Slock sucks less, with a bit of luck next release will even survive
the destruction of our planet.
Give me a break. Our eyes need to rest, too. Stop coding everyone.
(I will from now on only troll on Sundays, thanks for your patience)
ctrl+alt+backspace is not enabled by default. remove your xorg.conf an you'll
enjoy it.
this is the reason why X must be started with exec or from rc.d. this way.
ctrl+alt+bs doesnt gives you a shell.
this ctrl+alt+multiple thingy looks evil. who the hell needs to do this? and
more to say.. wh
I don't have an xorg.conf and don't know what an rc.d is.
I use ctrl-alt-backspace a lot, and as I live in a democratic country
I don't think I can be forced to start X with exec either.
On 22.01.2012, pancake wrote:
> ctrl+alt+backspace is not enabled by default. remove your xorg.conf an
> you'l
On 21 January 2012 01:13, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote:
> Þann fös 20.jan 2012 23:42, skrifaði Rob:
>>
>> On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 07:01:22PM +, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote:
>> Surely it just destroys the window, you can't get a PID for any X
>> window,
>> since it could be a networked one
>>
>
> As
> On 21 January 2012 01:13, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote:
> > Þann fös 20.jan 2012 23:42, skrifaði Rob:
> >>
> >> On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 07:01:22PM +, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote:
> >> Surely it just destroys the window, you can't get a PID for any X
> >> window,
> >> since it could be a networked
On 22 January 2012 18:25, Roman Z. wrote:
>> On 21 January 2012 01:13, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote:
>> > Ţann fös 20.jan 2012 23:42, skrifađi Rob:
>> >>
>> >> On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 07:01:22PM +, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote:
>> >> Surely it just destroys the window, you can't get a PID for any X
r u using the multiply key from the numpad?
On Jan 22, 2012, at 18:30, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
> On 22 January 2012 18:25, Roman Z. wrote:
>>> On 21 January 2012 01:13, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote:
Ţann fös 20.jan 2012 23:42, skrifađi Rob:
>
> On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 07:01:22PM +,
Dnia 2012-01-22, o godz. 18:30:03
Anselm R Garbe napisał(a):
> Ok, so the error handler trick doesn't work as it exceeds some x
> server threshold and then raises an XIO fatal error.
>
> I will investigate this issue further, but will need a more current X
> server first ;)
>
> Cheers,
> Anselm
2012/1/22 Hadrian Węgrzynowski :
> I will repeat my self. Read this first:
> http://who-t.blogspot.com/2012/01/xkb-breaking-grabs-cve-2012-0064.html
I did, however there should be a way to prevent similar issues from
happening anyways.
Next year someone sez press Ctrl-Alt-something this will crash
On 01-22 18:06, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
Having said all this, there is still another problem in slock. If you
launch a client *after* slock has taken over (like over a SSH
connection), the window will be managed and most likely appear on top
of slock (the window won't receive any input though).
what about disabling ctrl key when slock is running by calling xmodmap or doing
it in C? will this work? ( i know its hacky)
On Jan 22, 2012, at 19:14, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
> 2012/1/22 Hadrian Węgrzynowski :
>> I will repeat my self. Read this first:
>> http://who-t.blogspot.com/2012/01/xkb-br
On Sat, Jan 21, 2012 at 11:54:17PM +0100, Aurélien Aptel wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I've made st ~10x faster on my computer. If there are no major bugs I
> will tag tip as version 0.2.
> Here's the relevant commit message:
>
> * add a timeout value (SELECT_TIMEOUT) of 20ms in the select() call
> * wait
On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 01:22:20PM -0500, Peter John Hartman wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Unfortunately, the tmux-split-pane problem still persists. The
> tmux-split-pane problem is this: if one pane in tmux is spitting
> out a bunch of text (e.g. a sudo cat /var/log/messages or most
> compilations) you can
On Mon, Jan 16, 2012 at 12:25 AM, Anthony Cox wrote:
> This seems to have broken my floating windows - if I have a floating XTerm
> and open a new XTerm (tiled), the floating XTerm ends up behind the tiled
> one and I can no longer raise the floating one above.
>
I just want to mention this break
On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 08:02:58PM +0100, Martti Kühne wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 01:22:20PM -0500, Peter John Hartman wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > Unfortunately, the tmux-split-pane problem still persists. The
> > tmux-split-pane problem is this: if one pane in tmux is spitting
> > out a bunch o
> I just want to mention this breaks raising my floating windows also.
> Reverting the lines from the patch:
>
> - if(m->sel->isfloating || !m->lt[m->sellt]->arrange)
> - XRaiseWindow(dpy, m->sel->win);
>
> seems to fix it again.
That's why I attacked the SDL problem from another
People used to take their steering wheels with them so that nobody
drives their car away. So I think your approach should work. Perhaps
you could take away the whole keyboard. It's very easy on my thinkpad.
Only 7 screws away from perfect security.
On 22.01.2012, pancake wrote:
> what about disab
On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 07:14:03PM +0100, Anselm R Garbe wrote:
> 2012/1/22 Hadrian Węgrzynowski :
> > I will repeat my self. Read this first:
> > http://who-t.blogspot.com/2012/01/xkb-breaking-grabs-cve-2012-0064.html
>
> I did, however there should be a way to prevent similar issues from
> happe
usb keyboard will bypass your security protections against this.
On Jan 22, 2012, at 21:08, hiro <23h...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> People used to take their steering wheels with them so that nobody
> drives their car away. So I think your approach should work. Perhaps
> you could take away the who
On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 09:15:53PM +0100, pancake wrote:
> On Jan 22, 2012, at 21:08, hiro <23h...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> > People used to take their steering wheels with them so that nobody
> > drives their car away. So I think your approach should work. Perhaps
> > you could take away the whole
Well, I already did break one of my usb ports. Should be easy to break
the other two. But then also beware of the pcmcia ports. You can use a
cheap FPGA to hack the whole PC using DMA over pci or so I heard.
>> usb keyboard will bypass your security protections against this.
>
> That's a bug in yo
On Sun, Jan 22, 2012 at 10:10:23PM +0100, hiro wrote:
> Well, I already did break one of my usb ports.
That's the spirit!
> Should be easy to break the other two. But then also beware of the
> pcmcia ports. You can use a cheap FPGA to hack the whole PC using DMA
> over pci or so I heard.
Seems w
I'm having problems displaying fonts. Every font I use, besides the
default, leaves the display in a messy state. My locale is en_US.utf8
if it makes a difference and using the repo's tip. Here is a
screenshot: http://i43.tinypic.com/241r1jp.jpg
On Sun, 22 Jan 2012, Christopher Lunsford wrote:
I'm having problems displaying fonts. Every font I use, besides the
default, leaves the display in a messy state. My locale is en_US.utf8
if it makes a difference and using the repo's tip. Here is a
screenshot: http://i43.tinypic.com/241r1jp.jpg
On Mon, 23 Jan 2012, Benjamin R. Haskell wrote:
I had similar results until I compiled the st terminfo file by running:
tic st
Sorry:
tic st.info
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