You mustn't launch elsa_client. Elsa_client was used to catch some user inforamtion (login, password, ...), so use less memory if you don't need it (autologin). Don't make some scripts to launch elsa_client, it's elsa's job. She cleans the things between logons, with restarting X. When X will be ready, elsa_client is launched.
cheers ps: I think your version isn't up to date. 2011/2/7 C Anthony Risinger <[email protected]> > On Fri, Feb 4, 2011 at 11:33 AM, Mister Olli <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > I currently experience the following behaviour. > > - Starting & logging in via elsa works perfectly. My e17 is as stable > > as starting X manually > > - When I finish enlightenment all windows get closed, my screen remains > > black and mouse curses is a little X > > You can find all elsa log messages (from the log file) until > > this point in the file called 'elsa.log__hanging_e17_exit' > > i don't know if this is the case for you, but i believe it could be. > elsa's architecture seems to have changed a bit, it feels for the > better, but it's wasn't apparent at first what needed to be done to > get it running. it seems that `elsa` is now a daemon, that runs > forever (in contrast to other login managers) as root. you then use > `elsa_client` as your user to connect to the server and start a login > session. when the system first boots, i think `elsa` does this for > you, but not after you logout... it looks exactly as you've described. > > so, after you logout, try switching to another VT and running > `elsa_client`; this works for me every time. the problem i'm having > is trying to wire this whole process up to inittab... i can start > `elsa`, but it's not easy to wire up `elsa_client`... im trying to > work out some kind of wrapper script to handle this properly, possibly > with cgroups; im also in the process of switching to systemd, and that > might handle it better than traditional init. > > C Anthony > -- Michaƫl Bouchaud ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The modern datacenter depends on network connectivity to access resources and provide services. The best practices for maximizing a physical server's connectivity to a physical network are well understood - see how these rules translate into the virtual world? http://p.sf.net/sfu/oracle-sfdevnlfb _______________________________________________ enlightenment-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/enlightenment-users
