Jonathan, What are you talking about "top post"? Someone also told me to stop topposting but I don't know what that is and I don't think I'm doing anything wrong here. I'm not reformatting the emails in any way, heck, I'm too lazy to go out of my way to reformat something myself.
All I'm doing is clicking reply to the message I want to reply to and writting my replys. I'm not editing anything or trying to cause a disturbance here. What's wrong with my emails? Do I possibly have a gmail setting thats screwing things up or should I reply back with Rich Text formatting? I'm sorry if I'm doing something thats irritating you guys unintentionally. Please tell me so I can try to fix it. Thanks, - Jake On 10/12/07, Jonathan Arnold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > (Please don't top post. Reformatting it) > > Jake Conk wrote: > > On 10/11/07, Jonathan Ervine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> On Friday 12 October 2007 00:57:31 Jake Conk wrote: > >>> No you misunderstood, good try though. > >> Grrr... top-posting. You're breaking the logic of the thread. I'd say Roger > >> understood perfectly what you're trying to achieve. He's given you a > >> solution > >> based on KDE, but it's a trivial adaptation for GNOME (which you've already > >> mentioned you've got). > >> > >> sudo is going to be a waste of time, as it will be expecting a terminal > >> console in which to enter the password to allow privileged access. However, > >> if you look at Roger's script he's checking to see if the current user is > >> id > >> 0 (this is root by the way). If it is, then the application is launched. If > >> not, then it launches the application via kdesu. kdesu, in case you didn't > >> know, is a 'wrapper' binary that prompts for the root password to launch a > >> privileged application. It's how YaST2 is launched in the KDE desktop > >> environment. > >> > >> Now as you mentioned you've got GNOME available you might want to look > >> again > >> at Roger's script, and google for gnomesu > >> > >> Jon > >> > >>> On 10/11/07, Roger Oberholtzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >>>> On Thu, 2007-10-11 at 03:57 -0700, Jake Conk wrote: > >>>>> Hello, > >>>>> > >>>>> i want to add a program to my desktop panel but it needs to be ran as > >>>>> root when clicked... How do make a it prompt for my root password when > >>>>> I click on that application from a panel? I tried putting sudo in > >>>>> front of it in hopes a prompt of some sort will come up but no luck. > >>>>> > >>>>> Regards, > >>>>> - Jake > >>>>> > >>>>> PS. If it matters, I'm running Xfce but I have Gnome installed if I > >>>>> need something from gnome. > >>>> Or KDE? This may run outside KDE. I use something like this: > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> LAUNCH_CMD="MyCommand" > >>>> > >>>> if test `id -u` -eq 0 ; then > >>>> exec $LAUNCH_CMD 2> /dev/null > >>>> else > >>>> kdesu -n -c "$LAUNCH_CMD" 2> /dev/null > >>>> fi > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> I send errors to /dev/null for the heck of it. Remove as needed. > >>>> > >>>> -- > > This is obviously to launch a program from my panel as I mentioned and > > I'm obviously not root so there is no need to make a script which is > > going a bit beyond of what I wanted to do. I guess if I had kde > > installed the kdesu <program> would have worked but since I don't then > > a better answer would have been gnomesu. > > > > Anyways I've found gksu which is actually the right answer because it > > doesn't require gnome or kde and it solves my problem. No need to make > > it into a script or anything.. > > Actually, the script is a good idea. It is checking to see if you are already > root, so it doesn't ask you again for the root password. This makes it a > generally > useful script that you can use anywhere. And yes, simply replacing > 'kdesu' with 'gksu' (or gnomesu) is what you want to do. > > -- > Jonathan Arnold (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]) > Linux Brain Dump - Linux Notes, HOWTOs and Tutorials: > http://www.linuxbraindump.org > > Daemon Dancing in the Dark, an Open OS weblog: > http://freebsd.amazingdev.com/blog/ > > -- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
