On Wed, Sep 11, 2002 at 09:51:51PM +, Tom Goulet (UID0) wrote:
> Well, almost. Thanks -- now I remember having read this before! but
> for some reason, the simple startx command puts me right into kde,
> without the usual dialog box asking how I want to log in. This
> happens regardless of
> Well, almost. Thanks -- now I remember having read this before! but
> for some reason, the simple startx command puts me right into kde,
> without the usual dialog box asking how I want to log in. This
> happens regardless of what user I log in as.
That is startx's job. I think you can use
On Wed, 11 Sep 2002 12:19:45 -0400
Matt Price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Well, almost. Thanks -- now I remember having read this before! but
> for some reason, the simple startx command puts me right into kde,
> without the usual dialog box asking how I want to log in. This
> happens regard
Matt Price wrote:
> > > Is it really straightforward to configure my woody system to allow
> > > multiple X sessions on the same monitor?
> >
> > To start another X session:
> > startx -- :1
> >
> > It will end up running on the next available virtual console, and you
> > can switch between them
Matt Price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > Is it really straightforward to configure my woody system to allow
> > > multiple X sessions on the same monitor?
> >
> > To start another X session:
> > startx -- :1
> >
> > It will end up running on the next available virtual console, and you
> > c
> > Is it really straightforward to configure my woody system to allow
> > multiple X sessions on the same monitor?
>
> To start another X session:
> startx -- :1
>
> It will end up running on the next available virtual console, and you
> can switch between them by using Linux's virtual console
> Is it really straightforward to configure my woody system to allow
> multiple X sessions on the same monitor?
To start another X session:
startx -- :1
It will end up running on the next available virtual console, and you
can switch between them by using Linux's virtual console switchingness.
Remco Blaakmeer wrote:
>
> E Papantoniou wrote:
> > my problem is that I cannot run more than one X server at the same time.
> > When I am logged in as a user one and run startx on display :0.0, I do
> > Ctrl-Alt-F2, log in as a user two and type startx -- :1.0
>
I eventually managed to run the
E Papantoniou wrote:
> my problem is that I cannot run more than one X server at the same time.
> When I am logged in as a user one and run startx on display :0.0, I do
> Ctrl-Alt-F2, log in as a user two and type startx -- :1.0
What version of the X packages are you running? There have been bugs
On Sat, 6 Dec 1997, Adrian Bridgett wrote:
> This seems to be saying that the currently running Xserver won't let you
> connect. I think when you run "startx --:1.0" it is trying to start it on
> the currently running server. Try using something like "startx --vt9 :1.0"
> (I don't know if that's r
On Fri, Dec 05, 1997 at 04:23:44PM +, E Papantoniou wrote:
> (this is a repost)
> Hi all,
>
> my problem is that I cannot run more than one X server at the same time.
> When I am logged in as a user one and run startx on display :0.0, I do
> Ctrl-Alt-F2, log in as a user two and type startx --
E Papantoniou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> my problem is that I cannot run more than one X server at the same time.
> When I am logged in as a user one and run startx on display :0.0, I do
> Ctrl-Alt-F2, log in as a user two and type startx -- :1.0
> The second X server attempts to start (the gra
I've seen this working (on a Redhat system) once, but have never
managed to get it work on my own systems. It would be convenient, so
for example my wife and I can both be logged in and switch back and
forth easily.
--Bill.
--
William R Ward Bay View Consulting http://www.bayview.com
I've seen this working (on a Redhat system) once, but have never
managed to get it work on my own systems. It would be convenient, so
for example my wife and I can both be logged in and switch back and
forth easily.
--Bill.
--
William R Ward Bay View Consulting http://www.bayview.co
Let me count the reasons...
1) If I want to do some work when someone else is already logged in via
xdm (ie: They don't mind the 'break' but would mind "shutting down"
for me).
2) If I am logged in as me and decide that I want to do a bunch of
"sysadm" type stuff, I will frequently
E Papantoniou wrote:
> my problem is that I cannot run more than one X server at the same time.
> When I am logged in as a user one and run startx on display :0.0, I do
> Ctrl-Alt-F2, log in as a user two and type startx -- :1.0
More importantly, why are you trying to? There are several window ma
I tried the second option and works :-) thanks to everybody that replied
Manos
On Tue, 25 Nov 1997, Ted Harding wrote:
> On 25-Nov-97 E Papantoniou wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > when I am logged in as a user and I run X windows, I press Ctrl-Alt-F2
> > and as expected a new terminal comes up. Then I l
thanks a lot!!! I tried it and it works
On Tue, 25 Nov 1997, Ettore Aldrovandi wrote:
> E Papantoniou wrote:
> ->
> -> Hi,
> ->
> -> when I am logged in as a user and I run X windows, I press Ctrl-Alt-F2
> -> and as expected a new terminal comes up. Then I log in as a different user
> -> an
On Tue, 25 Nov 1997, E Papantoniou wrote:
> to add to my previous msg:
>
> when I try to get back to the first X session with Ctrl-Alt-F1 I get another
> error msg:
>
> AUDIT: X: client 11 rejected from local host Auth name MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1 ID:
> -1
To return to the original X display use Alt
On Tue, 25 Nov 1997, Ettore Aldrovandi wrote:
> E Papantoniou wrote:
> ->
> -> Hi,
> ->
> -> when I am logged in as a user and I run X windows, I press Ctrl-Alt-F2
> -> and as expected a new terminal comes up. Then I log in as a different user
> -> and I type startx. I get some errors:
> ->
>
On 25-Nov-97 E Papantoniou wrote:
> Hi,
>
> when I am logged in as a user and I run X windows, I press Ctrl-Alt-F2
> and as expected a new terminal comes up. Then I log in as a different user
> and I type startx. I get some errors:
>
> Fatal server error
> Server is already active for display 0
>
E Papantoniou wrote:
->
-> Hi,
->
-> when I am logged in as a user and I run X windows, I press Ctrl-Alt-F2
-> and as expected a new terminal comes up. Then I log in as a different user
-> and I type startx. I get some errors:
->
Hi, you have to open another display. Try this:
startx -- /usr/X
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