct resolution. I used the native resolution of my monitor, 1600x1200. But apparently Grub and Plymouth can have a different max resolution than the monitor and video card.



        Since hwinfo is not available on Ubuntu 14.04, I booted into Grub2, dropped to command line and ran vbeinfo. Max resolution listed was 1280x800x32.



        So with that info, the solution is:



        sudo apt-get install v86d
        sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


        Find this line:



        #GRUB_GFXMODE=640x480


        leave commented out and add:



        GRUB_GFXMODE=1280x800x32 (use max resolution found using vbeinfo)
        GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=keep


        Save file, then in terminal:



        echo FRAMEBUFFER=y | sudo tee /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash
        sudo update-initramfs -u
        sudo update-grub


        This gave me the 'correct' looking resolution for Plymouth both at startup and shutdown. Everything looks like it did before installing the nvidia driver, apart from a brief flash of the nvidia logo between Plymouth and the desktop launching.



        I think the 'late resume failure' error report is unrelated, as I did not encounter this error report this time around.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:23









        Community

        1




        1










        answered Jul 5 '16 at 16:09









        jubjub

        1116




        1116



























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