>
> Antony Suter wrote:
> >=20
> > Guillaume Rousse wrote:
> > >
> > > Bryan Paxton a =E9crit :
> > > >
> > > > When you try to start xfs and it just says passed ?
> > > > The lock file gets created and yada yada, but the server doesn't star=
> t up, it
> > > > simply says passed
> > > >
> > > > What does this mean ?
> > > It means failure :-)
> > > Quick fix : change your /etc/init.d/xfs script by commenting actual
> > > launch command, and launch xfs directly:
> > > su xfs -c "xfs -port -1 -daemon" -s /bin/sh
> > > instead of
> > > daemon --check xfs su xfs -c \"xfs -port -1 -daemon\" -s /bin/sh
> > >
> > > Seems there have been some change in xfs configuration recently, that
> > > affect some users (already two thread on this topic) onyl. Maybe
> > > something linked to incremental or direct XFree86 upgrade N
> >=20
> > I want to point out to the Mandrake team that I also have this problem.
> > I need to remove the words "daemon --check" from /etc/rc.d/init.d/xfs so
> > that my xfs server will start as normal.
>
> This problem has now been truely fixed for me.
>
> Somehow I did not have the latest pam.rpm on my system.
>
> The recent upgrades to sh-utils and pam have fixed it for me.
>
> --
> - Antony Suter ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) "Examiner" openpgp:71ADFC87
> - "And how do you store the nuclear equivalent of the universal solvent?"
>
>
I have the same problem. The xfs-server just doesn't get to work. I tryed the above
but it doesn't help.