

The system should now boot properly using onboard video. Physically remove the graphics card and connect your display adapter to the onboard video. Remove the Graphics Card and Boot the System Then, remove the rpmfusion-nonfree repository: rpm -erase rpmfusion-nonfree-release-18.noarch If there are any packages returned, uninstall them with yum erase. This is optional, but you might want to remove the rpmfusion-nonfree repository if you no longer need it.įirst, identify if there are any other packages installed from that repository: yum list installed | grep rpmfusion-nonfree However, there is a possibility that file is empty if you have been using onboard video. If you know this to be a working nf file you can revert back to it. The aticonfig command will have created a backup nf file in /etc/X11 with a file name such as -0. This will remove the nf file created by the aticonfig -initial -f command during installation. The following command will create a new /boot/initramfs-%\n" kernel | tail -n 1) yum erase akmod-catalyst akmods kmodtool xorg-x11-drv-catalyst xorg-x11-drv-catalyst-libs If you do not want to uninstall packages manually, yum history is a very useful command to rollback package installs. Run the following command to uninstall the packages mentioned above. Version 13.4-2 of the akmod-catalyst package installs the following dependencies: 86_64 the packages listed above, the following are the relevant packages to remove if you want to uninstall the AMD Catalyst Proprietary Driver: 86_64 AMD Catalyst Proprietary Driver Uninstall Repository Packages What follows are the steps I took to uninstall AMD’s proprietary Catalyst driver from Fedora 18. In the event you want to uninstall the proprietary driver, sometimes it is not as straight forward as it should be because there is no documentation. restart and install latest AMD driver your problem is 1. I am a novice with the command line.Installing a proprietary graphics driver installs a lot of packages and dependencies. ONLY clean driver and restart (no other button pressed) 5. I found a post by someome who said he was able to get back into his system by using DISM and uninstalling "pci bus" but I don't fully understand what he did.ĭISM /image:d\ /remove-driver/driver pci busīut got error 87 DISM doesn't understand the command line option bus Is there a way I can uninstall the AMD drivers from the command line and get back into my system? I can access the command line though, from advanced options after boot up by going into trouble shooting. My exact problem is described in this old thread I found : Normally in this situation I'd boot into safe mode and install the drivers but this time my computer won't even boot into safe mode. After installing the latest AMD drivers I got caught in an endless boot loop and can no longer access my windows 10 system.
