Hi all -- I have a situation where I want to set certain KDE desktop attributes for all users in KDE 4 on Debian "squeeze", and not allow users to change them. Specifically, I want to turn off nepomuk and nepomuk/strigi, because our systems have NFS-mounted user home directories, and "desktop search" plays havoc with the NFS server.
I thought I could do this by putting the appropriate nepomukserverrc and nepomukstrigirc files in /etc/kde4/share/config, after copying these files out of an example home directory's $HOME/.kde/share/config directory, where they had been turned off. I also tried appending "[$i]" to all the group stanzas in the config files, I read somewhere that this was supposed to lock stuff down. However, this didn't work, or at least, when I restored the pre-shutoff files to the account and logged in again, nepomuk was running. I found some documentation about order-of-operations and search paths for KDE config files, but it seems to be for KDE3, and I haven't found any for KDE4 specifically, has the scheme changed? I am also confused about the order of precedence -- the docs seem to say that the KDEHOME files always have the highest precedence, but also have some discussion about the [$i] scheme to lock things down, which I suppose means that the [$i] scheme overrides the precedence scheme, but I have not yet run across a clear statement to that effect in the docs, and I can't seem to make it work. By way of explanation/apology, as a sysadmin I am generally strongly in favor of maximal user control, and I'm not really fond of the idea of locking down settings, but the sad fact in this case is that the defaults are killing the server, and as the "squeeze" roll-out picks up, it's only going to get worse. Thanks in advance for extra clues... -- A. -- Andrew Reid / rei...@bellatlantic.net -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-kde-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201110171946.50403.rei...@bellatlantic.net