At first Instead of my SDDM I would just see an after image of what was last displayed on screen. But if I typed in my password and pressed enter, it would let me in just fine. Then after following some suggestions from users in r/Kubuntu I’ve made a bit of progress. Now when I boot up my computer instead of the SDDM being invisible, it now doesn’t load at all, from there I switch to tty3 then back to tty2 and then log in through the terminal. After that I run startplasma-wayland and then I have access to my desktop. The post where all this went down - https://www.reddit.com/r/Kubuntu/comments/1nvreuo/sddm_not_rendering/

Does anyone know a fix? I would like to be able to see my login screen.

Here’s my specs in case that would help - https://i.imgur.com/XtC43zw.png

And here’s my journalctl output after booting and launching plasma - https://pastebin.com/nnGsWebd

  • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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    2 days ago

    Show us! The journalctl output was too restricted, we need to see all of it - at least for the significant timeframe.

      • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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        7 hours ago

        Not downloading and reading 181MB of logs. You probably used journalctl without any qualifiers, right?

        What we want is

        1. The current boot showed the erroneous behavior
        2. Make note of the timeframe the erroneous behavior occured

        Compose a journalctl command that takes these aspects into account, i.e.:

        journalctl --boot --since <date_time> --until <date_time>
        

        Also see:

        -S, --since=, -U, --until=
           Start showing entries on or newer than the specified date, or on
           or older than the specified date, respectively. Date
           specifications should be of the format "2012-10-30 18:17:16". If
           the time part is omitted, "00:00:00" is assumed. If only the
           seconds component is omitted, ":00" is assumed. If the date
           component is omitted, the current day is assumed. Alternatively
           the strings "yesterday", "today", "tomorrow" are understood,
           which refer to 00:00:00 of the day before the current day, the
           current day, or the day after the current day, respectively.
           "now" refers to the current time. Finally, relative times may be
           specified, prefixed with "-" or "+", referring to times before or
           after the current time, respectively. For complete time and date
           specification, see systemd.time(7). Note that --output=short-full
           prints timestamps that follow precisely this format.
        

        Assuming 1. and 2. are in effect, you can also try this:

        systemctl status -n999 sddm