Rupert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-10-14 22:20:20 +0100]: > XTerm*loginShell: true > > that causes problems. I don't know why telling XTerm to use a login > shell gives rise to this strange behaviour, but it seems that it does.
Check your tty settings. I am sure that when you compare a terminal that 'works' to one that does not you will find different settings. stty -a Try setting this: stty -tostop Now that you have been pointed to 'stty' please read the 'man stty' for the details of 'tostop'. Stop on terminal output. Login shells read your $HOME/.profile (or other file as specified in your shell documentation.) Other shells do not. Therefore probably you have something in your ~/.profile file calling 'stty tostop' and therefore causing your behavior. Or it is in your X resources. xrdb -q | grep -i ttyModes Note that you could always have avoided the output by redirecting the output. Then the background process would not have been stopped on tty output since there would have been no output. galeon >/dev/null 2>&1 & Also, you could create your own ~/bin/mygaleon script which did all of that for you. Bob
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