Date: Sat, 31 Jul 1999 15:24:10 +0200 From: Stefan Esser <se@zpr.uni-koeln.de> To: Satoshi Asami <asami@cs.berkeley.edu> Cc: nacai@iname.com, imura@cs.titech.ac.jp, ports@freebsd.org, Stefan Esser <se@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: how to start gnome/kde Message-ID: <19990731152410.A594@dialup124.zpr.uni-koeln.de> In-Reply-To: <199907292233.PAA94695@silvia.hip.berkeley.edu>; from Satoshi Asami on Thu, Jul 29, 1999 at 03:33:58PM -0700 References: <199907292233.PAA94695@silvia.hip.berkeley.edu>
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On 1999-07-29 15:33 -0700, Satoshi Asami <asami@cs.berkeley.edu> wrote: > I decided to try gnome/kde and had a hell of a time trying to figure > out how to start them. Their homepages (www.kde.org, www.gnome.org) > have users' guides but they basically assume that you've got an > installation that starts them up by default. Hmmm, there are several ways to start them. In the case of KDE, you can have the KDE Login Manager (KDM) accept the user ID and password, or you can have a traditional XDM and put startkde into your .xsession file. And finally, you can have a text login and manually invoke X11 and KDE (though I doubt many people start KDE that way). > Do you mind if I add something like "Use {kde,gnome-session} to start" > in their respective pkg/DESCRs? No, sure, go for it. Let me know if I can help. For KDE, the default method is to have ${PREFIX}/bin/startkde take care of starting all the daemons in the correct order and with a little irelative delay. The latter has been claimed to be of advantage under Linux, but I honestly don't think this is really true under FreeBSD, at least on the systems I tried it on. I think we should refer the user to optionally start kdm from the local rc.d directory. (With xdm disabled, of course.) We should use startkde for the session, but I may add a patch to the port, which minimizes startup time on my (average, I assume ;-) system. Regards, STefan To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-ports" in the body of the message
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