On Thu, 19 Nov 2009 12:44:43 Francisco Ares wrote: > On Wed, Nov 18, 2009 at 3:11 AM, Francisco Ares <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Wed, Nov 18, 2009 at 2:29 AM, Gmail <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Have you added consolekit to the boot level? If you did then please post > >> your xdm and kdm log file. > >> > >> Hung > >> > >> Francisco Ares wrote: > >> > Hi, All > >> > > >> > After several upgrades, now kdm (apparently) doesn't login my wife's > >> > user - or perhaps kde doesn't keep an open session for her: a few > >> > seconds after password, the login windows reappears. > >> > > >> > But the strange thing is that logging in a text console and issuing > >> > that old and good "startx" command, the kde session starts as > >> > expected. > >> > > >> > Anyone have any idea where should I start checking? > >> > > >> > Thanks > >> > Francisco > >> > > >> > -- > > > > Hy, Hung, thanks for your answer. > > > > I don't have consolekit at boot runlevel. Don't even have it emerged yet. > > Didn't know I was supposed to. Doing so right now. > > > > Meanwhile, I have no xdm log, but in kdm.log there is a difference during > > my login and my wife's login, it is this only two entries in > > /var/log/kdm.log after my wife's user login: > > > > (EE) XKB: No components provided for device Virtual core keyboard > > (EE) XKB: No components provided for device Virtual core keyboard > > > > I've done a search for "Virtual core" and didn't find a thing up to now. > > > > Any hint? > > > > Thanks again > > > > Francisco > > Well, I had consolekit up an running and didn't know that, sorry. > > There is no xdm log, and the only two entries already mentioned. > > I'll try to remove the user and add it again, perhaps a permissions issue. > > Thanks again > Francisco
Before you do that, rename the .kde directories in their home directory to something like .kde_old and let KDE create new ones on her next login, and see what happens then. It could just be some bad config settings from previous versions. -- Reverend Paul Colquhoun, ULC. http://andor.dropbear.id.au/~paulcol Before you criticize someone, you should walk a mile in their shoes. Then, when you do, you'll be a mile away, and you'll have their shoes.

