On Fri, May 31, 2013 at 5:58 AM, Peter Humphrey <pe...@humphrey.ukfsn.org>
wrote:
> On Monday 27 May 2013 17:58:35 Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
>
>
>> I also have no idea what "small version" means - it's not English, it
>
>> doesn't parse, and it makes no sense.
>
>
>
> It is understandable if there is a small version of aterm. Perhaps aterm
> itself rather than multi-aterm?
>
>
>
> --
>
> Peter
>
>

I am still not sure if "small" means both small in size and small in
features or just small in features. I did not build it both ways and
compare, in fact, I built rxvt-unicode and the flag was completely
irrelevant. Wasn't having one of my good days evidently. I have built
several Gentoo systems over the last few months but they have been
gentoo-hardened servers and routers. This is/was my first attempt at a
desktop and it is exposing my lack of understanding of X in general. I am
one of those people who find that to be a good thing and have learned a lot
this week.

I believe now that what that flag does is allows you to build a terminal
that is small, as in lightweight on resources. You can build it so that it
would not read the xdefaults files and run as a very no frills terminal
even if you ran an xserver built with all the fixin's. Which is exactly
what the description says and caused me to be a bit embarrassed for even
have asked.

By the way, this install runs great. I have 320GB hard drive on a Dual Core
Dell laptop. I'm in the process of putting three seperate installs on it
which will be identical except for one will be gentoo-hardened with
SELinux, another using RBAC, and then this one as normal install. I believe
there are some situation where RBAC has an advantage over SELinux and vice
versa. I also want to try and build the RBAC system running LXC with
SELinux inside the containers. I believe this is possible and would further
isolate the containers from the base system.


--
B G

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