On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 22:15:23 +0200
Albin wrote:
>This starts the screensaver and I'm now able to enter my password to unlock.
>The unlock screen looks a bit different though.
Just to be sure, are you saying that the unlocking works fine with that?
> > ls -l $(which xlock)
> -r-sr-sr-x 3 ro
Den 2016-04-23 kl. 20:28, skrev Danny Milosavljevic:
> On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 20:22:52 +0200
> Danny Milosavljevic wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> weird. It works for me here. I did the same as you did. (although I'm using
>> fluxbox)
>>
>> What happens when you run
>>
>>xlock
>>
>> manually?
Hi!
Thi
On Sat, 23 Apr 2016 20:22:52 +0200
Danny Milosavljevic wrote:
> Hi,
>
> weird. It works for me here. I did the same as you did. (although I'm using
> fluxbox)
>
> What happens when you run
>
>xlock
>
> manually?
(just to clarify: as your normal user)
Also, what does
which xlock
Hi,
weird. It works for me here. I did the same as you did. (although I'm using
fluxbox)
What happens when you run
xlock
manually?
Can you unlock the screen there?
Den 2016-04-23 kl. 09:55, skrev Danny Milosavljevic:
> On Thu, 14 Apr 2016 18:50:32 +0200
> l...@gnu.org (Ludovic Courtès) wrote:
>> As Chris Webber mentioned on the mailing list (IIRC), you’ll also have
>> to enable xscreensaver in the OS config:
>>
>> (use-modules (gnu services xorg))
>>
>> (
On Thu, 14 Apr 2016 18:50:32 +0200
l...@gnu.org (Ludovic Courtès) wrote:
> As Chris Webber mentioned on the mailing list (IIRC), you’ll also have
> to enable xscreensaver in the OS config:
>
> (use-modules (gnu services xorg))
>
> (operating-system
> ;; …
> (services (cons (screen-loc