Hi all, I have four debian workstations setup at the school I teach in. We'll start off with linux on the desktop in the library as browsing & research machines. I figure this is a good way in - the machine are donated and have no OS on them, so I have a strong argument here.
1. Debian is impressive. I'm using testing and I'm very pleased with the ease and quality of the software so far. 2. It's been a breeze to set up XDMCP through GDM. Nice for a novice. I can "choose" to log on to the machine configured to allow it. 3. Now I want to hack the X startup scripts to *automatically* go to one machine's log in screen (I'll call that machine the "application server"). I know the line I need to add will be X -query 192.168.0.10 (where that is the IP of the "application server"), but I don't know how best to do this. Do I change the default runlevel to 3, then add this line to a script? Do I leave the runlevel at 5, but change an X startup script? And crucially, whatever the solution, when the user logs out from a "terminal", that "terminal" must then present the next user with a login screen to the "application server", not return to a command prompt or gdm of the terminal. I don't want anyone to "choose" - just be straight onto the gdm of the application server. All guidance on debians X startup would be much appreciated. Incidently, I'm using whichever X server comes as default on testing. Cheers -- Matt Johnson UK ___________________________________________________________ALL-NEW Yahoo! Messenger - sooooo many all-new ways to express yourself http://uk.messenger.yahoo.com -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]