After suspend a second X server does not start anymore

2009-07-14 Thread Rainer Dorsch
Hello, I have a desktop system which I suspend to RAM from time to time using pm-suspend. After resuming everything works fine except switching to another user inside KDE (which I think technically starts another X server). The logs should contain a sequence of - starting a second X server

Re: Second X

2004-01-23 Thread Paul Johnson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 http://www.linuxmafia.com/~rick/faq/index.php?page=netiquette#offlist On Fri, Jan 23, 2004 at 02:50:07PM -0800, Dennis Kaplan wrote: > On Thursday 22 January 2004 09:54 pm, Paul Johnson wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 10:42:20PM -0800, Dennis Kapla

Re: Second X

2004-01-23 Thread Hugo Vanwoerkom
Antonio Rodriguez wrote: On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 06:18:40PM -0600, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote: Dennis Kaplan wrote: Hello, How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 Even a better idea: buy another video card

Re: Second X

2004-01-22 Thread Paul Johnson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Thu, Jan 22, 2004 at 09:45:43AM +0100, S?bastien NOBILI wrote: > I've tried it once on KDE-3.1.4 but wasn't really satisfied of it... > In the K menu, you click on the "Disconnect" (or something similar) > button, just as if you wished to shutdown.

Re: Second X

2004-01-22 Thread Paul Johnson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 10:42:20PM -0800, Dennis Kaplan wrote: > How do I lock my session and then how do I start a new session? KDE Menu | Lock Screen, then click Start New Session. - -- .''`. Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : :' : `. `'

Re: Second X

2004-01-22 Thread Anders Skolseg Bruvik
Dennis Kaplan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Hello, > > How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? > Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 > > If you use xdm you can add a second line to /etc/X11/xdm/Xservers, like: #sta

Re: Second X

2004-01-22 Thread Sébastien NOBILI
Dennis Kaplan a écrit : > How do I lock my session and then how do I start a new session? I've tried it once on KDE-3.1.4 but wasn't really satisfied of it... In the K menu, you click on the "Disconnect" (or something similar) button, just as if you wished to shutdown. The top checkbox allows you

Re: Second X

2004-01-21 Thread Dennis Kaplan
On Wednesday 21 January 2004 12:01 pm, Antonio Rodriguez wrote: > On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 11:40:28AM -0800, Dennis Kaplan wrote: > > Hello, > > > > How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? > > Right now I have X on F7 I like to log i

Re: Second X

2004-01-21 Thread Dennis Kaplan
On Wednesday 21 January 2004 07:00 pm, Paul Johnson wrote: > On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 11:40:28AM -0800, Dennis Kaplan wrote: > > How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? > > Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 > > In KDE/KD

Re: Second X

2004-01-21 Thread Paul Johnson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 11:40:28AM -0800, Dennis Kaplan wrote: > How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? > Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 In KDE/KDM, the easy way is to lock your sessi

Re: Second X

2004-01-21 Thread Antonio Rodriguez
On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 06:18:40PM -0600, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote: > Dennis Kaplan wrote: > >Hello, > > > >How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? > >Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 > > > > > &g

Re: Second X

2004-01-21 Thread Hugo Vanwoerkom
Dennis Kaplan wrote: Hello, How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 Even a better idea: buy another video card, monitor, keyboard and mouse, and you can use Backstreet Ruby to have 2 users on your system

Re: Second X

2004-01-21 Thread John Spray
Dennis Kaplan wrote: How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 This is quite possible. It can be done with recent versions of GNOME with the "Applications->System Tools->New Login" menu option

Re: Second X

2004-01-21 Thread Antonio Rodriguez
On Wed, Jan 21, 2004 at 11:40:28AM -0800, Dennis Kaplan wrote: > > Hello, > > How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? > Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 > > > -- > Dennis Kaplan > > http://vmclinks.

Second X

2004-01-21 Thread Dennis Kaplan
Hello, How can I log in to a second X session on my debian machine? Right now I have X on F7 I like to log in as a different user on F8 -- Dennis Kaplan http://vmclinks.com http://guyscope.com -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe"

Re: second X-session only as root

2002-09-17 Thread Karsten M. Self
on Sat, Sep 14, 2002, David Wilk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > Howdy folks, > > I upgraded from a potato+unofficial Xfree4.1 packages (pbotha) system > that allowed multiple xsessions for all users to a stock woody system > that only allows a second xsession for root. I didn't change any > config

Re: second X

2000-02-24 Thread kmself
On Thu, Feb 24, 2000 at 09:25:08AM +0100, Dietmar Block wrote: > Hi, > > I would like to run a second X and indeed I succeed by using > > xinit -- :1 > > but only as root. As soon as I use the same command as normal user > the system tells me that I am not authorized

Re: second X

2000-02-24 Thread Roy Pluschke
Dietmar Block wrote: > > Hi, > > I would like to run a second X and indeed I succeded by using > > xinit -- :1 > > but only as root. As soon as I use the same command as normal user > the system tells me that I am not authorized to run the Xserver. > As the same c

second X

2000-02-24 Thread Dietmar Block
Hi, I would like to run a second X and indeed I succeded by using xinit -- :1 but only as root. As soon as I use the same command as normal user the system tells me that I am not authorized to run the Xserver. As the same command run well on other linux distributions I wonder how I can change

Re: xdm -- Second X Session

1996-11-26 Thread ugs
On Mon, 25 Nov 1996, Joey Hess wrote: > Edit /etc/X11/xdm/Xservers. Here's mine: > > :1 local /usr/X11R6/bin/X vt8 -bpp 16 :1.0 > :0 local /usr/X11R6/bin/X vt7 > > This starts up 2 xdms, one at 16bpp and the other at 256 colors. The vt7 > and vt8 are important -- without them, the 2 xdm's fig

xdm -- Second X Session

1996-11-26 Thread Stephen Early
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > So far, I've only been able to manually get a second X session going for > root (doesn't seem to work for a normal user :( ) by using the following > command line: "startx -- /usr/X11R6/bin/XF86_Mach64 :1" How about something like &#

Re: xdm -- Second X Session

1996-11-25 Thread Joey Hess
[ Resent because I hada run-in with the new spam filter. ] > Can someone clue me in or point me in the right direction on have xdm > start up a second X session on startup. I did manage to change > no-start-xdm to start-xdm in /etc/X11/config, and that change now causes > xdm t

xdm -- Second X Session

1996-11-25 Thread ugs
Can someone clue me in or point me in the right direction on have xdm start up a second X session on startup. I did manage to change no-start-xdm to start-xdm in /etc/X11/config, and that change now causes xdm to manage one session nicely. So far, I've only been able to manually get a sec