I'm casting around for ideas on how to best detect that the current environment is on a fat client (not on a thin client or on the server itself), and then run a startup script to modify pcmanfm's volume management preferences. The script should run whether the user is logging into the server, a thin client or a fat client, so I would probably not want to run it via an RCFILE entry in lts.conf. Maybe an upstart job (I'm on Lubuntu 14.04).
(I'm tweaking the behavior of what happens when a USB flash drive, audio CD or data disc is inserted. My first approach was to turn off pcmanfm's "Mount removable media automatically when they are inserted" setting for all users except user1. I arrived at an acceptable solution in a thin-only environment that involved ltspfs notifications, but the same thing doesn't work for fat clients.) I know that pcmanfm's preferences are in ~/.config/pcmanfm/lubuntu/pcmanfm.conf, but don't have any slick ideas beyond that. My first idea is to make a script that looks at whether the output of hostname contains "ltsp" or not. Other ideas? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ One dashboard for servers and applications across Physical-Virtual-Cloud Widest out-of-the-box monitoring support with 50+ applications Performance metrics, stats and reports that give you Actionable Insights Deep dive visibility with transaction tracing using APM Insight. http://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/290420510;117567292;y _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.freenode.net