#!/bin/sh # # DEFAULT TRINITY STARTUP SCRIPT ( KDE-3.5.12 ) # echo "[startkde] Starting startkde." 1>&2 # When the X server dies we get a HUP signal from xinit. We must ignore it # because we still need to do some cleanup. trap '[startkde] echo GOT SIGHUP' HUP # Check if a KDE session is already running. if kcheckrunning >/dev/null 2>&1; then echo "[startkde] KDE seems to be already running on this display." xmessage -geometry 500x100 "KDE seems to be already running on this display." > /dev/null 2>/dev/null exit 1 fi # Set the background color. # The standard X background is nasty, causing moire effects and exploding # people's heads. We use colours from the standard KDE palette for those with # palettised displays. if test -z "$XDM_MANAGED" || echo "$XDM_MANAGED" | grep ",auto" > /dev/null; then xsetroot -solid "#618DCC" # sky blue fi # Unset this for Darwin since it will screw up KDE's dynamic-loading unset DYLD_FORCE_FLAT_NAMESPACE # Check whether prelinking is enabled. If so, exporting KDE_IS_PRELINKED improves # loading KDE. The $KDE_IS_PRELINKED variable might already be set on some systems # through /etc/profile.d, so first check whether the variable exists. if [ -z $KDE_IS_PRELINKED ]; then if [ -r /etc/default/prelink ]; then . /etc/default/prelink if [ "$PRELINKING" == "yes" ]; then export KDE_IS_PRELINKED=1 fi fi fi # In case we have been started with full pathname spec without being in PATH. bindir=`echo "$0" | sed -n 's,^\(/.*\)/[^/][^/]*$,\1,p'` if [ -n "$bindir" ]; then case $PATH in $bindir|$bindir:*|*:$bindir|*:$bindir:*) ;; *) PATH=$bindir:$PATH; export PATH;; esac fi # Boot sequence: # # kdeinit is used to fork off processes which improves memory usage # and startup time. # # * kdeinit starts the dcopserver and klauncher first. # * Then kded is started. kded is responsible for keeping the sycoca # database up to date. When an up to date database is present it goes # into the background and the startup continues. # * Then kdeinit starts kcminit. kcminit performs initialisation of # certain devices according to the user's settings # # * Then ksmserver is started which takes control of the rest of the startup sequence # The user's personal KDE directory usually is $HOME/.kde or $HOME/.kde3. # This setting may be overridden by setting $KDEHOME. # Must be careful here because $HOME/.kde was used commonly in the pre-KDE4 # days for the user's KDE3 profile, but now with KDE4 common on systems, # $HOME/.kde might point to KDE4 profile settings. Further, the existence # of KDE4 does not mean all people have KDE4 installed and might want to keep # $HOME/.kde as their preferred profile location for Trinity KDE. if [ -n "$KDEHOME" ]; then echo "[startkde] KDEHOME is preset to $KDEHOME." 1>&2 export KDEHOME=$KDEHOME else # $KDEHOME is NOT already preset in the environment. Try to help. # This might be overkill but does provide flexibility. echo "[startkde] KDEHOME is not set." 1>&2 if [ -d $HOME/.kde3 ]; then # OK, this one is obvious. export KDEHOME=$HOME/.kde3 elif [ -f /usr/bin/kde4-config ]; then # Looks like KDE4 is installed. if [ -d $HOME/.kde ] && [ ! -d $HOME/.kde3 ]; then # Presume $HOME/.kde is being used for KDE4 as it already exists. export KDEHOME=$HOME/.kde3 else # Presume $HOME/.kde is being used for KDE4 to be on the safe side. export KDEHOME=$HOME/.kde3 fi elif [ -f /opt/kde3/bin/kde-config ]; then # Looks like KDE3 or Trinity is installed and playing second fiddle to KDE4. export KDEHOME=$HOME/.kde3 elif [ -f /opt/kde3/bin/kde-config ]; then # Looks like KDE3 or Trinity is installed and playing second fiddle to KDE4. export KDEHOME=$HOME/.kde3 elif [ -f /usr/bin/kde-config ] && [ -d $HOME/.kde ]; then # Looks like KDE3 or Trinity is installed and not playing second fiddle to KDE4. export KDEHOME=$HOME/.kde else # Resort to this and hope for the best! export KDEHOME=$HOME/.kde3 fi echo "[startkde] Set KDEHOME to $KDEHOME." 1>&2 fi # Run a quick test for root. if [ -z "$KDEROOTHOME" ] && [ "$UID" = "0" ]; then echo "[startkde] User ID is $UID. Setting KDEROOTHOME to $KDEHOME." export KDEROOTHOME=$KDEHOME fi # Modify the following environment variables only as necessary. if [ -d /opt/kde3/games ]; then export PATH=/opt/kde3/games:$PATH fi if [ -d /opt/kde3/bin ]; then export PATH=/opt/kde3/bin:$PATH fi if [ -d /opt/trinity/games ]; then export PATH=/opt/trinity/games:$PATH fi if [ -d /opt/trinity/bin ]; then export PATH=/opt/trinity/bin:$PATH fi if [ -d /opt/kde3/share ]; then export XDG_DATA_DIRS=$XDG_DATA_DIRS:/opt/kde3/share/:/usr/share/ fi if [ -d /opt/trinity/share ]; then export XDG_DATA_DIRS=$XDG_DATA_DIRS:/opt/trinity/share/:/usr/share/ fi if [ -d /opt/kde3/etc/xdg ]; then export XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS:/opt/kde3/etc/xdg/:/etc/xdg/ fi if [ -d /opt/trinity/etc/xdg ]; then export XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS:/opt/trinity/etc/xdg/:/etc/xdg/ fi if [ -d $HOME/.config ]; then export XDG_CONFIG_DIRS=$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS:$HOME/.config/ fi if [ -d /opt/kde3/share/man ]; then export MANPATH=/opt/kde3/share/man:$MANPATH fi if [ -d /opt/trinity/share/man ]; then export MANPATH=/opt/trinity/share/man:$MANPATH fi if [ -d /opt/kde3 ]; then if [ -n "$KDEDIRS" ]; then export KDEDIRS=$KDEDIRS:/opt/kde3/:/usr/ else export KDEDIRS=/opt/kde3/:/usr/ fi fi if [ -d /opt/trinity ]; then if [ -n "$KDEDIRS" ]; then export KDEDIRS=$KDEDIRS:/opt/trinity/:/usr/ else export KDEDIRS=/opt/trinity/:/usr/ fi fi test -n "$KDEHOME" && kdehome=`echo "$KDEHOME" | sed "s,^~/,$HOME/,"` echo "[startkde] kdehome: $kdehome" 1>&2 # Allow interested applications, such as the Plasma control wrapper, # to know that this is a Trinity desktop and not a KDE one. export DESKTOP_SESSION=kde3 # Please see kstartupconfig source for usage. mkdir -m 700 -p $kdehome mkdir -m 700 -p $kdehome/share mkdir -m 700 -p $kdehome/share/config cat >$kdehome/share/config/startupconfigkeys <$kdehome/share/config/kdesktoprc </env/*.sh and /env/*.sh # (where is $KDEHOME or ~/.kde3, and is where KDE is installed) # # This is where you can define environment variables that will be available to # all KDE programs, so this is where you can run agents using e.g. eval `ssh-agent` # or eval `gpg-agent --daemon`. # Note: if you do that, you should also put "ssh-agent -k" as a shutdown script # # (see end of this file). # For anything else (that doesn't set env vars, or that needs a window manager), # better use the Autostart folder. exepath=`kde-config --path exe | tr : '\n'` for prefix in `echo "$exepath" | sed -n -e 's,/bin[^/]*/,/env/,p'`; do for file in "$prefix"*.sh; do test -r "$file" && . "$file" done done # Activate the kde font directories. # # There are 4 directories that may be used for supplying fonts for KDE. # # There are two system directories. These belong to the administrator. # There are two user directories, where the user may add her own fonts. # # The 'override' versions are for fonts that should come first in the list, # i.e. if you have a font in your 'override' directory, it will be used in # preference to any other. # # The preference order looks like this: # user override, system override, X, user, system # # Where X is the original font database that was set up before this script # runs. usr_odir=$HOME/.fonts/kde-override usr_fdir=$HOME/.fonts # Add any user-installed font directories to the X font path kde_fontpaths=$usr_fdir/fontpaths do_usr_fdir=1 do_usr_odir=1 if test -r "$kde_fontpaths" ; then savifs=$IFS IFS=" " for fpath in `grep -v '^[ ]*#' < "$kde_fontpaths"` ; do rfpath=`echo $fpath | sed "s:^~:$HOME:g"` if test -s "$rfpath"/fonts.dir; then xset fp+ "$rfpath" if test "$rfpath" = "$usr_fdir"; then do_usr_fdir=0 fi if test "$rfpath" = "$usr_odir"; then do_usr_odir=0 fi fi done IFS=$savifs fi if [ -n "$KDEDIR" ]; then export KDEDIR=`echo "$KDEDIRS" | sed -e 's/:.*//'` fi echo "[startkde] KDEDIR: $KDEDIR" 1>&2 echo "[startkde] KDEDIRS: $KDEDIRS" 1>&2 if test -n "$KDEDIRS"; then kdedirs_first=`echo "$KDEDIRS" | sed -e 's/:.*//'` sys_odir=$kdedirs_first/share/fonts/override sys_fdir=$kdedirs_first/share/fonts else sys_odir=$KDEDIR/share/fonts/override sys_fdir=$KDEDIR/share/fonts fi if test -n "$KDEDIRS"; then kdedirs_first=`echo "$KDEDIRS" | sed -e 's/:.*//'` echo "[startkde] kdedirs_first: $kdedirs_first" if [ -r $kdedirs_first/share/kgtk/preload ]; then echo "[startkde] Reading from $kdedirs_first/share/kgtk/preload" read -r KGTK_PRELOAD < $kdedirs_first/share/kgtk/preload fi else if [ -r $KDEDIR/share/kgtk/preload ]; then read -r KGTK_PRELOAD < $KDEDIR/share/kgtk/preload fi fi if [ -n $KGTK_PRELOAD ]; then export LD_PRELOAD=$KGTK_PRELOAD:$LD_PRELOAD fi # We run mkfontdir on the user's font dirs (if we have permission) to pick # up any new fonts they may have installed. If mkfontdir fails, we still # add the user's dirs to the font path, as they might simply have been made # read-only by the administrator, for whatever reason. # Only do usr_fdir and usr_odir if they are *not* listed in fontpaths if [ -e $sys_odir/fonts.dir ] then xset +fp "$sys_odir" fi test $do_usr_odir -eq 1 && test -d "$usr_odir" && (mkfontdir "$usr_odir" ; xset +fp "$usr_odir") test $do_usr_fdir -eq 1 && test -d "$usr_fdir" && (mkfontdir "$usr_fdir" ; xset fp+ "$usr_fdir") test -d "$sys_fdir" && xset fp+ "$sys_fdir" # Ask X11 to rebuild its font list. xset fp rehash # Set a left cursor instead of the standard X11 "X" cursor, since I've heard # from some users that they're confused and don't know what to do. This is # especially necessary on slow machines, where starting KDE takes one or two # minutes until anything appears on the screen. # # If the user has overwritten fonts, the cursor font may be different now # so don't move this up. # xsetroot -cursor_name left_ptr # Get Ghostscript to look into user's KDE fonts dir for additional Fontmap if test -n "$GS_LIB" ; then GS_LIB=$usr_fdir:$GS_LIB export GS_LIB else GS_LIB=$usr_fdir export GS_LIB fi # Link "tmp" "socket" and "cache" resources to directory in /tmp # Creates: # - a directory /tmp/kde-$USER and links $KDEHOME/tmp-$HOSTNAME to it. # - a directory /tmp/ksocket-$USER and links $KDEHOME/socket-$HOSTNAME to it. # - a directory /var/tmp/kdecache-$USER and links $KDEHOME/cache-$HOSTNAME to it. # Note: temporary locations can be overriden through the KDETMP and KDEVARTMP # environment variables. for resource in tmp cache socket; do if ! lnusertemp $resource >/dev/null; then echo "[startkde] Call to lnusertemp failed (temporary directories full?). Check your installation." 1>&2 xmessage -geometry 600x100 "Call to lnusertemp failed (temporary directories full?). Check your installation." exit 1 fi done # In case of dcop sockets left by a previous session, cleanup. dcopserver_shutdown echo '[startkde] Starting Trinity...' 1>&2 # Run KPersonalizer before the session if this is the first login. if test "$kpersonalizerrc_general_firstlogin" = "true"; then if [ ! -x $KDEDIR/bin/kpersonalizer ]; then echo "[startkde] kpersonalizer not found! Please install it in order to properly configure your user profile." 1>&2 else # start only dcopserver, don't start whole kdeinit (takes too long) echo "[startkde] Running kpersonalizer..." 1>&2 dcopserver kwin --lock & kpersonalizer --before-session # handle kpersonalizer restarts (language change) while test $? -eq 1; do kpersonalizer --r --before-session done dcopquit kwin dcopserver_shutdown --wait fi fi # Remove moodin cache if we have a new wallpaper installed, jriddell. Distro-specific. if [ -d $kdehome/share/apps/ksplash/cache/Moodin/kubuntu ]; then if [ /usr/share/wallpapers/kubuntu-wallpaper.png -nt $kdehome/share/apps/ksplash/cache/Moodin/kubuntu/ ]; then rm -rf $kdehome/share/apps/ksplash/cache/Moodin/kubuntu/ fi fi if test -z "$dl"; then # the splashscreen and progress indicator case "$ksplashrc_ksplash_theme" in None) ;; # nothing Simple) if test "$kpersonalizerrc_general_firstlogin" = "true"; then ksplashsimple fi # otherwise started earlier ;; *) ksplash --nodcop ;; esac fi # Mark that full KDE session is running (e.g. Konqueror preloading works only # with full KDE running). The KDE_FULL_SESSION property can be detected by # any X client connected to the same X session, even if not launched # directly from the KDE session but e.g. using "ssh -X", kdesu. $KDE_FULL_SESSION # however guarantees that the application is launched in the same environment # like the KDE session and that e.g. KDE utilities/libraries are available. # KDE_FULL_SESSION property is also only available since KDE 3.5.5. # The matching tests are: # For $KDE_FULL_SESSION: # if test -n "$KDE_FULL_SESSION"; then ... whatever # For KDE_FULL_SESSION property: # xprop -root | grep "^KDE_FULL_SESSION" >/dev/null 2>/dev/null # if test $? -eq 0; then ... whatever # # Additionally there is (since KDE 3.5.7) $KDE_SESSION_UID with the uid # of the user running the KDE session. It should be rarely needed (e.g. # after sudo to prevent desktop-wide functionality in the new user's kded). # KDE_FULL_SESSION=true export KDE_FULL_SESSION xprop -root -f KDE_FULL_SESSION 8t -set KDE_FULL_SESSION true echo "[startkde] KDE_FULL_SESSION: $KDE_FULL_SESSION" 1>&2 KDE_SESSION_UID=$UID export KDE_SESSION_UID echo "[startkde] KDE_SESSION_UID: $KDE_SESSION_UID" 1>&2 # We set LD_BIND_NOW to increase the efficiency of kdeinit. # kdeinit unsets this variable before loading applications. LD_BIND_NOW=true start_kdeinit_wrapper --new-startup +kcminit_startup if test $? -ne 0; then # Startup error echo '[startkde] Could not start kdeinit. Check your installation.' 1>&2 xmessage -geometry 500x100 "Could not start kdeinit. Check your installation." fi echo "[startkde] kdeinit started successfully." 1>&2 # If the session should be locked from the start (locked autologin), # lock now and do the rest of the KDE startup underneath the locker. if test -n "$dl"; then kwrapper kdesktop_lock --forcelock & # Give it some time for starting up. This is somewhat unclean; some # notification would be better. sleep 1 fi # Finally, give the session control to the session manager. # See kdebase/ksmserver for the description of the rest of the startup sequence. # If the KDEWM environment variable has been set, then it will be used as Trinity's # window manager instead of kwin. # If KDEWM is not set, ksmserver will ensure kwin is started. # kwrapper is used to reduce startup time and memory usage # kwrapper does not return usefull error codes such as the exit code of ksmserver. # We only check for 255 which means that the ksmserver process could not be # started, any problems thereafter, e.g. ksmserver failing to initialize, # will remain undetected. test -n "$KDEWM" && KDEWM="--windowmanager $KDEWM" kwrapper ksmserver $KDEWM if test $? -eq 255; then # Startup error echo '[startkde] Could not start ksmserver. Check your installation.' 1>&2 xmessage -geometry 500x100 "Could not start ksmserver. Check your installation." fi # wait if there's any crashhandler shown while dcop | grep -q ^drkonqi- ; do sleep 5 done echo '[startkde] Shutting down Trinity...' 1>&2 # Clean up kdeinit_shutdown dcopserver_shutdown --wait artsshell -q terminate # KDE4 support if [ -f /usr/bin/kdeinit4_shutdown ]; then kde4 kdeinit4_shutdown 2>/dev/null fi echo '[startkde] Running Trinity shutdown scripts...' 1>&2 # Run scripts found in $KDEDIRS/shutdown for prefix in `echo "$exepath" | sed -n -e 's,/bin[^/]*/,/shutdown/,p'`; do for file in `ls "$prefix" 2> /dev/null | egrep -v '(~|\.bak)$'`; do if [ -x "${prefix}${file}" ]; then echo "[startkde] Running ${prefix}${file}." 1>&2 sh ${prefix}${file} fi done done unset KDE_FULL_SESSION xprop -root -remove KDE_FULL_SESSION unset KDE_SESSION_UID # Initialize_Status_Header echo "[startkde] Trinity shutdown complete." 1>&2