# # Copyright 2010 Timothy Pearson <kb9vqf@pearsoncomputing.net> # Copyright 2004-2005 Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@kde.org> # # Permission to use, copy, modify, distribute, and sell this software and its # documentation for any purpose is hereby granted without fee, provided that # the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that # copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting # documentation. # # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included # in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS # OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF # MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. # IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR # OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, # ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR # OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # # Except as contained in this notice, the name of a copyright holders shall # not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or # other dealings in this Software without prior written authorization # from the copyright holders. # # The contents of this section are copied into config.ci verbatim. <code> #define RCVERMAJOR 2 #define RCVERMINOR 3 #define KDMCONF KDE_CONFDIR "/kdm" #define KDMDATA KDE_DATADIR "/kdm" #ifdef _AIX # define HALT_CMD "/usr/sbin/shutdown -h now" # define REBOOT_CMD "/usr/sbin/shutdown -r now" #elif defined(BSD) # define HALT_CMD "/sbin/shutdown -h now" # define REBOOT_CMD "/sbin/shutdown -r now" #elif defined(__SVR4) # define HALT_CMD "/usr/sbin/halt" # define REBOOT_CMD "/usr/sbin/reboot" #else # define HALT_CMD "/sbin/poweroff" # define REBOOT_CMD "/sbin/reboot" #endif #if defined(BSD) || defined(__linux__) # define DEF_USER_PATH "/usr/local/bin:/opt/kde3/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/opt/kde3/games:/usr/games" # define DEF_SYSTEM_PATH "/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/kde3/sbin:/usr/sbin:/opt/kde3/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin" #else # define DEF_USER_PATH "/usr/local/bin:/opt/kde3/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/opt/kde3/games:/usr/games:/usr/ucb" # define DEF_SYSTEM_PATH "/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/kde3/sbin:/usr/sbin:/opt/kde3/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/etc:/usr/ucb" #endif #if 0 /*def HASXDMAUTH*/ # define DEF_AUTH_NAME "XDM-AUTHORIZATION-1,MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1" #else # define DEF_AUTH_NAME "MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1" #endif #ifdef __linux__ # define HAVE_VTS #elif defined(__sun__) # define DEF_SERVER_TTY "console" #elif defined(_AIX) # define DEF_SERVER_TTY "lft0" #else # define DEF_SERVER_TTY "" #endif #ifdef _AIX # define DEF_SERVER_CMD XBINDIR "/X -T -force" #elif defined(__linux__) || defined(__GNU__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__OpenBSD__) || defined(__NetBSD__) /* we just assume that any free *nix installation has a recent xfree86/xorg */ # define DEF_SERVER_CMD XBINDIR "/X -br" #else # define DEF_SERVER_CMD XBINDIR "/X" #endif </code> # The contents of this section are copied mostly verbatim to the # default/example configuration file. # Everything indented with a space is considered a comment for the output; # it is prefixed with a hash mark but otherwise copied verbatim (except # for lines consisting of a single underscore, which generate empty comment # lines). # Section headers are "condensation seeds" for the Instance:s in the key # definitions below. <kdmrc> &kdm; master configuration file _ Please note: Settings in this file are sometimes ignored (overridden). The default KDM startup script /etc/init.d/kdm looks in /etc/default/kdm.d for theme-related settings which, if found, take precedence. The possibly overridden settings are: UseBackground, BackgroundCfg, UseTheme, Theme. See /usr/share/doc/kdm/README.Debian for details _ 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] [Xdmcp] [Shutdown] 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] Greeter config for all displays [X-*-Greeter] Core config for local displays [X-:*-Core] Greeter config for local displays [X-:*-Greeter] Core config for 1st local display [X-:0-Core] Greeter config for 1st local display [X-:0-Greeter] </kdmrc> # The contents of this section are copied into kdmrc-ref.docbook. # The macro %REF% is replaced with the accumulated Description:s from the key # definitions below. <docu> <chapter id="kdm-files"> <title>The Files &kdm; Uses for Configuration</title> <para>This chapter documents the files that control &kdm;'s behavior. Some of this can be also controlled from the &kcontrol; module, but not all.</para> <sect1 id="kdmrc"> <title>&kdmrc; - The &kdm; master configuration file</title> <para>The basic format of the file is <quote>INI-like</quote>. Options are key/value pairs, placed in sections. Everything in the file is case sensitive. Syntactic errors and unrecognized key/section identifiers cause &kdm; to issue non-fatal error messages.</para> <para>Lines beginning with <literal>#</literal> are comments; empty lines are ignored as well.</para> <para>Sections are denoted by <literal>[</literal><replaceable>Name of Section</replaceable><literal>]</literal>. </para> <para>You can configure every X-display individually.</para> <para>Every display has a display name, which consists of a host name (which is empty for local displays specified in <option>StaticServers</option> or <option>ReserveServers</option>), a colon, and a display number. Additionally, a display belongs to a display class (which can be ignored in most cases).</para> <para>Sections with display-specific settings have the formal syntax <literal>[X-</literal> <replaceable>host</replaceable> [ <literal>:</literal> <replaceable>number</replaceable> [ <literal>_</literal> <replaceable>class</replaceable> ] ] <literal>-</literal> <replaceable>sub-section</replaceable> <literal>]</literal> </para> <para>All sections with the same <replaceable>sub-section</replaceable> make up a section class.</para> <para>You can use the wildcard <literal>*</literal> (match any) for <replaceable>host</replaceable>, <replaceable>number</replaceable>, and <replaceable>class</replaceable>. You may omit trailing components; they are assumed to be <literal>*</literal> then. The host part may be a domain specification like <replaceable>.inf.tu-dresden.de</replaceable> or the wildcard <literal>+</literal> (match non-empty).</para> <para>From which section a setting is actually taken is determined by these rules:</para> <itemizedlist> <listitem> <para>An exact match takes precedence over a partial match (for the host part), which in turn takes precedence over a wildcard (<literal>+</literal> taking precendence over <literal>*</literal>).</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>Precedence decreases from left to right for equally exact matches.</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para> Example: display name <quote>myhost.foo:0</quote>, class <quote>dpy</quote> </para> <itemizedlist> <listitem> <para>[X-myhost.foo:0_dpy] precedes</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>[X-myhost.foo:0_*] (same as [X-myhost.foo:0]) precedes</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>[X-myhost.foo:*_dpy] precedes</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>[X-myhost.foo:*_*] (same as [X-myhost.foo]) precedes</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>[X-.foo:*_*] (same as [X-.foo]) precedes</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>[X-+:0_dpy] precedes</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>[X-*:0_dpy] precedes</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>[X-*:0_*] (same as [X-*:0]) precedes</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>[X-*:*_*] (same as [X-*]).</para> </listitem> <listitem> <para>These sections do <emphasis>not</emphasis> match this display:</para> <para>[X-hishost], [X-myhost.foo:0_dec], [X-*:1], [X-:*]</para> </listitem> </itemizedlist> </listitem> </itemizedlist> <para>Common sections are [X-*] (all displays), [X-:*] (all local displays) and [X-:0] (the first local display).</para> <para>The format for all keys is <userinput><option><replaceable>key</replaceable></option> <literal>=</literal> <parameter>value</parameter></userinput>. Keys are only valid in the section class they are defined for. Some keys do not apply to particular displays, in which case they are ignored. </para> <para>If a setting is not found in any matching section, the default is used.</para> <para>Special characters need to be backslash-escaped (leading and trailing spaces (<literal>\s</literal>), tab (<literal>\t</literal>), linefeed (<literal>\n</literal>), carriage return (<literal>\r</literal>) and the backslash itself (<literal>\\</literal>)).</para> <para>In lists, fields are separated with commas without whitespace in between. </para> <para>Some command strings are subject to simplified sh-style word splitting: single quotes (<literal>'</literal>) and double quotes (<literal>"</literal>) 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.</para> <note><para>A pristine &kdmrc; is very thoroughly commented. All comments will be lost if you change this file with the kcontrol frontend.</para></note> %REF% </sect1> <sect1 id="kdmrc-xservers"> <title>Specifying permanent &X-Server;s</title> <para>Each entry in the <option>StaticServers</option> list indicates a display which should constantly be managed and which is not using &XDMCP;. This method is typically used only for local &X-Server;s that are started by &kdm;, but &kdm; can manage externally started (<quote>foreign</quote>) &X-Server;s as well, may they run on the local machine or rather remotely.</para> <para>The formal syntax of a specification is <screen> <userinput><replaceable>display name</replaceable> [<literal>_</literal><replaceable>display class</replaceable>]</userinput> </screen> for all &X-Server;s. <quote>Foreign</quote> displays differ in having a host name in the display name, may it be <literal>localhost</literal>.</para> <para>The <replaceable>display name</replaceable> must be something that can be passed in the <option>-display</option> option to an X program. This string is used to generate the display-specific section names, so be careful to match the names. The display name of &XDMCP; displays is derived from the display's address by reverse host name resolution. For configuration purposes, the <literal>localhost</literal> prefix from locally running &XDMCP; displays is <emphasis>not</emphasis> stripped to make them distinguishable from local &X-Server;s started by &kdm;.</para> <para>The <replaceable>display class</replaceable> portion is also used in the display-specific sections. This is useful if you have a large collection of similar displays (such as a corral of X terminals) and would like to set options for groups of them. When using &XDMCP;, the display is required to specify the display class, so the manual for your particular X terminal should document the display class string for your device. If it does not, you can run &kdm; in debug mode and <command>grep</command> the log for <quote>class</quote>.</para> <para>The displays specified in <option>ReserveServers</option> will not be started when &kdm; starts up, but when it is explicitly requested via the command socket (or <acronym>FiFo</acronym>). If reserve displays are specified, the &kde; menu will have a <guilabel>Start New Session</guilabel> item near the bottom; use that to activate a reserve display with a new login session. The monitor will switch to the new display, and you will have a minute to login. If there are no more reserve displays available, the menu item will be disabled.</para> <para>When &kdm; starts a session, it sets up authorization data for the &X-Server;. For local servers, &kdm; passes <command><option>-auth</option> <filename><replaceable>filename</replaceable></filename></command> on the &X-Server;'s command line to point it at its authorization data. For &XDMCP; displays, &kdm; passes the authorization data to the &X-Server; via the <quote>Accept</quote> &XDMCP; message.</para> </sect1> <sect1 id="kdmrc-xaccess"> <title>&XDMCP; access control</title> <para>The file specified by the <option>AccessFile</option> option provides information which &kdm; uses to control access from displays requesting service via &XDMCP;. The file contains four types of entries: entries which control the response to <quote>Direct</quote> and <quote>Broadcast</quote> queries, entries which control the response to <quote>Indirect</quote> queries, macro definitions for <quote>Indirect</quote> entries, and entries which control on which network interfaces &kdm; listens for &XDMCP; queries. Blank lines are ignored, <literal>#</literal> is treated as a comment delimiter causing the rest of that line to be ignored, and <literal>\</literal> causes an immediately following newline to be ignored, allowing indirect host lists to span multiple lines. </para> <para>The format of the <quote>Direct</quote> entries is simple, either a host name or a pattern, which is compared against the host name of the display device. Patterns are distinguished from host names by the inclusion of one or more meta characters; <literal>*</literal> matches any sequence of 0 or more characters, and <literal>?</literal> matches any single character. If the entry is a host name, all comparisons are done using network addresses, so any name which converts to the correct network address may be used. Note that only the first network address returned for a host name is used. For patterns, only canonical host names are used in the comparison, so ensure that you do not attempt to match aliases. Host names from &XDMCP; queries always contain the local domain name even if the reverse lookup returns a short name, so you can use patterns for the local domain. Preceding the entry with a <literal>!</literal> character causes hosts which match that entry to be excluded. To only respond to <quote>Direct</quote> queries for a host or pattern, it can be followed by the optional <literal>NOBROADCAST</literal> keyword. This can be used to prevent a &kdm; server from appearing on menus based on <quote>Broadcast</quote> queries.</para> <para>An <quote>Indirect</quote> entry also contains a host name or pattern, but follows it with a list of host names or macros to which the queries should be forwarded. <quote>Indirect</quote> entries can be excluding as well, in which case a (valid) dummy host name must be supplied to make the entry distinguishable from a <quote>Direct</quote> entry. If compiled with IPv6 support, multicast address groups may also be included in the list of addresses the queries are forwarded to. <!-- Not actually implemented! Multicast addresses may be followed by an optional <literal>/</literal> character and hop count. If no hop count is specified, the multicast hop count defaults to 1, keeping the packet on the local network. For IPv4 multicasting, the hop count is used as the TTL. --> If the indirect host list contains the keyword <literal>CHOOSER</literal>, <quote>Indirect</quote> queries are not forwarded, but instead a host chooser dialog is displayed by &kdm;. The chooser will send a <quote>Direct</quote> query to each of the remaining host names in the list and offer a menu of all the hosts that respond. The host list may contain the keyword <literal>BROADCAST</literal>, to make the chooser send a <quote>Broadcast</quote> query as well; note that on some operating systems, UDP packets cannot be broadcast, so this feature will not work. </para> <para>When checking access for a particular display host, each entry is scanned in turn and the first matching entry determines the response. <quote>Direct</quote> and <quote>Broadcast</quote> entries are ignored when scanning for an <quote>Indirect</quote> entry and vice-versa.</para> <para>A macro definition contains a macro name and a list of host names and other macros that the macro expands to. To distinguish macros from hostnames, macro names start with a <literal>%</literal> character.</para> <para>The last entry type is the <literal>LISTEN</literal> directive. The formal syntax is <screen> <userinput> <literal>LISTEN</literal> [<replaceable>interface</replaceable> [<replaceable>multicast list</replaceable>]]</userinput> </screen> If one or more <literal>LISTEN</literal> lines are specified, &kdm; listens for &XDMCP; requests only on the specified interfaces. <replaceable>interface</replaceable> may be a hostname or IP address representing a network interface on this machine, or the wildcard <literal>*</literal> to represent all available network interfaces. If multicast group addresses are listed on a <literal>LISTEN</literal> line, &kdm; joins the multicast groups on the given interface. For IPv6 multicasts, the IANA has assigned ff0<replaceable>X</replaceable>:0:0:0:0:0:0:12b as the permanently assigned range of multicast addresses for &XDMCP;. The <replaceable>X</replaceable> in the prefix may be replaced by any valid scope identifier, such as 1 for Node-Local, 2 for Link-Local, 5 for Site-Local, and so on (see IETF RFC 2373 or its replacement for further details and scope definitions). &kdm; defaults to listening on the Link-Local scope address ff02:0:0:0:0:0:0:12b to most closely match the IPv4 subnet broadcast behavior. If no <literal>LISTEN</literal> lines are given, &kdm; listens on all interfaces and joins the default &XDMCP; IPv6 multicast group (when compiled with IPv6 support). To disable listening for &XDMCP; requests altogether, a <literal>LISTEN</literal> line with no addresses may be specified, but using the <literal>[Xdmcp]</literal> <option>Enable</option> option is preferred. </para> </sect1> <sect1 id="kdm-scripts"> <title>Supplementary programs</title> <para> The following programs are run by &kdm; at various stages of a session. They typically are shell scripts. </para> <para> The Setup, Startup and Reset programs are run as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>, so they should be careful about security. Their first argument is <literal>auto</literal> if the session results from an automatic login; otherwise, no arguments are passed to them. </para> <sect2 id="kdmrc-xsetup"> <title>Setup program</title> <para> The <filename>Xsetup</filename> program is run after the &X-Server; is started or reset, but before the greeter is offered. This is the place to change the root background (if <option>UseBackground</option> is disabled) or bring up other windows that should appear on the screen along with the greeter. </para> <para> In addition to any specified by <option>ExportList</option>, the following environment variables are passed:</para> <variablelist> <varlistentry> <term>DISPLAY</term> <listitem><para>the associated display name</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>PATH</term> <listitem><para>the value of <option>SystemPath</option></para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>SHELL</term> <listitem><para>the value of <option>SystemShell</option></para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>XAUTHORITY</term> <listitem><para>may be set to an authority file</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>DM_CONTROL</term> <listitem><para>the value of <option>FifoDir</option></para></listitem> </varlistentry> </variablelist> <para> Note that since &kdm; grabs the keyboard, any other windows will not be able to receive keyboard input. They will be able to interact with the mouse, however; beware of potential security holes here. If <option>GrabServer</option> is set, <filename>Xsetup</filename> will not be able to connect to the display at all. Resources for this program can be put into the file named by <option>Resources</option>. </para> </sect2> <sect2 id="kdmrc-xstartup"> <title>Startup program</title> <para>The <filename>Xstartup</filename> program is run as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> when the user logs in. This is the place to put commands which add entries to <filename>utmp</filename> (the <command>sessreg</command> program may be useful here), mount users' home directories from file servers, or abort the session if some requirements are not met (but note that on modern systems, many of these tasks are already taken care of by <acronym>PAM</acronym> modules).</para> <para>In addition to any specified by <option>ExportList</option>, the following environment variables are passed:</para> <variablelist> <varlistentry> <term>DISPLAY</term> <listitem><para>the associated display name</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>HOME</term> <listitem><para>the initial working directory of the user</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>LOGNAME</term> <listitem><para>the username</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>USER</term> <listitem><para>the username</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>PATH</term> <listitem><para>the value of <option>SystemPath</option></para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>SHELL</term> <listitem><para>the value of <option>SystemShell</option></para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>XAUTHORITY</term> <listitem><para>may be set to an authority file</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>DM_CONTROL</term> <listitem><para>the value of <option>FifoDir</option></para></listitem> </varlistentry> </variablelist> <para>&kdm; waits until this program exits before starting the user session. If the exit value of this program is non-zero, &kdm; discontinues the session and starts another authentication cycle.</para> </sect2> <sect2 id="kdmrc-xsession"> <title>Session program</title> <para>The <filename>Xsession</filename> program is the command which is run as the user's session. It is run with the permissions of the authorized user. One of the keywords <literal>failsafe</literal>, <literal>default</literal> or <literal>custom</literal>, or a string to <command>eval</command> by a Bourne-compatible shell is passed as the first argument.</para> <para>In addition to any specified by <option>ExportList</option>, the following environment variables are passed:</para> <variablelist> <varlistentry> <term>DISPLAY</term> <listitem><para>the associated display name</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>HOME</term> <listitem><para>the initial working directory of the user</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>LOGNAME</term> <listitem><para>the username</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>USER</term> <listitem><para>the username</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>PATH</term> <listitem><para>the value of <option>UserPath</option> (or <option>SystemPath</option> for <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> user sessions)</para> </listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>SHELL</term> <listitem><para>the user's default shell</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>XAUTHORITY</term> <listitem><para>may be set to a non-standard authority file</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>KRBTKFILE</term> <listitem><para>may be set to a Kerberos4 credentials cache name</para> </listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>KRB5CCNAME</term> <listitem><para>may be set to a Kerberos5 credentials cache name</para> </listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>DM_CONTROL</term> <listitem><para>the value of <option>FifoDir</option></para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>XDM_MANAGED</term> <listitem><para>will contain a comma-separated list of parameters the session might find interesting, like the location of the command <acronym>FiFo</acronym> and its capabilities, and which conversation plugin was used for the login</para> </listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term>DESKTOP_SESSION</term> <listitem><para>the name of the session the user has chosen to run</para> </listitem> </varlistentry> </variablelist> </sect2> <sect2 id="kdmrc-xreset"> <title>Reset program</title> <para>Symmetrical with <filename>Xstartup</filename>, the <filename>Xreset</filename> program is run after the user session has terminated. Run as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>, it should contain commands that undo the effects of commands in <filename>Xstartup</filename>, removing entries from <filename>utmp</filename> or unmounting directories from file servers.</para> <para>The environment variables that were passed to <filename>Xstartup</filename> are also passed to <filename>Xreset</filename>. </para> </sect2> </sect1> </chapter> </docu> # The rest of this file are section and key definitions for the options. # The order of the keywords is fixed and everything is case sensitive. # A keyword may expect supplementary data in the form of space-indented # lines following it. Definitions are delimited by empty lines. # # Section definition: # Section: <name> # Section name. Section classes start with a dash. # If: <expression> # C preprocessor conditional for supporting this section. # If it evaluates to false, all keys in this section are disabled as well. # Description: # A docbook description of this section is expected in the next lines. # The contents are automatically enclosed in <para></para>. # # Option key definition: # Key: <name> # Option name. # If: <expression> # C preprocessor conditional for supporting this option. # Type: (int|bool|enum|group|string|path|list) # The option's data type. # If the type is enum, the element definitions follow in the next lines: # <term>[/<c #define>]: <docbook style description> # Default: <default> # Default value. string, path and list are copied verbatim and therefore # must be already quoted appropriately. The other types are auto-quoted. # If the default value is prefixed with a "*", a c #define def_<Key> is # created. # The default is automatically appended to the kdmrc comment and the # documentation entry. # CDefault: <verbose default> # Append this instead of the real default to the two docs. The quoting # rules are the same as for Default. # DDefault: - # If specified, the default value will not be appended to the documentation # entry. The Description should mention the default then. Use this when # the default is system-dependent. # PostProc: <function> # A function to postprocess the read config value before using it. # User: (dummy|(core|greeter|greeter-c|dep|config)[(<variable>)][:font]) # These entries specify which parts of kdm need the option in question: # dummy: no user; entry is there only for syntactical correctness. # dep: this option is an internal dependency for another option. # config: this option configures the config reader itself. # core: the kdm backend needs this option. # greeter-c: the kdm frontend needs this option as a C data type. # greeter: the kdm frontend needs this option as a C++/Qt data type. # If a :font tag is appended, a string entry is converted to a QFont. # If no variable name is specified, it will be derived from the Key by # un-capitalizing it. # Instance: (-|[#][<display spec>/](!|<value>)) # These entries specify option instances for the default/example kdmrc. # A "-" entry is a dummy for syntactical correctness. # A prefixing hash mark will be copied to kdmrc. # For options in a section class a display must be specified. # For bool options "!" can be used as the value to specify the negation # of the default. # Update: <function>[/<number>] # Call this function on each occurence of this option in genkdmconf. # Options with higher numbers (default is 0) will be processed later. # Merge: (xdm[:<resource>][(<function>)]|kdm:[<section>/][<key>][<function>]) # Specify config options to merge from xdm and older kdm versions. # Kdm options from the current version are automatically merged. # When merging an xdm resource and no resource name is specified, it is # derived from the Key by un-capitalizing it. # When merging a kdm option, at least one of <section> and <key> must # be given; an unspecified entity defaults to the current Section/Key. # <section> may be a dash-prefixed section class. # A function to postprocess the read value can be specified. # Comment: [&|-] # A kdmrc comment for this option is expected in the next lines. # If "-" is given to Comment, no comment is generated at all. # If "&" is given, the comment is derived from the Description below by # applying some simple docbook interpretation to it. Note that the # Description must be preformatted in this case. Use # sed -ne 's/^\(.\{79,\}\)$/\1/p' < kdmrc # after running "make install" to see whether all lines still fit. # If Type is enum, a list of the previously defined element/description # pairs is appended; the descriptions undergo docbook interpretation. # Finally, a sentence with the Default (or CDefault, if given) is appended. # Description: [!|-] # A docbook description of this option is expected in the next lines. # The contents are automatically enclosed in <para></para>. # If "-" is given to Description, no comment is generated at all. # If "!" is given, enums are not treated specially; otherwise, the macro # %ENUM% is replaced with a list of the defined element/description pairs, # or - if the macro is not present - the list is appended to the # description. # Finally, a sentence with the Default (or CDefault, if given) is appended, # unless "DDefault: -" was specified. # Each option entry generates an anchor named option-<lowercase(Key)>; # it can be referenced in the main documentation. # Do not forget to run "make ref" in kdebase/doc/kdm after changing # Descriptions. Section: General Description: This section contains global options that do not fit into any specific section. Key: ConfigVersion Type: string Default: "" CDefault: - User: dummy # will be overwritten Instance: Comment: This option exists solely for the purpose of a clean automatic upgrade. Do not even think about changing it! Description: This option exists solely for the purpose of clean automatic upgrades. <emphasis>Do not</emphasis> change it, you may interfere with future upgrades and this could result in &kdm; failing to run. Key: PAMService If: defined(USE_PAM) Type: string Default: KDM_PAM_SERVICE User: core Instance: - Comment: - Description: - <legacy> Proc: absorb_xservers # note: this can miss Xservers from kdm for kde 2.2 because of stupid default. Source: kdm:General/Xservers Source: xdm:servers </legacy> Key: StaticServers Type: list Default: ":0" User: core Instance: ":0" Comment: List of permanent displays. Displays with a hostname are foreign. A display class may be specified separated by an underscore. Description: List of displays (&X-Server;s) permanently managed by &kdm;. Displays with a hostname are foreign displays which are expected to be already running, the others are local displays for which &kdm; starts an own &X-Server;; see <option>ServerCmd</option>. Each display may belong to a display class; append it to the display name separated by an underscore. See <xref linkend="kdmrc-xservers"/> for the details. Key: ReserveServers Type: list Default: "" User: core Instance: ":1,:2,:3" Comment: & Description: List of on-demand displays. See <option>StaticServers</option> for syntax. Key: ServerVTs If: defined(HAVE_VTS) Type: list Default: "" User: core Instance: #"7,8,-9,-10" Update: upd_servervts Comment: VTs to allocate to &X-Server;s. 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. Description: List of Virtual Terminals to allocate to &X-Server;s. For negative numbers the absolute value is used, and the <acronym>VT</acronym> will be allocated only if the kernel says it is free. If &kdm; exhausts this list, it will allocate free <acronym>VT</acronym>s greater than the absolute value of the last entry in this list. Currently Linux only. Key: ConsoleTTYs If: defined(HAVE_VTS) Type: list Default: "" User: core Instance: #"tty1,tty2,tty3,tty4,tty5,tty6" Update: upd_consolettys Comment: TTYs (without /dev/) to monitor for activity while in console mode. Description: This option is for operating systems (<acronym>OS</acronym>s) with support for virtual terminals (<acronym>VT</acronym>s), by both &kdm; and the <acronym>OS</acronym>s itself. Currently this applies only to Linux. </para><para> When &kdm; switches to console mode, it starts monitoring all <acronym>TTY</acronym> lines listed here (without the leading <literal>/dev/</literal>). If none of them is active for some time, &kdm; switches back to the X login. Key: PidFile Type: string Default: "" User: core Instance: "/var/run/kdm.pid" Merge: xdm Comment: Where &kdm; should store its PID (do not store if empty). Description: The filename specified will be created to contain an ASCII representation of the process ID of the main &kdm; process; the PID will not be stored if the filename is empty. Key: LockPidFile Type: bool Default: true User: core Instance: #! Merge: xdm Comment: Whether &kdm; should lock the PID file to prevent having multiple &kdm; instances running at once. Do not change unless you are brave. Description: This option controls whether &kdm; uses file locking to keep multiple display managers from running onto each other. Key: AuthDir Type: path # differs from XDM Default: "/var/run/xauth" User: core Instance: #"/tmp" Merge: xdm(P_authDir) Comment: Where to store authorization files. Description: This names a directory under which &kdm; stores &X-Server; authorization files while initializing the session. &kdm; expects the system to clean up this directory from stale files on reboot. </para><para> The authorization file to be used for a particular display can be specified with the <option>AuthFile</option> option in [X-*-Core]. Key: AutoRescan Type: bool Default: true User: core Instance: #! Merge: xdm Comment: Whether &kdm; should automatically re-read configuration files, if it finds them having changed. Description: This boolean controls whether &kdm; automatically re-reads its configuration files if it finds them to have changed. Key: ExportList Type: list Default: "" User: core Instance: #"LD_LIBRARY_PATH,ANOTHER_IMPORTANT_VAR" Merge: xdm(P_List) Comment: & Description: Additional environment variables &kdm; should pass on to all programs it runs. <envar>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</envar> and <envar>XCURSOR_THEME</envar> are good candidates; otherwise, it should not be necessary very often. Key: RandomFile If: !defined(ARC4_RANDOM) && !defined(DEV_RANDOM) Type: string Default: "/dev/mem" User: core Instance: #"" Merge: xdm Comment: A file &kdm; should read entropy from. Description: If the system has no native entropy source like /dev/urandom (see <option>RandomDevice</option>) and no entropy daemon like EGD (see <option>PrngdSocket</option> and <option>PrngdPort</option>) is running, &kdm; will fall back to its own pseudo-random number generator that will, among other things, successively checksum parts of this file (which, obviously, should change frequently). </para><para> This option does not exist on Linux and various BSDs. Key: PrngdSocket If: !defined(ARC4_RANDOM) && !defined(DEV_RANDOM) Type: string # differs from xdm! Default: "" User: core Instance: #"/tmp/entropy" Merge: xdm Comment: A UNIX domain socket &kdm; should read entropy from. Description: If the system has no native entropy source like /dev/urandom (see <option>RandomDevice</option>), read random data from a Pseudo-Random Number Generator Daemon, like EGD (http://egd.sourceforge.net) via this UNIX domain socket. </para><para> This option does not exist on Linux and various BSDs. Key: PrngdPort If: !defined(ARC4_RANDOM) && !defined(DEV_RANDOM) Type: int Default: 0 User: core Instance: #4840 Merge: xdm Comment: A TCP socket on localhost &kdm; should read entropy from. Description: Same as <option>PrngdSocket</option>, only use a TCP socket on localhost. Key: RandomDevice If: !defined(ARC4_RANDOM) Type: string Default: "" User: core Instance: #"/dev/altrandom" Merge: xdm Comment: A character device &kdm; should read entropy from. Empty means use the system's preferred entropy device. Description: The path to a character device which &kdm; should read random data from. Empty means to use the system's preferred entropy device if there is one. </para><para> This option does not exist on OpenBSD, as it uses the arc4_random function instead. Key: FifoDir Type: path Default: *"/var/run/xdmctl" User: core Instance: #"/tmp" Update: upd_fifodir Comment: Where the command FiFos should be created; make it empty to disable them. Description: The directory in which the command <acronym>FiFo</acronym>s should be created; make it empty to disable them. # See <xref linkend="kdm-fifos"/> for the details. Key: FifoGroup Type: group Default: 0 User: core Instance: #xdmctl Comment: & Description: The group to which the global command <acronym>FiFo</acronym> should belong; can be either a name or a numerical ID. Key: DataDir Type: path Default: *"/var/lib/kdm" User: greeter Instance: #"" Update: upd_datadir Comment: The directory in which &kdm; should store persistent working data. Description: The directory in which &kdm; should store persistent working data; such data is, for example, the previous user that logged in on a particular display. Key: DmrcDir Type: path Default: "" User: core Instance: #"/nfs-shared/var/dmrcs" Comment: & Description: The directory in which &kdm; should store users' <filename>.dmrc</filename> files. This is only needed if the home directories are not readable before actually logging in (like with AFS). Section: Xdmcp If: defined(XDMCP) Description: This section contains options that control &kdm;'s handling of &XDMCP; requests. # See <xref linkend="xdmcp-with-kdm"/> to find out what &XDMCP; is. Key: Enable Type: bool Default: true User: dep(xdmcpEnable) Instance: false Comment: & Description: Whether &kdm; should listen to incoming &XDMCP; requests. Key: Port Type: int Default: 177 PostProc: PrequestPort User: core(request_port) Instance: # Merge: xdm:requestPort(P_requestPort) Comment: The UDP port on which &kdm; should listen for &XDMCP; requests. Do not change. Description: This indicates the UDP port number which &kdm; uses to listen for incoming &XDMCP; requests. Unless you need to debug the system, leave this with its default value. Key: KeyFile Type: string Default: "" User: core Instance: #KDMCONF "/kdmkeys" Update: cp_keyfile Merge: xdm Comment: File with the private keys of X-terminals. Required for XDM authentication. Description: XDM-AUTHENTICATION-1 style &XDMCP; authentication requires a private key to be shared between &kdm; and the terminal. This option specifies the file containing those values. Each entry in the file consists of a display name and the shared key. Key: Xaccess Type: string # differs from xdm Default: *KDMCONF "/Xaccess" User: config(Xaccess) Instance: #"" Update: mk_xaccess Merge: xdm:accessFile Comment: &XDMCP; access control file in the usual XDM-Xaccess format. Description: To prevent unauthorized &XDMCP; service and to allow forwarding of &XDMCP; IndirectQuery requests, this file contains a database of hostnames which are either allowed direct access to this machine, or have a list of hosts to which queries should be forwarded to. The format of this file is described in <xref linkend="kdmrc-xaccess"/>. Key: ChoiceTimeout Type: int Default: 15 User: core Instance: #10 Merge: xdm Comment: Number of seconds to wait for display to respond after the user has selected a host from the chooser. Description: Number of seconds to wait for the display to respond after the user has selected a host from the chooser. If the display sends an &XDMCP; IndirectQuery within this time, the request is forwarded to the chosen host; otherwise, it is assumed to be from a new session and the chooser is offered again. Key: RemoveDomainname Type: bool Default: true User: core Instance: #! Merge: xdm Comment: Strip domain name from remote display names if it is equal to the local domain. Description: When computing the display name for &XDMCP; clients, the name resolver will typically create a fully qualified host name for the terminal. As this is sometimes confusing, &kdm; will remove the domain name portion of the host name if it is the same as the domain name of the local host when this option is enabled. Key: SourceAddress Type: bool Default: false User: core Instance: #! Merge: xdm Comment: Use the numeric IP address of the incoming connection on multihomed hosts instead of the host name. Description: Use the numeric IP address of the incoming connection on multihomed hosts instead of the host name. This is to avoid trying to connect on the wrong interface which might be down at this time. Key: Willing Type: string Default: "" User: core # will be overwritten Instance: # Update: mk_willing Merge: xdm Merge: kdm:Xwilling Comment: 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. Description: This specifies a program which is run (as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>) when an &XDMCP; DirectQuery or BroadcastQuery is received and this host is configured to offer &XDMCP; display management. The output of this program may be displayed in a chooser window. If no program is specified, the string <quote>Willing to manage</quote> is sent. Section: Shutdown Description: This section contains global options concerning system shutdown. Key: HaltCmd Type: string Default: HALT_CMD DDefault: - User: core(cmdHalt) Instance: #"" Comment: The command (subject to word splitting) to run to halt the system. Description: The command (subject to word splitting) to run to halt/poweroff the system. </para><para> The default is something reasonable for the system on which &kdm; was built, like <command>/sbin/shutdown <option>-h</option> <parameter>now</parameter></command>. Key: RebootCmd Type: string Default: REBOOT_CMD DDefault: - User: core(cmdReboot) Instance: #"" Comment: The command (subject to word splitting) to run to reboot the system. Description: The command (subject to word splitting) to run to reboot the system. </para><para> The default is something reasonable for the system &kdm; on which was built, like <command>/sbin/shutdown <option>-r</option> <parameter>now</parameter></command>. Key: AllowFifo Type: bool Default: false User: core(fifoAllowShutdown) Instance: #! Comment: & Description: Whether it is allowed to shut down the system via the global command <acronym>FiFo</acronym>. Key: AllowFifoNow Type: bool Default: true User: core(fifoAllowNuke) Instance: #! Comment: Whether it is allowed to abort active sessions when shutting down the system via the global command FiFo. Description: Whether it is allowed to abort active sessions when shutting down the system via the global command <acronym>FiFo</acronym>. </para><para> This will have no effect unless <option>AllowFifo</option> is enabled. Key: BootManager Type: enum None/BO_NONE: no boot manager Grub/BO_GRUB: Grub boot manager Lilo/BO_LILO: Lilo boot manager (Linux on i386 & x86-64 only) Default: None User: core User: greeter Instance: #Grub Merge: kdm:UseLilo(P_UseLilo) Comment: & Description: The boot manager &kdm; should use for offering boot options in the shutdown dialog. Section: -Core Description: This section class contains options concerning the configuration of the &kdm; backend (core). Key: OpenDelay Type: int Default: 15 User: core Instance: #*/ Merge: xdm(P_openDelay) Comment: How long to wait before retrying to connect a display. Description: See <option>OpenRepeat</option>. Key: OpenTimeout Type: int Default: 120 User: core Instance: #*/ Merge: xdm Comment: How long to wait before timing out a display connection attempt. Description: See <option>OpenRepeat</option>. Key: OpenRepeat Type: int Default: 5 User: core Instance: #*/ Merge: xdm Comment: How many connection attempts to make during a start attempt. Note that a timeout aborts the entire start attempt. Description: These options control the behavior of &kdm; when attempting to open a connection to an &X-Server;. <option>OpenDelay</option> is the length of the pause (in seconds) between successive attempts, <option>OpenRepeat</option> is the number of attempts to make and <option>OpenTimeout</option> is the amount of time to spend on a connection attempt. After <option>OpenRepeat</option> attempts have been made, or if <option>OpenTimeout</option> seconds elapse in any particular connection attempt, the start attempt is considered failed. Key: StartAttempts Type: int Default: 4 User: core Instance: #*/ Merge: xdm Comment: Try at most that many times to start a display. If this fails, the display is disabled. Description: How many times &kdm; should attempt to start a <literal>foreign</literal> display listed in <option>StaticServers</option> before giving up and disabling it. Local displays are attempted only once, and &XDMCP; displays are retried indefinitely by the client (unless the option <option>-once</option> was given to the &X-Server;). Key: ServerAttempts Type: int Default: 1 User: core Instance: #:*/ Merge: xdm Comment: How often to try to run the &X-Server;. Running includes executing it and waiting for it to come up. Description: How many times &kdm; should attempt to start up a local &X-Server;. Starting up includes executing it and waiting for it to come up. Key: ServerTimeout Type: int Default: 15 User: core Instance: #:*/ Comment: How long to wait for a local &X-Server; to come up. Description: How many seconds &kdm; should wait for a local &X-Server; to come up. Key: ServerCmd Type: string Default: DEF_SERVER_CMD DDefault: - User: core Instance: :*/DEF_SERVER_CMD Comment: The command line to start the &X-Server;, without display number and VT spec. This string is subject to word splitting. Description: The command line to start the &X-Server;, without display number and VT spec. This string is subject to word splitting. </para><para> The default is something reasonable for the system on which &kdm; was built, like <command>/usr/bin/X</command>. Key: ServerArgsLocal Type: string Default: "" User: core Instance: :*/"-nolisten tcp" Comment: & Description: Additional arguments for the &X-Server;s for local sessions. This string is subject to word splitting. Key: ServerArgsRemote Type: string Default: "" User: core Instance: #:*/"" Comment: & Description: Additional arguments for the &X-Server;s for remote sessions. This string is subject to word splitting. Key: ServerVT If: defined(HAVE_VTS) Type: int Default: 0 User: core(reqSrvVT) Instance: #:0/7 Comment: The VT the &X-Server; should run on; auto-assign if zero, don't assign if -1. Better leave it zero and use ServerVTs. Description: The VT the &X-Server; should run on. <option>ServerVTs</option> should be used instead of this option. Leave it zero to let &kdm; assign a <acronym>VT</acronym> automatically. Set it to <literal>-1</literal> to avoid assigning a <acronym>VT</acronym> alltogether - this is required for setups with multiple physical consoles. Currently Linux only. Key: ServerTTY If: !defined(HAVE_VTS) Type: string Default: "" User: core(console) Instance: :0/DEF_SERVER_TTY Comment: The TTY line (without /dev/) the &X-Server; covers physically. Description: This option is for <acronym>OS</acronym>s without support for <acronym>VT</acronym>s, either by &kdm; or the <acronym>OS</acronym> itself. Currently this applies to all <acronym>OS</acronym>s but Linux. </para><para> When &kdm; switches to console mode, it starts monitoring this <acronym>TTY</acronym> line (specified without the leading <literal>/dev/</literal>) for activity. If the line is not used for some time, &kdm; switches back to the X login. Key: PingInterval Type: int Default: 5 User: core User: greeter Instance: #*/ Merge: xdm Comment: Ping remote display every that many minutes. Description: See <option>PingTimeout</option>. Key: PingTimeout Type: int Default: 5 User: core User: greeter Instance: #*/ Merge: xdm Comment: Wait for a Pong that many minutes. Description: To discover when <emphasis>remote</emphasis> displays disappear, &kdm; regularly pings them. <option>PingInterval</option> specifies the time (in minutes) between the pings and <option>PingTimeout</option> specifies the maximum amount of time (in minutes) to wait for the terminal to respond to the request. If the terminal does not respond, the session is declared dead and terminated. </para><para> If you frequently use X terminals which can become isolated from the managing host, you may wish to increase the timeout. The only worry is that sessions will continue to exist after the terminal has been accidentally disabled. Key: TerminateServer Type: bool Default: false User: core Instance: #:*/! Merge: xdm Comment: Restart instead of resetting the local &X-Server; after session exit. Use it if the server leaks memory etc. Description: Whether &kdm; should restart the local &X-Server; after session exit instead of resetting it. Use this if the &X-Server; leaks memory or crashes the system on reset attempts. Key: ResetSignal Type: int Default: 1 CDefault: 1 (SIGHUP) User: core Instance: #:*/ Merge: xdm Comment: The signal needed to reset the local &X-Server;. Description: The signal number to use to reset the local &X-Server;. Key: TermSignal Type: int Default: 15 CDefault: 15 (SIGTERM) User: core Instance: #:*/ Merge: xdm Comment: The signal needed to terminate the local &X-Server;. Description: The signal number to use to terminate the local &X-Server;. Key: Authorize Type: bool Default: true User: core Instance: #:*/! Merge: xdm Comment: Create X-authorizations for local displays. Description: Controls whether &kdm; generates and uses authorization for <emphasis>local</emphasis> &X-Server; connections. For &XDMCP; displays the authorization requested by the display is used; foreign non-&XDMCP; displays do not support authorization at all. Key: AuthNames Type: list Default: DEF_AUTH_NAME User: core Instance: #:*/"" Merge: xdm:authName Comment: Which X-authorization mechanisms should be used. Description: If <option>Authorize</option> is true, use the authorization mechanisms listed herein. The MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 authorization is always available; XDM-AUTHORIZATION-1, SUN-DES-1 and MIT-KERBEROS-5 might be available as well, depending on the build configuration. Key: ResetForAuth Type: bool Default: false User: core Instance: #:*/! Merge: xdm Comment: Need to reset the &X-Server; to make it read initial Xauth file. Description: Some <emphasis>old</emphasis> &X-Server;s re-read the authorization file at &X-Server; reset time, instead of when checking the initial connection. As &kdm; generates the authorization information just before connecting to the display, an old &X-Server; would not get up-to-date authorization information. This option causes &kdm; to send SIGHUP to the &X-Server; after setting up the file, causing an additional &X-Server; reset to occur, during which time the new authorization information will be read. Key: AuthFile Type: string Default: "" User: core(clientAuthFile) Instance: #*/"" Merge: xdm Comment: The name of this &X-Server;'s Xauth file. If empty, a random name in the AuthDir directory will be used. Description: This file is used to communicate the authorization data from &kdm; to the &X-Server;, using the <option>-auth</option> &X-Server; command line option. It should be kept in a directory which is not world-writable as it could easily be removed, disabling the authorization mechanism in the &X-Server;. If not specified, a random name is generated from <option>AuthDir</option> and the name of the display. Key: Resources # XXX strictly speaking this is supposed to be a string list, i think. Type: string Default: "" User: core Instance: #*/"" Update: cp_resources Merge: xdm Comment: 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. Description: This option specifies the name of the file to be loaded by <command>xrdb</command> as the resource database onto the root window of screen 0 of the display. KDE programs generally do not use X-resources, so this option is only needed if the <option>Setup</option> program needs some X-resources. Key: Xrdb Type: string Default: XBINDIR "/xrdb" User: core Instance: #*/"" Merge: xdm Comment: The xrdb program to use to read the above specified recources. Subject to word splitting. Description: The <command>xrdb</command> program to use to read the X-resources file specified in <option>Recources</option>. The command is subject to word splitting. Key: Setup Type: string Default: "" User: core # will be overwritten Instance: #*/"" Update: mk_setup Merge: xdm Comment: 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. Description: This string is subject to word splitting. It specifies a program which is run (as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>) before offering the greeter window. This may be used to change the appearance of the screen around the greeter window or to put up other windows (e.g., you may want to run <command>xconsole</command> here). The conventional name for a file used here is <command>Xsetup</command>. See <xref linkend="kdmrc-xsetup"/>. Key: Startup Type: string Default: "" User: core # will be overwritten Instance: #*/"" Update: mk_startup Merge: xdm Comment: A program to run before a user session starts. Subject to word splitting. Description: This string is subject to word splitting. It specifies a program which is run (as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>) after the user authentication process succeeds. The conventional name for a file used here is <command>Xstartup</command>. See <xref linkend="kdmrc-xstartup"/>. Key: Reset Type: string Default: "" User: core # will be overwritten Instance: #*/"" Update: mk_reset Merge: xdm Comment: A program to run after a user session exits. Subject to word splitting. Description: This string is subject to word splitting. It specifies a program which is run (as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>) after the session terminates. The conventional name for a file used here is <command>Xreset</command>. See <xref linkend="kdmrc-xreset"/>. Key: Session Type: string Default: XBINDIR "/xterm -ls -T" #Merge: xdm - incompatible! User: core # will be overwritten Instance: #*/"" Update: mk_session Comment: 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. Description: This string is subject to word splitting. It specifies the session program to be executed (as the user owning the session). The conventional name for a file used here is <command>Xsession</command>. See <xref linkend="kdmrc-xsession"/>. Key: FailsafeClient Type: string Default: XBINDIR "/xterm" User: core Instance: #*/"" Merge: xdm Comment: The program to run if Session fails. Description: If the <option>Session</option> program fails to execute, &kdm; will fall back to this program. This program is executed with no arguments, but executes using the same environment variables as the session would have had (see <xref linkend="kdmrc-xsession"/>). Key: UserPath Type: string Default: DEF_USER_PATH DDefault: - User: core Instance: #*/"" Merge: xdm Comment: The PATH for the Session program. Description: The <envar>PATH</envar> environment variable for non-<systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> <option>Session</option>s. </para><para> The default depends on the system &kdm; was built on. Key: SystemPath Type: string Default: DEF_SYSTEM_PATH DDefault: - User: core Instance: #*/"" Merge: xdm Comment: The PATH for Setup, Startup and Reset, etc. Description: The <envar>PATH</envar> environment variable for all programs but non-<systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> <option>Session</option>s. Note that it is good practice not to include <literal>.</literal> (the current directory) into this entry. </para><para> The default depends on the system &kdm; was built on. Key: SystemShell Type: string Default: "/bin/sh" User: core Instance: #*/"/bin/bash" Merge: xdm Comment: The default system shell. Description: The <envar>SHELL</envar> environment variable for all programs but the <option>Session</option>. Key: UserAuthDir Type: path Default: "/tmp" User: core Instance: #*/"" Merge: xdm Comment: Where to put the user's &X-Server; authorization file if ~/.Xauthority cannot be created. Description: When &kdm; is unable to write to the usual user authorization file ($<envar>HOME</envar>/.Xauthority), it creates a unique file name in this directory and points the environment variable <envar>XAUTHORITY</envar> at the created file. Key: AutoReLogin Type: bool Default: false User: core Instance: #*/! Merge: xdm Comment: 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! Description: If enabled, &kdm; will automatically restart a session after an &X-Server; crash (or if it is killed by Alt-Ctrl-BackSpace). Note that enabling this feature opens a security hole: a secured display lock can be circumvented (unless &kde;'s built-in screen locker is used). Key: AllowRootLogin Type: bool Default: true User: core User: greeter(showRoot) Instance: */false Merge: xdm Comment: Allow root logins? Description: If disabled, do not allow <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> (and any other user with UID = 0) to log in directly. Key: AllowNullPasswd Type: bool Default: true User: core # sensible? Instance: */false Instance: :*/true Merge: xdm Comment: Allow to log in, when user has set an empty password? Description: If disabled, only users that have passwords assigned can log in. Key: AllowShutdown Type: enum None/SHUT_NONE: no <guilabel>Shutdown...</guilabel> menu entry is shown at all Root/SHUT_ROOT: the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> password must be entered to shut down All/SHUT_ALL: everybody can shut down the machine Default: All User: core User: greeter Instance: */Root Instance: :*/All Merge: kdm:-Greeter/ Comment: & Description: Who is allowed to shut down the system. This applies both to the greeter and to the command <acronym>FiFo</acronym>. Key: AllowSdForceNow Type: enum None: no forced shutdown is allowed at all Root: the <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> password must be entered to shut down forcibly All: everybody can shut down the machine forcibly Default: All User: core(allowNuke) User: greeter(allowNuke) Instance: #*/Root Comment: & Description: Who is allowed to abort active sessions when shutting down. Key: DefaultSdMode Type: enum 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: Schedule User: core(defSdMode) User: greeter(defSdMode) Instance: #*/ForceNow Comment: & Description: The default choice for the shutdown condition/timing. Key: ScheduledSd Type: enum Never/SHUT_NEVER: not at all Optional/SHUT_OPTION: as a button in the simple shutdown dialogs Always/SHUT_ALWAYS: instead of the simple shutdown dialogs Default: Never User: greeter Instance: #*/Optional Comment: & Description: How to offer shutdown scheduling options: Key: NoPassEnable Type: bool Default: false User: dep Instance: #:*/true Comment: & Description: Enable password-less logins on this display. <emphasis>Use with extreme care!</emphasis> Key: NoPassUsers Type: list Default: "" PostProc: PnoPassUsers User: core Instance: #:*/"fred,ethel" Merge: xdm(P_noPassUsers) Comment: 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. Description: The users that do not need to provide a password to log in. Items which are prefixed with <literal>@</literal> represent all users in the user group named by that item. <literal>*</literal> means all users but <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem> (and any other user with UID = 0). <emphasis>Never</emphasis> list <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>. Key: AutoLoginEnable Type: bool Default: false User: dep Instance: #:0/true Comment: & Description: Enable automatic login. <emphasis>Use with extreme care!</emphasis> Key: AutoLoginAgain Type: bool Default: false User: core(autoAgain) User: greeter Instance: #:0/true Comment: & Description: If true, auto-login after logout. If false, auto-login is performed only when a display session starts up. Key: AutoLoginDelay Type: int Default: 0 User: core(autoDelay) User: greeter Instance: #:0/10 Comment: The delay in seconds before automatic login kicks in. Description: The delay in seconds before automatic login kicks in. This is also known as <quote>Timed Login</quote>. Key: AutoLoginUser Type: string Default: "" PostProc: PautoLoginX User: core(autoUser) User: greeter Instance: #:0/"fred" Merge: xdm:autoUser(P_autoUser) Comment: & Description: The user to log in automatically. <emphasis>Never</emphasis> specify <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>! Key: AutoLoginPass Type: string Default: "" PostProc: PautoLoginX User: core(autoPass) Instance: #:0/"secret!" Merge: xdm:autoPass(P_autoPass) Comment: & Description: The password for the user to log in automatically. This is <emphasis>not</emphasis> required unless the user is logged into a <acronym>NIS</acronym> or Kerberos domain. If you use this option, you should <command>chmod <option>600</option> <filename>kdmrc</filename></command> for obvious reasons. Key: AutoLoginLocked Type: bool Default: false User: core(autoLock) Instance: #:0/! Comment: & Description: Immediately lock the automatically started session. This works only with KDE sessions. Key: SessionsDirs Type: list Default: "/usr/share/xsessions,/var/lib/menu-xdg/xsessions,/usr/share/apps/kdm/sessions" User: core User: greeter-c Instance: #*/"/usr/share/xsessions,/var/lib/menu-xdg/xsessions,/usr/share/apps/kdm/sessions" Comment: The directories containing session type definitions in .desktop format. Description: A list of directories containing session type definitions. # See <xref linkend="kdmrc-sessions"> for details. Key: ClientLogFile Type: string Default: ".xsession-errors" User: core Instance: */".xsession-errors-%s" Instance: :0/".xsession-errors" Comment: The file (relative to $HOME) to redirect the session output to. This is a printf format string; one %s will be replaced with the display name. Description: The file (relative to the user's home directory) to redirect the session output to. One occurrence of <parameter>%s</parameter> in this string will be substituted with the display name. Use <parameter>%%</parameter> to obtain a literal <literal>%</literal>. Key: UseSessReg Type: bool Default: false User: core Instance: #*/! Comment: Whether &kdm;'s built-in utmp/wtmp/lastlog registration should be used. Description: Specify whether &kdm;'s built-in utmp/wtmp/lastlog registration should be used. If it is not, the tool <command>sessreg</command> should be used in the <option>Startup</option> and <option>Reset</option> scripts, or, alternatively, the pam_lastlog module should be used on <acronym>PAM</acronym>-enabled systems. Section: -Greeter Description: This section class contains options concerning the configuration of the &kdm; frontend (greeter). Key: GUIStyle Type: string Default: "" User: greeter Instance: #*/"Windows" Update: upd_guistyle Comment: Widget style of the greeter. "" means the built-in default which currently is "Plastik". Description: Specify the widget style for the greeter. Empty means to use the built-in default which currently is <literal>Plastik</literal>. Key: UseAdminSession Type: bool Default: false User: greeter Instance: #*/! Comment: Admin session Description: If given there will be a special button that requires root password and starts the given session Key: ColorScheme Type: string Default: "" User: greeter Instance: #*/"Pumpkin" Comment: Widget color scheme of the greeter. "" means the built-in default which currently is yellowish grey with some light blue and yellow elements. Description: Specify the widget color scheme for the greeter. Empty means to use the built-in default which currently is yellowish grey with some light blue and yellow elements. Key: LogoArea Type: enum None/LOGO_NONE: nothing Logo/LOGO_LOGO: the image specified by <option>LogoPixmap</option> Clock/LOGO_CLOCK: a neat analog clock Default: Clock User: greeter Instance: */Logo Comment: What should be shown in the greeter's logo are: Description: What should be shown in the greeter righthand of the input lines (if <option>UserList</option> is disabled) or above them (if <option>UserList</option> is enabled): Key: LogoPixmap Type: string Default: "" User: greeter(logo) Instance: */KDMDATA "/pics/kdelogo.png" Comment: The image to show when LogoArea=Logo. Description: The image to show in the greeter if <option>LogoArea</option> is <literal>Logo</literal>. Key: GreeterPos Type: string Default: "50,50" User: greeter-c Instance: #*/"30,40" Comment: The relative coordinates (X,Y in percent) of the center of the greeter. Description: The relative coordinates (percentages of the screen size; X,Y) at which the center of the greeter is put. &kdm; aligns the greeter to the edges of the screen it would cross otherwise. Key: GreeterScreen Type: int Default: 0 User: greeter Instance: #*/-1 Comment: & Description: 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. Key: GreetString Type: string Default: "Welcome to Trinity at %n" User: greeter Instance: #*/"Welcome to Trinity at %n" Comment: 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 % Description: The headline in the greeter. An empty greeting means none at all. </para><para> The following character pairs are replaced by their value: <variablelist> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>%d</parameter></term> <listitem><para>name of the current display</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>%h</parameter></term> <listitem><para>local host name, possibly with the domain name</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>%n</parameter></term> <listitem><para>local node name, most probably the host name without the domain name</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>%s</parameter></term> <listitem><para>operating system</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>%r</parameter></term> <listitem><para>operating system version</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>%m</parameter></term> <listitem><para>machine (hardware) type</para></listitem> </varlistentry> <varlistentry> <term><parameter>%%</parameter></term> <listitem><para>a single <literal>%</literal></para></listitem> </varlistentry> </variablelist> # This needs to come _in front_ of the font settings to be effective! Key: AntiAliasing Type: bool Default: true User: greeter Instance: */ Comment: & Description: Whether the fonts used in the greeter should be antialiased. Key: GreetFont Type: string Default: "Sans Serif,22,5,0,50,0" CDefault: "Serif,20,bold" User: greeter:font Instance: #*/"Sans Serif,22,5,0,50,0" Comment: & Description: The font for the greeter headline. Key: StdFont Type: string Default: "Sans Serif,10,5,0,50,0" CDefault: "Sans Serif,10" User: greeter(normalFont):font Instance: #*/"Sans Serif,10,5,0,50,0" Comment: & Description: The normal font used in the greeter. Key: FailFont Type: string Default: "Sans Serif,10,5,0,75,0" CDefault: "Sans Serif,10,bold" User: greeter:font Instance: #*/"Sans Serif,10,5,0,75,0" Comment: & Description: The font used for the <quote>Login Failed</quote> message. Key: NumLock Type: enum Off: turn off On: turn on Keep: do not change the state Default: Keep User: greeter(numLockStatus) Instance: #*/Off Comment: & Description: What to do with the Num Lock modifier for the time the greeter is running: Key: Language Type: string Default: "en_US" User: greeter-c Instance: #*/"de_DE" Update: upd_language Comment: & Description: Language and locale to use in the greeter, encoded like $<envar>LC_LANG</envar>. Key: UserCompletion Type: bool Default: false User: greeter Instance: #*/! Comment: & Description: Enable autocompletion in the username line edit. Key: UserList Type: bool Default: true User: greeter Instance: #*/! Comment: Enable user list (names along with images) in the greeter. Description: Show a user list with unix login names, real names, and images in the greeter. Key: ShowUsers Type: enum NotHidden/SHOW_ALL: all users except those listed in HiddenUsers Selected/SHOW_SEL: only the users listed in SelectedUsers Default: NotHidden User: greeter Instance: #*/Selected Update: upd_showusers Comment: User selection for UserCompletion and UserList: Description: ! This option controls which users will be shown in the user view (<option>UserList</option>) and/or offered for autocompletion (<option>UserCompletion</option>). If it is <literal>Selected</literal>, <option>SelectedUsers</option> contains the final list of users. If it is <literal>NotHidden</literal>, the initial user list are all users found on the system. Users contained in <option>HiddenUsers</option> are removed from the list, just like all users with a UID greater than specified in <option>MaxShowUID</option> and users with a non-zero UID less than specified in <option>MinShowUID</option>. Items in <option>SelectedUsers</option> and <option>HiddenUsers</option> which are prefixed with <literal>@</literal> represent all users in the user group named by that item. Finally, the user list will be sorted alphabetically, if <option>SortUsers</option> is enabled. Key: SelectedUsers Type: list Default: "" User: greeter-c(users) Instance: #*/"root,johndoe" Merge: kdm:Users Comment: For ShowUsers=Selected. @<group> means all users in that group. Description: See <option>ShowUsers</option>. Key: HiddenUsers Type: list Default: "" User: greeter-c(noUsers) Instance: #*/"root" # depends on {Min,Max}ShowUID Update: upd_hiddenusers/1 Merge: kdm:NoUsers Comment: For ShowUsers=NotHidden. @<group> means all users in that group. Description: See <option>ShowUsers</option>. Key: MinShowUID Type: int Default: 0 User: greeter(lowUserId) # will be overwritten Instance: #*/ Update: upd_minshowuid Comment: Special case of HiddenUsers: users with a non-zero UID less than this number will not be shown as well. Description: See <option>ShowUsers</option>. Key: MaxShowUID Type: int Default: 65535 User: greeter(highUserId) # will be overwritten Instance: #*/ Update: upd_maxshowuid Comment: Complement to MinShowUID: users with a UID greater than this number will not be shown as well. Description: See <option>ShowUsers</option>. Key: SortUsers Type: bool Default: true User: greeter Instance: #*/! Comment: If false, the users are listed in the order they appear in /etc/passwd. If true, they are sorted alphabetically. Description: See <option>ShowUsers</option>. Key: FaceSource Type: enum AdminOnly/FACE_ADMIN_ONLY: from <filename><<option>FaceDir</option>>/$<envar>USER</envar>.face[.icon]</filename> PreferAdmin/FACE_PREFER_ADMIN: prefer <<option>FaceDir</option>>, fallback on $<envar>HOME</envar> PreferUser/FACE_PREFER_USER: ... and the other way round UserOnly/FACE_USER_ONLY: from the user's <filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.face[.icon]</filename> Default: AdminOnly User: greeter Instance: #*/PreferUser Comment: Specify, where the users' pictures should be taken from. Description: If <option>UserList</option> is enabled, this specifies where &kdm; gets the images from: </para> %ENUM% <para> The images can be in any format Qt recognizes, but the filename must match &kdm;'s expectations: <literal>.face.icon</literal> should be a 48x48 icon, while <literal>.face</literal> should be a 300x300 image. Currently the big image is used only as a fallback and is scaled down, but in the future it might be displayed full-size in the logo area or a tooltip. Key: FaceDir Type: string Default: *KDMDATA "/faces" User: greeter Instance: #*/"/usr/share/faces" Update: upd_facedir Comment: The directory containing the user images if FaceSource is not UserOnly. Description: See <option>FaceSource</option>. Key: PreselectUser Type: enum None/PRESEL_NONE: do not preselect any user Previous/PRESEL_PREV: the user which successfully logged in last time Default/PRESEL_DEFAULT: the user specified in the <option>DefaultUser</option> option Default: None User: greeter(preselUser) Instance: #*/Previous Instance: :*/Previous Instance: #:0/Default Comment: Specify, if/which user should be preselected for log in. Description: Specify, if/which user should be preselected for log in: </para> %ENUM% <para> If <option>FocusPasswd</option> is enabled and a user was preselected, the cursor is placed in the password input field automatically. </para> <note><para>Enabling user preselection can be considered a security hole, as it presents a valid login name to a potential attacker, so he <quote>only</quote> needs to guess the password. On the other hand, one could set <option>DefaultUser</option> to a fake login name.</para></note> <para> Key: DefaultUser Type: string Default: "" User: greeter Instance: #:0/"johndoe" Comment: The user to preselect if PreselectUser=Default. Description: See <option>PreselectUser</option>. Key: FocusPasswd Type: bool Default: false User: greeter Instance: #*/! Instance: :*/true Comment: If this is true, the password input line is focused automatically if a user is preselected. Description: See <option>PreselectUser</option>. Key: EchoMode Type: enum OneStar: <literal>*</literal> is shown for every typed letter ThreeStars: <literal>***</literal> is shown for every typed letter NoEcho: nothing is shown at all, the cursor does not move # HACK! This must be in sync with KPasswordEdit::EchoModes (kpassdlg.h) Default: OneStar User: greeter Instance: #*/NoEcho Comment: & Description: The password input fields cloak the typed in text. Specify, how to do it: Key: UseBackground Type: bool Default: true User: greeter Instance: #*/! Comment: If true, krootimage will be automatically started by &kdm;; otherwise, the Setup script should be used to setup the background. Description: If enabled, &kdm; will automatically start the <command>krootimage</command> program to set up the background; otherwise, the <option>Setup</option> program is responsible for the background. Key: BackgroundCfg Type: string Default: *KDMCONF "/backgroundrc" User: greeter-c Instance: #*/"" Update: handBgCfg Comment: The configuration file to be used by krootimage. Description: The configuration file to be used by <command>krootimage</command>. It contains a section named <literal>[Desktop0]</literal> like <filename>kdesktoprc</filename> does. Its options are not described herein; guess their meanings or use the control center. Key: GrabServer Type: bool Default: false User: greeter-c Instance: #*/! Comment: 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. Description: To improve security, the greeter grabs the &X-Server; and then the keyboard when it starts up. This option specifies if the &X-Server; grab should be held for the duration of the name/password reading. When disabled, the &X-Server; is ungrabbed after the keyboard grab succeeds; otherwise, the &X-Server; is grabbed until just before the session begins. </para> <note><para>Enabling this option disables <option>UseBackground</option> and <option>Setup</option>.</para></note> <para> Key: GrabTimeout Type: int Default: 3 User: greeter Instance: #*/ Comment: How many seconds to wait for grab to succeed. Description: This option specifies the maximum time &kdm; will wait for the grabs to succeed. A grab may fail if some other X-client has the &X-Server; or the keyboard grabbed, or possibly if the network latencies are very high. You should be cautious when raising the timeout, as a user can be spoofed by a look-alike window on the display. If a grab fails, &kdm; kills and restarts the &X-Server; (if possible) and the session. Key: AuthComplain Type: bool Default: true User: greeter Instance: #*/! Merge: xdm Comment: Warn, if display has no X-authorization (local auth cannot be created, &XDMCP; display wants no auth, or display is foreign from StaticServers). Description: Warn, if a display has no X-authorization. This will be the case if <itemizedlist> <listitem><para> the authorization file for a local &X-Server; could not be created, </para></listitem> <listitem><para> a remote display from &XDMCP; did not request any authorization or </para></listitem> <listitem><para> the display is a <quote>foreign</quote> display specified in <option>StaticServers</option>. </para></listitem> </itemizedlist> Key: LoginMode If: defined(XDMCP) Type: enum LocalOnly/LOGIN_LOCAL_ONLY: only local login possible DefaultLocal/LOGIN_DEFAULT_LOCAL: start up in local mode, but allow switching to remote mode DefaultRemote/LOGIN_DEFAULT_REMOTE: ... and the other way round RemoteOnly/LOGIN_REMOTE_ONLY: only choice of remote host possible Default: LocalOnly User: core User: greeter Instance: :*/DefaultLocal # from make_it_cool branch and SuSE 8.1 Merge: kdm:EnableChooser(P_EnableChooser) Comment: & Description: 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. Key: ChooserHosts If: defined(XDMCP) Type: list Default: "*" User: core Instance: #:*/"*,ugly,sky,dino,kiste.local,login.crap.com" Comment: A list of hosts to be automatically added to the remote login menu. The special name "*" means broadcast. Description: A list of hosts to be automatically added to the remote login menu. The special name <literal>*</literal> means broadcast. Has no effect if <option>LoginMode</option> is <literal>LocalOnly</literal>. Key: ForgingSeed Type: int Default: 0 User: greeter Instance: #*/ Comment: Random seed for forging saved session types, etc. of unknown users. This value should be random but constant across the login domain. Description: Use this number as a random seed when forging saved session types, etc. of unknown users. This is used to avoid telling an attacker about existing users by reverse conclusion. This value should be random but constant across the login domain. Key: ShowLog If: defined(WITH_KDM_XCONSOLE) Type: bool Default: false User: greeter Instance: :0/true Comment: Enable &kdm;'s built-in xconsole. Note that this can be enabled for only one display at a time. Description: Enable &kdm;'s built-in <command>xconsole</command>. Note that this can be enabled for only one display at a time. This option is available only if &kdm; was <command>configure</command>d with <option>--enable-kdm-xconsole</option>. Key: LogSource If: defined(WITH_KDM_XCONSOLE) Type: string Default: "" User: greeter-c Instance: :0/"/dev/xconsole" Comment: The data source for &kdm;'s built-in xconsole. If empty, a console log redirection is requested from /dev/console. Description: The data source for &kdm;'s built-in <command>xconsole</command>. If empty, a console log redirection is requested from <filename>/dev/console</filename>. Has no effect if <option>ShowLog</option> is disabled. Key: PluginsLogin Type: list Default: "classic" User: greeter Instance: #*/"sign" Comment: 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. Description: Specify conversation plugins for the login dialog; the first in the list is selected initially. Each plugin can be specified as a base name (which expands to <filename>$<envar>kde_modulesdir</envar>/kgreet_<replaceable>base</replaceable></filename>) or as a full pathname. </para><para> Conversation plugins are modules for the greeter which obtain authentication data from the user. Currently only the <literal>classic</literal> plugin is shipped with &kde;; it presents the well-known username and password form. Key: PluginsShutdown Type: list Default: "classic" User: greeter Instance: #*/"modern" Comment: & Description: Same as <option>PluginsLogin</option>, but for the shutdown dialog. Key: PluginOptions Type: list Default: "" User: greeter Instance: #*/"SomeKey=randomvalue,Foo=bar" Comment: 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. Description: A list of options of the form <replaceable>Key</replaceable><literal>=</literal><replaceable>Value</replaceable>. The conversation plugins can query these settings; it is up to them what possible keys are. Key: AllowConsole Type: bool Default: true User: greeter(hasConsole) Instance: #*/! Comment: & Description: Show the <guilabel>Console Login</guilabel> action in the greeter (if <option>ServerTTY</option>/<option>ConsoleTTYs</option> is configured). Key: AllowClose Type: bool Default: true User: greeter Instance: :*/true Comment: & Description: Show the <guilabel>Restart X Server</guilabel>/<guilabel>Close Connection</guilabel> action in the greeter. Key: Preloader Type: string Default: "" User: greeter-c Instance: */KDE_BINDIR "/preloadkde" Comment: & Description: 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). Key: UseTheme Type: bool Default: true User: greeter Instance: */true Comment: & Description: Whether the greeter should be themed. Key: Theme Type: string Default: KDMDATA "/themes/o2_enterprise" User: greeter Instance: */KDMDATA "/themes/o2_enterprise" Comment: & Description: The theme to use for the greeter. Can point to either a directory or an XML file.