Roland Kaeser wrote:
Hello
Thansk for the answer.
There is no 'Reset' on the NSCM greeter. What exactly did you do?
I log in using the dtlogin screen with the session and language option.
Then the system starts jds or kde (doesnt matter which) and I have my
desktop. Afterwards I press Shift-Pause, the session seems to detach and
the XDM-Login Screen appears (No session type and language setting
options). To get back to the dtlogin-Screen if have to reset this xdm
login screen. But when I do this, the previous detached session
appears.
After you enabled the NSCM policy, did you run "utrestart -c", or do a
full restart
from the admin browser? Please send output from:
# /opt/SUNWut/sbin/utpolicy
# /opt/SUNWut/sbin/utsession -p
-Bob
What does your ~/.dt/sessions/lastsession file contain?
This is correct. The path to last Xsession script in the file is
correct. Content: /usr/dt/config/Xsession.jds
My main interest is to get information how the whole thing internally
works, to debug this problem and find a solution.
So what happens exactly when I restore a previous detached nscm session?
Why does the "users last session" option in the dtmgreeter not work for
kde? Who is dtlogin determining which session I used last time?
Who can a see whats going on while log in?
Thanks
Roland
Am Mittwoch, den 21.03.2007, 19:49 -0700 schrieb ottomeister:
On 3/21/07, Roland Kaeser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
While running the beta environment of KDE 3.5.4 on our SUN-Ray
environment, we recognized that the NSCM and utdetach isn't working
correct. I can press shift-pause and it (seems to) detach the session.
But when I press reset on the login screen, it brings the old session back.
There is no 'Reset' on the NSCM greeter. What exactly did you
do?
if you choose Options->Exit then you will get to a non-mobile session
that is the equivalent of the fixed DTU session that you would have
had if NSCM had not been active.
When I try to login to a nscm, it doesn't recognizes the last saved
session, and starts the default one (CDE). It seems to have to do with
the the .lastsession setting in utlogin.
What does your ~/.dt/sessions/lastsession file contain? If the
session script pathname in that file does not exist on this
machine then you'll be given whatever the default session is,
typically CDE.
If you want to explicitly choose a session type (or locale) while
logging in through NSCM then select Options->Quicklogin->Off
before authenticating to NSCM. This will expose a dtlogin
dialogue after the NSCM authentication and you can make your
choices there before hitting 'OK' to continue the login.
OttoM.
__
ottomeister
Disclaimer: These are my opinions. I do not speak for my employer.
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