Dieser Artikel wurde archiviert, da er - oder Teile daraus - nur noch unter einer älteren Ubuntu-Version nutzbar ist. Diese Anleitung wird vom Wiki-Team weder auf Richtigkeit überprüft noch anderweitig gepflegt. Zusätzlich wurde der Artikel für weitere Änderungen gesperrt.
Dieser Artikel erfordert mehr Erfahrung im Umgang mit Linux und ist daher nur für fortgeschrittene Benutzer gedacht.
Dieser Artikel gehört zur Beschreibung der Multiseat-Konfiguration für Ubuntu und erklärt die Verwendung alternativer Displaymanager.
Der Displaymanager GDM unterstützt nur bis zur Version 2.20 (bis Ubuntu 9.04) den Multiseat-Betrieb. Da diese Version in Ubuntu nicht enthalten ist, muss auf den Multiseats-Zweig des GDM- und ConsoleKit-Projekts gewechselt werden. Bis Ubuntu 11.04 lassen sich die entsprechenden Pakete über ein "Personal Package Archiv" (PPA) [1] installieren.
Adresszeile zum Hinzufügen des PPAs:
ppa:a7x/multiseat
Zusätzliche Fremdquellen können das System gefährden.
Ein PPA unterstützt nicht zwangsläufig alle Ubuntu-Versionen. Weitere Informationen sind der PPA-Beschreibung des Eigentümers/Teams a7x zu entnehmen.
Damit Pakete aus dem PPA genutzt werden können, müssen die Paketquellen neu eingelesen werden.
Nach dem Aktualisieren der Paketquellen können die folgenden Pakete installiert [2] werden:
gdm (ppa)
consolekit (ppa)
mit apturl
Paketliste zum Kopieren:
sudo apt-get install gdm consolekit
sudo aptitude install gdm consolekit
Anschließend wird ConsoleKit konfiguriert [3][4], um mehrere XServer zu starten. Dies erfolgt über mehrere Dateien.
In der Datei /etc/ConsoleKit/seats.d/00-primary.seat muss:
Hidden=true
gesetzt werden.
Für jeden Seat wird nun in /etc/ConsoleKit/seats.d/ eine Datei 01-seat1.seat angelegt. Dabei ist im Dateinamen und im Dateiinhalt für jeden Seat eine neue Nummer zu vergeben:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 | [Seat Entry] Version=1.0 Name=Seat 1 ID=Seat1 Hidden=false Devices= Sessions=Seat1; |
Für jeden angelegten Seat wird nun die passende Session in /etc/ConsoleKit/sessions.d/Seat1.session erstellt. Auch hier sind die Zahlen an den entsprechenden Seat anzupassen. Außerdem muss die Zahl für die Display hochgezählt werden (z.B. display=:1):
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 | [Session Entry] Name=Local Type=LoginWindow Description=Local Login Screen DisplayTemplate=Seat1 [Local] display=:0 vt=vt7 |
Abschließend muss für jeden Seat noch eine Instanz des XServers gestartet werden. Dies wird in /etc/ConsoleKit/displays.d/Seat1.display gemacht, wobei auch hier die Nummern der Seats angepasst werden muss. An dieser Stelle müssen auch die Dateinamen der XServer-Konfigurationsdateien und die PCI-BUS-IDs angepasst werden.
1 2 3 4 5 | [Display] Type=X11 [X11] Exec=/usr/bin/X -config /etc/xorg.conf.d_ms/Seat1.conf -nolisten tcp -isolateDevice PCI:0:2:0 $display $vt |
Die Konfiguration sollte mittels gemeinsam genutzer virtueller Terminals realisiert werden. Deshalb sollte die Konfiguration ab dem zweiten Seat nach folgender Vorlage angelegt werden:
1 2 3 4 5 | [Display] Type=X11 [X11] Exec=/usr/bin/X -config /etc/xorg.conf.d_ms/Seat2.conf -nolisten tcp -isolateDevice PCI:1:0:0 $display -sharevts |
Quelle: MultiseatX Ubuntu 10.04
Die Konfigurationsdatei /usr/share/config/kdm/kdmrc muss mit Root-Rechten editiert werden:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 | # KDM master configuration file # /usr/share/config/kdm/kdmrc # # Definition: the greeter is the login dialog, i.e., the part of KDM # which the user sees. # # You can configure every X-display individually. # Every display has a display name, which consists of a host name # (which is empty for local displays specified in {Static|Reserve}Servers), # a colon, and a display number. Additionally, a display belongs to a # display class (which can be ignored in most cases; the control center # does not support this feature at all). # Sections with display-specific settings have the formal syntax # "[X-" host [":" number [ "_" class ]] "-" sub-section "]" # You can use the "*" wildcard for host, number, and class. You may omit # trailing components; they are assumed to be "*" then. # The host part may be a domain specification like ".inf.tu-dresden.de". # It may also be "+", which means non-empty, i.e. remote displays only. # From which section a setting is actually taken is determined by these # rules: # - an exact match takes precedence over a partial match (for the host part), # which in turn takes precedence over a wildcard ("+" taking precedence # over "*") # - precedence decreases from left to right for equally exact matches # Example: display name "myhost:0", class "dpy". # [X-myhost:0_dpy] precedes # [X-myhost:0_*] (same as [X-myhost:0]) precedes # [X-myhost:*_dpy] precedes # [X-myhost:*_*] (same as [X-myhost]) precedes # [X-+:0_dpy] precedes # [X-*:0_dpy] precedes # [X-*:0_*] (same as [X-*:0]) precedes # [X-*:*_*] (same as [X-*]) # These sections do NOT match this display: # [X-hishost], [X-myhost:0_dec], [X-*:1], [X-:*] # If a setting is not found in any matching section, the default is used. # # Every comment applies to the following section or key. Note that all # comments will be lost if you change this file with the kcontrol frontend. # The defaults refer to KDM's built-in values, not anything set in this file. # # Special characters need to be backslash-escaped (leading and trailing # spaces (\s), tab (\t), linefeed (\n), carriage return (\r) and the # backslash itself (\\)). # In lists, fields are separated with commas without whitespace in between. # Some command strings are subject to simplified sh-style word splitting: # single quotes (') and double quotes (") have the usual meaning; the backslash # quotes everything (not only special characters). Note that the backslashes # need to be doubled because of the two levels of quoting. [General] # This option exists solely for the purpose of a clean automatic upgrade. # Do not even think about changing it! ConfigVersion=2.4 # List of permanent displays. Displays with a hostname are foreign. A display # class may be specified separated by an underscore. # Default is ":0" StaticServers=:0,:1 # List of on-demand displays. See StaticServers for syntax. # Default is "" ReserveServers=:2,:3 # VTs to allocate to X-servers. A negative number means that the VT will be # used only if it is free. If all VTs in this list are used up, the next free # one greater than the last one in this list will be allocated. # Default is "" ServerVTs=7 # TTYs (without /dev/) to monitor for activity while in console mode. # Default is "" ConsoleTTYs=tty1,tty2,tty3,tty4,tty5,tty6 # Where KDM should store its PID (do not store if empty). # Default is "" PidFile=/var/run/kdm.pid # Whether KDM should lock the PID file to prevent having multiple KDM # instances running at once. Do not change unless you are brave. # Default is true #LockPidFile=false # Where to store authorization files. # Default is "/var/run/xauth" #AuthDir=/tmp # Whether KDM should automatically re-read configuration files, if it # finds them having changed. # Default is true #AutoRescan=false # Additional environment variables KDM should pass on to all programs it runs. # LD_LIBRARY_PATH and XCURSOR_THEME are good candidates; # otherwise, it should not be necessary very often. # Default is "" #ExportList=LD_LIBRARY_PATH,ANOTHER_IMPORTANT_VAR # A character device KDM should read entropy from. # Empty means use the system's preferred entropy device. # Default is "" #RandomDevice=/dev/altrandom # Where the command sockets should be created; make it empty to disable # them. # Default is "/var/run/xdmctl" #FifoDir=/tmp # The group to which the global command socket should belong; # can be either a name or a numerical ID. # Default is 0 #FifoGroup=xdmctl # The user the greeter should run as. Empty results in root. # Consider the impact on LogSource when setting it. # Default is "" GreeterUID=kdm # The directory in which KDM should store persistent working data. # Default is "/var/lib/kdm" #DataDir= # The directory in which KDM should store users' .dmrc files. This is only # needed if the home directories are not readable before actually logging in # (like with AFS). # Default is "" #DmrcDir=/nfs-shared/var/dmrcs [Xdmcp] # Whether KDM should listen to incoming XDMCP requests. # Default is true Enable=false # The UDP port on which KDM should listen for XDMCP requests. Do not change. # Default is 177 #Port=177 # File with the private keys of X-terminals. Required for XDM authentication. # Default is "" #KeyFile=/usr/share/config/kdm/kdmkeys # XDMCP access control file in the usual XDM-Xaccess format. # Default is "/usr/share/config/kdm/Xaccess" #Xaccess= # Number of seconds to wait for display to respond after the user has # selected a host from the chooser. # Default is 15 #ChoiceTimeout=10 # Strip domain name from remote display names if it is equal to the local # domain. # Default is true #RemoveDomainname=false # Use the numeric IP address of the incoming connection on multihomed hosts # instead of the host name. # Default is false #SourceAddress=true # The program which is invoked to dynamically generate replies to XDMCP # DirectQuery or BroadcastQuery requests. # If empty, no program is invoked and "Willing to manage" is sent. # Default is "" Willing=/usr/share/config/kdm/Xwilling [Shutdown] # The command (subject to word splitting) to run to halt the system. # Default is "/sbin/halt" #HaltCmd= # The command (subject to word splitting) to run to reboot the system. # Default is "/sbin/reboot" #RebootCmd= # Whether it is allowed to shut down the system via the global command socket. # Default is false #AllowFifo=true # Whether it is allowed to abort active sessions when shutting down the # system via the global command socket. # Default is true #AllowFifoNow=false # The boot manager KDM should use for offering boot options in the # shutdown dialog. # "None" - no boot manager # "Grub" - Grub boot manager # "Lilo" - Lilo boot manager (Linux on i386 & x86-64 only) # Default is None #BootManager=Grub # Rough estimations about how many seconds KDM will spend at most on # - opening a connection to the X-server (OpenTime) if the attempt # - times out: OpenTimeout # - is refused: OpenRepeat * OpenDelay # - starting a local X-server (ServerTime): # ServerAttempts * (ServerTimeout + OpenDelay) # - starting a display: # - local display: ServerTime + OpenTime # - foreign display: StartAttempts * OpenTime # - XDMCP display: OpenTime (repeated indefinitely by client) # Core config for all displays [X-*-Core] # How long to wait before retrying to connect a display. # Default is 15 #OpenDelay=15 # How long to wait before timing out a display connection attempt. # Default is 120 #OpenTimeout=120 # How many connection attempts to make during a start attempt. Note that # a timeout aborts the entire start attempt. # Default is 5 #OpenRepeat=5 # Try at most that many times to start a display. If this fails, the display # is disabled. # Default is 4 #StartAttempts=4 # Ping remote display every that many minutes. # Default is 5 #PingInterval=5 # Wait for a Pong that many minutes. # Default is 5 #PingTimeout=5 # The name of this X-server's Xauth file. # If empty, a random name in the AuthDir directory will be used. # Default is "" #AuthFile= # Specify a file with X-resources for the greeter, chooser and background. # The KDE frontend does not use this file, so you do not need it unless you # use another background generator than krootimage. # Default is "" #Resources= # The xrdb program to use to read the above specified recources. # Subject to word splitting. # Default is "/usr/bin/xrdb" #Xrdb= # A program to run before the greeter is shown. Can be used to start an # xconsole or an alternative background generator. Subject to word splitting. # Default is "" Setup=/usr/share/config/kdm/Xsetup # A program to run before a user session starts. Subject to word splitting. # Default is "" Startup=/usr/share/config/kdm/Xstartup # A program to run after a user session exits. Subject to word splitting. # Default is "" Reset=/usr/share/config/kdm/Xreset # The program which is run as the user which logs in. It is supposed to # interpret the session argument (see SessionsDirs) and start an appropriate # session according to it. Subject to word splitting. # Default is "/usr/bin/xterm -ls -T" Session=/usr/share/config/kdm/Xsession # The program to run if Session fails. # Default is "/usr/bin/xterm" #FailsafeClient= # The PATH for the Session program. # Default is "/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/games" #UserPath= # The PATH for Setup, Startup and Reset, etc. # Default is "/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin" #SystemPath= # The default system shell. # Default is "/bin/sh" #SystemShell=/bin/bash # Where to put the user's X-server authorization file if ~/.Xauthority # cannot be created. # Default is "/tmp" #UserAuthDir= # If true, UserAuthDir will be used unconditionally. # Default is false #ForceUserAuthDir=true # Whether to automatically restart sessions after X-server crashes. # Note that enabling this makes circumventing screen lockers other than # KDE's built-in one possible! # Default is false #AutoReLogin=true # Allow root logins? # Default is true AllowRootLogin=false # Allow to log in, when user has set an empty password? # Default is true AllowNullPasswd=false # Who is allowed to shut down the system. This applies both to the # greeter and to the command sockets. # "None" - no "Shutdown..." menu entry is shown at all # "Root" - the root password must be entered to shut down # "All" - everybody can shut down the machine # Default is All AllowShutdown=Root # Who is allowed to abort active sessions when shutting down. # "None" - no forced shutdown is allowed at all # "Root" - the root password must be entered to shut down forcibly # "All" - everybody can shut down the machine forcibly # Default is All #AllowSdForceNow=Root # The default choice for the shutdown condition/timing. # "Schedule" - shut down after all active sessions exit (possibly at once) # "TryNow" - shut down, if no active sessions are open; otherwise, do nothing # "ForceNow" - shut down unconditionally # Default is Schedule #DefaultSdMode=ForceNow # How to offer shutdown scheduling options: # "Never" - not at all # "Optional" - as a button in the simple shutdown dialogs # "Always" - instead of the simple shutdown dialogs # Default is Never #ScheduledSd=Optional # The directories containing session type definitions in .desktop format, # ordered by falling priority. # Default is "/usr/share/apps/kdm/sessions" SessionsDirs=/usr/share/config/kdm/sessions,/usr/share/apps/kdm/sessions # The file (relative to $HOME) to redirect the session output to. The # following character pairs are replaced: # - %d -> current display # - %u -> current user # - %r -> empty at first. See below. # - %% -> a single % # When the constructed filename cannot be used safely and the specification # contains %<stuff>r, other names will be tried - this time expanding %<stuff>r # to <stuff> followed by a random number. # Default is ".xsession-errors" ClientLogFile=.xsession-errors-%d # Fallback when ClientLogFile cannot be used. The same expansions are # supported. DO NOT use relative paths here. # Default is "/tmp/xerr-%u-%d%-r" #ClientLogFallback=/var/log/xsession-errors/%u-%d%-r # Whether KDM's built-in utmp/wtmp/lastlog registration should be used. # Default is true #UseSessReg=false # Greeter config for all displays [X-*-Greeter] # Specify the widget style for the greeter. Empty means to use the # built-in default which currently is "Oxygen-air". # Default is "" #GUIStyle=Plastique # Specify the widget color scheme for the greeter. Empty means to use the # built-in default which currently is "Oxygen-air". # Default is "" #ColorScheme=MidnightMeadow # What should be shown in the greeter's logo are: # "None" - nothing # "Logo" - the image specified by LogoPixmap # "Clock" - a neat analog clock # Default is Clock LogoArea=Logo # The image to show when LogoArea=Logo. # Default is "" LogoPixmap=/usr/share/apps/kdm/pics/kdelogo.png # The relative coordinates (X,Y in percent) of the center of the greeter. # Default is "50,50" #GreeterPos=30,40 # The screen the greeter should be displayed on in multi-headed and Xinerama # setups. The numbering starts with 0. For Xinerama, it corresponds to the # listing order in the active ServerLayout section of XF86Config; -1 means # to use the upper-left screen, -2 means to use the upper-right screen. # Default is 0 #GreeterScreen=-1 # The headline in the greeter. The following character pairs are replaced: # - %d -> current display # - %h -> host name, possibly with domain name # - %n -> node name, most probably the host name without domain name # - %s -> the operating system # - %r -> the operating system's version # - %m -> the machine (hardware) type # - %% -> a single % # Default is "Welcome to %s at %n" #GreetString=K Desktop Environment (%n) # Whether the fonts used in the greeter should be antialiased. # Default is false #AntiAliasing=true # The font for the greeter headline. # Default is "Serif,20,bold" #GreetFont=Serif,20,5,0,50,0 # The normal font used in the greeter. # Default is "Sans Serif,10" #StdFont=Sans Serif,10,5,0,50,0 # The font used for the "Login Failed" message. # Default is "Sans Serif,10,bold" #FailFont=Sans Serif,10,5,0,75,0 # What to do with the Num Lock modifier for the time the greeter is running: # "Off" - turn off # "On" - turn on # "Keep" - do not change the state # Default is Keep #NumLock=Off # Language and locale to use in the greeter, encoded like $LANGUAGE. # If empty, the settings from the environment are used. # Default is "" #Language=de_DE # Enable autocompletion in the username line edit. # Default is false #UserCompletion=true # Enable user list (names along with images) in the greeter. # Default is true #UserList=false # User selection for UserCompletion and UserList: # "NotHidden" - all users except those listed in HiddenUsers # "Selected" - only the users listed in SelectedUsers # Default is NotHidden #ShowUsers=Selected # For ShowUsers=Selected. @<group> means all users in that group. # Default is "" #SelectedUsers=root,johndoe # For ShowUsers=NotHidden. @<group> means all users in that group. # Default is "" #HiddenUsers=root # Special case of HiddenUsers: users with a non-zero UID less than this number # will not be shown as well. # Default is 0 MinShowUID=500 # Complement to MinShowUID: users with a UID greater than this number will # not be shown as well. # Default is 65535 MaxShowUID=65000 # If false, the users are listed in the order they appear in /etc/passwd. # If true, they are sorted alphabetically. # Default is true #SortUsers=false # Specify, where the users' pictures should be taken from. # "AdminOnly" - from <FaceDir>/$USER.face[.icon] # "PreferAdmin" - prefer <FaceDir>, fallback on $HOME # "PreferUser" - ... and the other way round # "UserOnly" - from the user's $HOME/.face[.icon] # Default is AdminOnly #FaceSource=PreferUser # The directory containing the user images if FaceSource is not UserOnly. # Default is "/usr/share/apps/kdm/faces" #FaceDir=/usr/share/faces # Specify, if/which user should be preselected for log in. # "None" - do not preselect any user # "Previous" - the user which successfully logged in last time # "Default" - the user specified in the DefaultUser option # Default is None #PreselectUser=Previous # If this is true, the password input line is focused automatically if # a user is preselected. # Default is false #FocusPasswd=true # If this is true, the entered password is echoed as bullets. Otherwise, # no feedback is given at all. # Default is true #EchoPasswd=false # If true, krootimage will be automatically started by KDM; otherwise, the # Setup script should be used to setup the background. # Default is true #UseBackground=false # The configuration file to be used by krootimage. # Default is "/usr/share/config/kdm/backgroundrc" #BackgroundCfg= # Whether to grab keyboard and mouse while the greeter is visible. Grabs # may improve security, but make on-screen keyboards, etc. unusable. # "Never" - never grab # "IfNoAuth" - grab if the display requires no X authorization # "Always" - always grab # Default is IfNoAuth #GrabInput=Always # Hold the X-server grabbed the whole time the greeter is visible. This # may be more secure, but it will disable any background and other # X-clients started from the Setup script. # Default is false #GrabServer=true # How many seconds to wait for grab to succeed. # Default is 3 #GrabTimeout=3 # Warn, if display has no X-authorization (local auth cannot be created, # XDMCP display wants no auth, or display is foreign from StaticServers). # Default is true #AuthComplain=false # Random seed for forging saved session types, etc. of unknown users. # This value should be random but constant across the login domain. # Default is 0 ForgingSeed=1294230568 # Specify conversation plugins for the login dialog. Each plugin can be # specified as a base name (which expands to $kde_modulesdir/kgreet_$base) # or as a full pathname. # Default is "classic" #PluginsLogin=sign # Same as PluginsLogin, but for the shutdown dialog. # Default is "classic" #PluginsShutdown=modern # A list of options of the form Key=Value. The conversation plugins can query # these settings; it is up to them what possible keys are. # Default is "" #PluginOptions=SomeKey=randomvalue,Foo=bar # Show the "Console Login" action in the greeter (if ServerTTY/ConsoleTTYs # is configured). # Default is true #AllowConsole=false # A program to run while the greeter is visible. It is supposed to preload # as much as possible of the session that is going to be started (most # probably). # Default is "" Preloader=/usr/bin/preloadkde # Whether the greeter should be themed. # Default is false UseTheme=true # The theme to use for the greeter. Can point to either a directory or an XML # file. # Default is "" Theme=/usr/share/apps/kdm/themes/oxygen-air # Enable the Alt-Ctrl-D shortcut to toggle greeter theme debugging. # Default is false #AllowThemeDebug=true # Core config for local displays [X-:*-Core] # How often to try to run the X-server. Running includes executing it and # waiting for it to come up. # Default is 1 #ServerAttempts=1 # How long to wait for a local X-server to come up. # Default is 30 #ServerTimeout=30 # The command line to start the X-server, without display number and VT spec. # This string is subject to word splitting. # Default is "/usr/bin/X" ServerCmd=/usr/bin/X # Additional arguments for the X-servers for local sessions. # This string is subject to word splitting. # Default is "" ServerArgsLocal=-nolisten tcp # Additional arguments for the X-servers for remote sessions. # This string is subject to word splitting. # Default is "" #ServerArgsRemote= # The user the X-server should run as. Empty results in root. # Default is "" #ServerUID=_x11 # Restart instead of resetting the local X-server after session exit. # Use it if the server leaks memory etc. # Default is true #TerminateServer=false # The signal needed to reset the local X-server. # Default is 1 (SIGHUP) #ResetSignal=1 # The signal needed to terminate the local X-server. # Default is 15 (SIGTERM) #TermSignal=15 # Create X-authorizations for local displays. # Default is true #Authorize=false # Which X-authorization mechanisms should be used. # Default is "MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1" #AuthNames= # Need to reset the X-server to make it read initial Xauth file. # Default is false #ResetForAuth=true # See above AllowNullPasswd=true # See above AllowShutdown=All # Enable password-less logins on this display. USE WITH EXTREME CARE! # Default is false #NoPassEnable=true # The users that do not need to provide a password to log in. NEVER list root! # "*" means all non-root users. @<group> means all users in that group. # Default is "" #NoPassUsers=fred,ethel # Greeter config for local displays [X-:*-Greeter] # See above PreselectUser=Previous # See above FocusPasswd=true # Specify whether the greeter of local displays should start up in host chooser # (remote) or login (local) mode and whether it is allowed to switch to the # other mode. # "LocalOnly" - only local login possible # "DefaultLocal" - start up in local mode, but allow switching to remote mode # "DefaultRemote" - ... and the other way round # "RemoteOnly" - only choice of remote host possible # Default is LocalOnly LoginMode=DefaultLocal # A list of hosts to be automatically added to the remote login menu. The # special name "*" means broadcast. # Default is "*" #ChooserHosts=*,host1,host2,host3.local,login.domain.com # Show the "Restart X Server"/"Close Connection" action in the greeter. # Default is true AllowClose=false # Core config for 1st local display [X-:0-Core] ServerVT=7 ServerCmd=/usr/bin/X ServerArgsLocal=-config xorg_seat1.conf -nolisten tcp -isolateDevice PCI:0:2:0 [X-:1-Core] ServerVT=7 ServerCmd=/usr/bin/X ServerArgsLocal=-config xorg_seat2.conf -nolisten tcp -isolateDevice PCI:1:0:0 -sharevts # Greeter config for 1st local display [X-:3-Greeter] # See above #PreselectUser=Default # The user to preselect if PreselectUser=Default. # Default is "" #DefaultUser=johndoe |
In dieser Datei müssen die Dateinamen der XServer-Konfigurationsdateien und die PCI-BUS-IDs angepasst werden. Um weitere Seats hinzuzufügen, kann der Abschnitt [X-:1-Core]
als Vorlage verwendet werden. Außerdem muss StaticServers
angepasst werden.
Quelle: 977547 (Kommentar 7)
Die Konfiguration für XDM wird über die Datei /etc/X11/xdm/Xservers angepasst. Für jeden Seat wird eine Zeile mit den Startparametern für die jeweilige XServer-Instanz angelegt. Für zwei Seats kann die Konfiguration wie folgt aussehen:
1 2 | :0 local /usr/bin/X -config /etc/xorg.conf.d_ms/Seat1.conf -nolisten tcp -isolateDevice PCI:0:2:0 :0 vt7 :1 local /usr/bin/X -config /etc/xorg.conf.d_ms/Seat2.conf -nolisten tcp -isolateDevice PCI:1:0:0 :1 -sharevts |
In dieser Datei müssen die Dateinamen der XServer-Konfigurationsdateien, die Display-IDs und die PCI-BUS-IDs angepasst werden. Um weitere Seats hinzuzufügen, kann die zweite Zeile als Vorlage verwendet werden.
Bei der Verwendung von XDM als Displaymanager gibt es einige Einschränkungen. Im Gegensatz zu KDM ist ein automatisches Einbinden von Wechseldatenträgern (USB-Sticks/CDs/DVDs) nicht ohne weiteres möglich. Um einen Datenträger einzubinden, ist das Kennwort eines Administrators notwendig. Wenn es den Benutzern möglich sein soll, externe Datenträger zu verwenden, müssen die entsprechenden Berechtigungen der Benutzer gesetzt werden.
Das Herunterfahren des Systems ist nur noch mit dem Kennwort eines Administrators möglich. Dies ist eine praktische Einschränkung, da so verhindert wird, dass ein einzelner Anwender das System herunterfahren kann. Auch hier können die Berechtigungen einzelner Benutzer so angepasst werden, dass ein Herunterfahren möglich ist (nicht zu empfehlen bei einem Mehrplatzsystem).
Eine Alternative ist es, am Rechner kurz den Ausschalter zu betätigen, nachdem sich alle Benutzer abgemeldet haben (bitte nur bei Systemen, die keinen physikalischen Ausschalter besitzen). Das System fährt nur herunter, wenn kein Nutzer mehr aktiv arbeitet.
Diese Revision wurde am 24. November 2013 18:13 von frustschieber erstellt.