On Monday 07 February 2005 03:28 am, you wrote: > On Sunday 06 February 2005 11:46 am, Ned Harrison wrote: > > I run FreeBSD 5.3 on my home PC in a stand alone machine as a desktop. > > Is it possible to set it up so an ordinary user can shut the system? > > I've created a couple of accounts that are not in the wheel group so I > > can give friends and house guests the chance to play on a non-Microsoft > > system. I don't want to give them root access just to shut it down. > > > > None of the books which I have discuss using FreeBSD in this way. They > > are mostly geared to setting up networks running it for businesses. > > Areas where one may not want an ordinary user to be able to shutdown the > > machine. However, I prefer having the machine off when I'm not on it. If > > it's not possible that fine I can continue working around it like I do > > now. > > The easiest way I've found to do this is assuming you have X installed and > are using a login manager ie. KDM/GDM/Login.app just use the shutdown > functionality of the login manager to shutdown the system. The most fool > proof way if you've got ACPI on this system it to just tap the power button > and it'll shutdown.
This sounds like what I want. I have WDM installed and I have KDE installed. I didn't realize that function was there. I've been using a terminal login ever sense I started using FreeBSD because that how I thought it was supposed to work! I'll try to step through the setup of KDM. I found a reference to the KDE display manager in the FreeBSD handbook. It might take a few days to figure things out. But this should work. Thanks, _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
