On Mon, Jan 24, 2005 at 06:04:35PM +0200, Shoshannah Forbes wrote: > > Since this topic came up anyway: I know gnome allows different users to > have different screen resolution settings (on the same machine). > > Anybody know if there is a way to set that independently of gnome?
The only place I can think such a feature can be sanely implemented is by the *DM . This is because each *DM login is to a newly-created X session. Naturally gnome/kde/whatever is independent of the DM you use (if you use one at all). You can also pass explicit server arguments if you run xinit/startx . > The > xorg.conf file seems rather system-wide, which is a strange thing for > a multi-user system. The X server typically controls a unique local resource. For performance reasons it has to run as root and thus has the ability to crash the system. You can't simply allow non-root to control its configuration: this can create an easy DoS. That said, a console user[1] can pass an arbitrary X parameter to the X server, including the path to an alternative config file. [1] The default configuration is that only root can run X. A local console user can also run it through Xwrapper. On my system I have /etc/X11/Xwrapper.config in which: allowed_users=console nice_value=-10 I don't know if this file is Debian-specific. -- Tzafrir Cohen | New signature for new address and | VIM is http://tzafrir.org.il | new homepage | a Mutt's [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | best ICQ# 16849755 | Space reserved for other protocols | friend ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]