Ok, forget EDITOR and XSESSION. I just started saying earlier that
DISPLAYMANAGER could be put in /etc/conf.d/xdm. XSESSION and
DISPLAYMANAGER are different, they just both relate to X. There is
really no reason not to split them up.
Forrest
On 2/14/06, John Mylchreest <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, Feb 13, 2006 at 08:15:23PM -0500, Mike Frysinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On Monday 13 February 2006 20:07, Forrest Voight wrote:
> > How is that wrong? If it isn't, eselect would be a great way to switch
> > EDITOR and XSESSION.
>
> jesus, talk about over engineering
>
> using esele
On Monday 13 February 2006 20:07, Forrest Voight wrote:
> How is that wrong? If it isn't, eselect would be a great way to switch
> EDITOR and XSESSION.
jesus, talk about over engineering
using eselect to manage some default variables instead of simply editing your
~/.bashrc file is like using a
How is that wrong? If it isn't, eselect would be a great way to switch
EDITOR and XSESSION.
On 2/13/06, Mike Frysinger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 13 February 2006 19:01, Alec Warner wrote:
> > Forrest Voight wrote:
> > > What happens if two env.d files set the same variable?
> >
> > Yo
On Monday 13 February 2006 19:01, Alec Warner wrote:
> Forrest Voight wrote:
> > What happens if two env.d files set the same variable?
>
> You write an eselect module to choose between them :)
brr wrong
-mike
--
gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Forrest Voight wrote:
> What happens if two env.d files set the same variable?
>
You write an eselect module to choose between them :)
> On 2/13/06, Olivier Crete <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>On Mon, 2006-13-02 at 16:51 -0500, Forrest Voight wrote:
>>
>>>What about env.d? Gnome could install a
On Monday 13 February 2006 14:24, Forrest Voight wrote:
> What happens if two env.d files set the same variable?
AFAIK, the env.d files processed in lexicographic order, and later entries
override earlier ones, except for certain variables (such as PATH) which are
added to instead.
--
#
# elect
What happens if two env.d files set the same variable?
On 2/13/06, Olivier Crete <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 2006-13-02 at 16:51 -0500, Forrest Voight wrote:
> > What about env.d? Gnome could install and env file that by default
> > sets XSESSION to gnome.
>
> Can't do... you can have gno
On Mon, 2006-13-02 at 16:51 -0500, Forrest Voight wrote:
> What about env.d? Gnome could install and env file that by default
> sets XSESSION to gnome.
Can't do... you can have gnome, kde, xfce, etc all installed at the same
time.
> On 2/13/06, Paul de Vrieze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Mo
What about env.d? Gnome could install and env file that by default
sets XSESSION to gnome.
On 2/13/06, Paul de Vrieze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 13 February 2006 13:19, Forrest Voight wrote:
> > Why doesn't it make sense to split DISPLAYMANAGER and XSESSION up?
> > They are related, bu
On Monday 13 February 2006 13:19, Forrest Voight wrote:
> Why doesn't it make sense to split DISPLAYMANAGER and XSESSION up?
> They are related, but in different contexts. XSESSION is for the user
> and DISPLAYMANAGER is used at boot time.
>
> On 2/13/06, Paul de Vrieze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
Why doesn't it make sense to split DISPLAYMANAGER and XSESSION up?
They are related, but in different contexts. XSESSION is for the user
and DISPLAYMANAGER is used at boot time.
On 2/13/06, Paul de Vrieze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 13 February 2006 03:33, Donnie Berkholz wrote:
> >
> >
On Monday 13 February 2006 03:33, Donnie Berkholz wrote:
>
> And even then, it's only copied over when you specify the -m option to
> useradd. It isn't done by default.
Users might further decide they use a .bashrc from a different system, or
to clean all percieved cruft from the .bashrc/.bash_pr
Edward Catmur wrote:
> On Sun, 2006-02-12 at 19:56 -0500, Forrest Voight wrote:
>> On 2/12/06, Donnie Berkholz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> Forrest Voight wrote:
I was using an old gentoo system. Forget about KEYMAP.
But, what about UNICODE? That is related to KEYMAP and consolefont.
>>
On Sun, 2006-02-12 at 19:56 -0500, Forrest Voight wrote:
> On 2/12/06, Donnie Berkholz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Forrest Voight wrote:
> > > I was using an old gentoo system. Forget about KEYMAP.
> > > But, what about UNICODE? That is related to KEYMAP and consolefont.
> > > Shouldn't EDITOR a
Then why can't it be in /etc/skel?
On 2/12/06, Donnie Berkholz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Forrest Voight wrote:
> > I was using an old gentoo system. Forget about KEYMAP.
> > But, what about UNICODE? That is related to KEYMAP and consolefont.
> > Shouldn't EDITOR and XSESSION be in a user-speci
Forrest Voight wrote:
> I was using an old gentoo system. Forget about KEYMAP.
> But, what about UNICODE? That is related to KEYMAP and consolefont.
> Shouldn't EDITOR and XSESSION be in a user-specific place?
I guess you didn't really understand the code. They can be in a
user-specific place.
If
I was using an old gentoo system. Forget about KEYMAP.
But, what about UNICODE? That is related to KEYMAP and consolefont.
Shouldn't EDITOR and XSESSION be in a user-specific place?
Forrest
On 2/12/06, Donnie Berkholz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Chris Gianelloni wrote:
> > On Sun, 2006-02-12 at
18 matches
Mail list logo