Charlie Brown wrote: Tue Jan 16, 2024 5:32 am
Just .. how did you remove the Nvidia driver? Manually (apt/apt-get/dpkg remove/purge etc..) or with ddm-mx ?
Installing from snapshot is the same as the official installation. In case you can't see an "install" icon on desktop, open a terminal:
... Also you can select "preserve home" during installation.
Or, if you don't hurry, you can first save home folder to somewhere via live session, also you can make a list of installed packages "by you" .. (we'll go on if you like)...
P.S.
Have you done this when on live session?.
(No, that's not the same thing as GSmart etc.. please just do that, that one is to check (and correct) the filesystem, not the disk. Especially needed after such sudden shutdowns.)
@Charlie Brown
I used ddm-mx to remove the Nvidia driver, as described in a textfile that was put on the system when I installed it.
The boot-up MX logo is the 2-dimensional old graphic, then it goes to CLI, that's where it stays...
I have not yet booted the live session stick; I've been nervous over losing something important, and don't quite understand how to address the current system drive from the live USB. Perhaps once I boot it, it'll be more obvious.
Happily though, I saved all my website files to a USB stick (in addition to having the live USB on a different stick), and that is all the content that REALLY matters.
I need to go through and see what nginx configuration changes I may have made - all this from CLI, since I have no gui - and save those files as well, though I'm not sure they aren't part of the systemd problem.
Thank you for the advice on the reinstall. I'm considering taking
@j2mcgreg 's advice about replacing the HDD and simply starting over with a SATA SSD replacing it, and hoping to use the live USB to install onto it.
I will boot the live USB today and see what happens.
Here's one question: is it worth considering re-installing the NVidia driver in hopes of having a GUI again?