The old .Xsession / .xinitrc feature is something that has worked 
consistently for 15+ years on a variety of unixes, so I was 
pretty surprised to find such an established behavior removed.

Each time I upgrade Ubuntu, I have to fix more and more things to 
get my system working as well as it did before the upgrade.  This 
is one more item on my list of bugs to work around.  However, 
giving lightdm a desktop file for Xsession would reduce my 
upgrade-fix list at least a little.

For me, the symptom was that when I tried to log in after 
upgrade, lightdm authorized me, gave me a blank desktop for about 
one second, then went back to the login screen.  No files in my 
home directory (such as .xsession-errors) were updated, and no 
logs in /var/log/ contained any hint of what was wrong.  I had to 
guess what the problem was, test a few hypotheses, then research 
it online for a fix.  It's worth noting that choosing the login 
option for my chosen window manager does *not* produce a suitable 
session, and that this is not a bug in the window manager.

If this isn't going to be fixed, I suppose I can always go back 
to putting 'exit 0' at the beginning of /etc/init.d/*dm and 
running 'startx' manually from a VT.  That would probably buy me 
a few more years of not having to worry about the constant churn 
in UI fads.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/818864

Title:
  add support for an “Xclient” fallback session

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