On 10/09/2015 20:33, tilt! wrote:
Hi,

in Ubuntu defaults are in X11/Xsession.d/60x11-common_xdg_path
which is shipped by x11-common and sourced by XSession
 >
BTW there is some XDG_* env setting also in X11/Xsession.d/00upstart

Ok, now if only we knew what to actually use as a default for
XDG_RUNTIME_DIR; it is a per-user setting, and defining the
prefix to be /tmp/run is not enough.

Come to think of it, my choice of

    ${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR:-/tmp/run/$USER}

is no good, because, just as an example, if $USER comes from
an AD domain or LDAP it might contain '\'; in the least,
$USER had to undergo some transformation (escaping?) to ensure
that it's filesystem-safe.

No wonder XDG issues no default value, and it all disappears
into implementation code, it's a potato of above-average warmth
  - makes me feel sorry i brought it up in the first place :-D

You can always use the uid instead of the name? One saving grace of this facility is that since it's entirely defined by XDG_RUNTIME_DIR, you can construct the path however you see fit. The name is purely an internal implementation detail. You could even do it by some other means such as the login number since startup e.g. /tmp/session/1. Or a timestamp and PID: /tmp/session/201509102055-9230. Or a random mkdtemp(3) direcory. My point is simply that the path doesn't need to contain the username, so you can use whatever makes most sense to make it unique. Depending upon your chosen level of conformance with the XDG spec, you might also want to make provision for sharing it between sessions, so a basic uid would give you that, but in combination with a random part would allow you to have separate sessions (which isn't covered by the spec).


Regards,
Roger
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