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(Press Q to quit top itself.) A program that's causing the GUI to freeze is not necessarily using lots of CPU, but this is a place to start. You can log in (see above) and run top see the currently running processes, sorted by CPU usage. Though no program should cause the whole GUI to freeze, it can occasionally happen. The main exception is if you are running Ubuntu GNOME, which uses GDM: sudo service gdm restartĪttempting to close just the offending program. That particular command actually only works if your display manager is LightDM, which it is by default on most Ubuntu systems. This works by stopping and starting the display manager. Your desktop environment and all running programs will swiftly quit (so you must usually be as careful with this as with a reboot), the GUI will be restarted, and the graphical login screen will come back up, when you run: sudo service lightdm restart However, instead of rebooting, you might consider:
#VIRTUAL STRIPPER TEXT COMMAND PASSWORD#
It's the same password both times, and you won't see any placeholder characters (like *) appear as you're typing it. You'll be asked for your password to log in on the virtual console, and you'll be asked for it again for sudo.
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But it does work in any virtual console that doesn't have X11 running in it (unless you've set it up not to, which is rare).Īnother way is to log in and run sudo reboot. This doesn't work in the GUI (unless you've set it up to, or you're running a really old distro). Unlike on the old DOS systems, pressing Ctrl+ Alt+ Delete in a GNU/Linux system like Ubuntu actually performs a proper shutdown and clean reboot. You don't even need to log in first, though it would not be a problem if you did. The easiest way to reboot from a virtual console is to just press Ctrl+ Alt+ Delete. Pressing Ctrl+ Alt+ F1 brought you from X11 (the GUI) to a virtual console.