Just a *small* note:  trying this on my server resulted in users not being able to login to GNOME.  Removing gnome-power-management also took gnome-session out!  Reinstalling gnome-session brings the power package back, as well...

gconf seems to be the best way to work this out.  Basically, set a mandatory entry, as Oliver mentioned.  With my config, as soon as users select "Quit" they are logged off (no confirmation or options given).

On Thu, 2006-31-08 at 11:08 +0100, Gavin McCullagh wrote:
Hi Oliver,

thanks for the reply.

On Thu, 31 Aug 2006, Oliver Grawert wrote:

> Am Dienstag, den 29.08.2006, 21:48 +0100 schrieb Gavin McCullagh:
> >       XKBLayout = GB
> >    under [default] in /etc/ltsp/lts.conf and /opt/ltsp/i386/etc/lts.conf
> >    (which is correct?) but to no avail.  I keep getting @ instead of ",
> >    etc.
> the variables in lts.conf are environment variables, they should be
> capiatlized, also there is no "GB" keymap in xorg, its likely rather
> "gb"

Cool, so I probably need:

       XKBLAYOUT = gb

also, which of the above is the correct lts.conf location?  

I know you're preparing a default lts.conf which is a good idea.  It would
be really helpful to have a doc or wiki page somewhere which listed _every_
directive which can be set in lts.conf and if possible every possible value
(within reason, I realise this wouldn't be possible for something like X
modes).

> > 2. Out of curiosity I hit the Hibernate button presented when I click quit.
> >    To my shock and alarm the system went down.  And I mean the server.
> >    Both on my account and the users.  How do I disable this horrible
> >    @[EMAIL PROTECTED]  
> that bug showed up very late in the release cycle, i'm working on a
> patch for gnome-session in edgy i hope to be able to backport to dapper
> for the next pointrelease. for now the easiest is to remove
> gnome-power-manager completely via apt or set the gconf keys
> "can-suspend" and "can-hibernate" with gconf-editor, that will make the
> option go away.

I see.  I'll probably go with removing the gnome-power-manager for now.
Can one set global gconf keys and if so how is it done?  I presume a user
could probably over-ride this but that's not so much of a concern.  My fear
is that a user will hit hibernate thinking that they can return to their
programs when they login again (as gnome currently advertises).

Gavin


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