On Wednesday 22 January 2003 13:28, you wrote: > On Wednesday 22 January 2003 07:48, Ralf Nolden wrote: > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > > Hash: SHA1 > > > > On Mittwoch, 22. Januar 2003 01:53, Achim Bohnet wrote: > > > > add lines like these: > > > > # Examples for multiple local X displays: > > > > # :0 local /usr/X11R6/bin/X :0 vt9 -bpp 16 > > > > # :1 local /usr/X11R6/bin/X :1 vt10 -bpp 8 > > > > > > > > :0 [EMAIL PROTECTED] /etc/X11/X :0 vt7 > > > > :1 local reserve /usr/bin/X11/X :1 vt8 > > > > :2 local reserve /usr/bin/X11/X :1 vt9 > > > > :3 local reserve /usr/bin/X11/X :1 vt10 > > > > > > ^---- should be :1 :2 :3 > > > not :1 :1 :1 > > > > > > Maybe a note would not bad that multiple X servers need N times the > > > graphic memory (something like N * 4 * Xres * Yres * (32bpp / 8) bytes > > > with dri AFAIR) Depending on the screen size 64 MB are nothing ;) > > > > That means, if you have an AGP aperture size of 32 mb it will take another > > 32 > > mb also for AGP cards ? Or is that only limited to this calculation ? > > Sorry I don't understand what you mean. Here's my case maybe this help. > worked on :0 and with DIR enabled. I once setup a second display :1 on the > same Radeon APG card to login into an test account. I wondered why it > was much slower. Checking /var/log/Xfree.1.log told me not enough memory > for DRI. > > > > > > > Just another topic for your README file is how to start > > > ssh-askpass-gnome > > > on session login. AFAIR I've lost this when I purge 2.2.2 for 3.0 > > > update. > > > Maybe someone has a good idea how to integrate this into kdm the debian > > > way. > > I never used 2.2.2 on woody so I don't know what's the specifics there and > > what ssh-askpass-gnome is. Could you come up with more details and an > > explanation what ssh-askpass-gnome is ? > > From the manpages: > > NAME > ssh-add - adds RSA or DSA identities to the authentication agent > [...] > ENVIRONMENT > DISPLAY and SSH_ASKPASS > If ssh-add needs a passphrase, it will read the passphrase from > the current terminal if it was run from a terminal. If ssh-add > does not have a terminal associated with it but DISPLAY and > SSH_ASKPASS are set, it will execute the program specified by > SSH_ASKPASS and open an X11 window to read the passphrase. This > is particularly useful when calling ssh-add from a .Xsession or > related script. (Note that on some machines it may be necessary > to redirect the input from /dev/null to make this work.) > > [...] > [EMAIL PROTECTED](0) ~ $ apt-cache search ssh-askpass ssh-askpass-gnome - under X, asks user for a passphrase for ssh-add ssh-askpass - under X, asks user for a passphrase for ssh-add
> gnome-ssh-askpass just ask for a the ssh passphrase and on 'okay' > writes it to stdout + \n. On cancel nothing is writen. > > So setting SSH_ASPASS after ssh-agent is running and before (or at the top) > /usr/bin/kde3 run ssh-add. This way keybased assccess with sftp, ssh > session > in rest Maybe a $ cat > kde-ssh-askpass #!/bin/sh exec kdialog --password 'give me the mantra' ^D as another (/etc/)alternative for ssh-askpass would also. There's only a suble difference: On cancel gnome version return '' + retcode 0, kdialog returns "\n" and retcode 1. Achim > > > > Ralf > > > > > > Achim > > > > > > > the reserve is the point :-) You could also use /etc/X11/X though, I > > > > just > > > > did a copy& paste from somewhere else :-) > > > > > > > > Ralf > > > > > > > > - -- > > > > We're not a company, we just produce better code at less costs. > > > > - -------------------------------------------------------------------- > > > > Ralf Nolden > > > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > > > > > The K Desktop Environment The KDevelop Project > > > > http://www.kde.org http://www.kdevelop.org > > -- > To me vi is Zen. To use vi is to practice zen. Every command is > a koan. Profound to the user, unintelligible to the uninitiated. > You discover truth everytime you use it. > -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > -- To me vi is Zen. To use vi is to practice zen. Every command is a koan. Profound to the user, unintelligible to the uninitiated. You discover truth everytime you use it. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]

