On Sun, Oct 17, 2010 at 8:37 AM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> Apparently, though unproven, at 15:03 on Sunday 17 October 2010, Nikos
> Chantziaras did opine thusly:
>
> > On 10/17/2010 04:00 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> > > On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
> > >> When I launch X programs via
Apparently, though unproven, at 15:03 on Sunday 17 October 2010, Nikos
Chantziaras did opine thusly:
> On 10/17/2010 04:00 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> > On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
> >> When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
> >>
> >> $sudo gui-admin
> >> No pro
On 10/17/2010 04:00 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
$sudo gui-admin
No protocol specified
gui-admin: cannot connect to X server :0
( Assume gui-admin is an X program )
But (gk|kde)su(do)? works. Thi
On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
$sudo gui-admin
No protocol specified
gui-admin: cannot connect to X server :0
( Assume gui-admin is an X program )
But (gk|kde)su(do)? works. This is somewhat confusing.
I just discovered somet
On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 10:22 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
> sudoers(5):
> ...
> ## Run X applications through sudo
> Defaults env_keep += "DISPLAY HOME"
> ...
>
> sudo visudo; paste; done
>
Except that in the heavily-commented version of the sudoers file that I
have, the corresponding line does not inc
sudoers(5):
...
## Run X applications through sudo
Defaults env_keep += "DISPLAY HOME"
...
sudo visudo; paste; done
--
Andrey "m05hbear" Vul
On 09/25/10 01:35:16, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
...
>
> But if some reason you want sudo, /etc/sudoers has some info:
>
>## Run X applications through sudo
>
> Read the comments there and uncomment what suits you. Did I mention
> that you should use kdesu instead of sudo? :-P
Which version
Robin Atwood wrote:
On Sunday 26 September 2010, Dale wrote:
Dale wrote:
It appears that maybe portage got the order wrong or something was
amiss with KDE. I re-emerged the following:
kdebase-menu
kdebase-menu-icons
kmenuedit
kdesu
After that, it works again. So, either something
On Sunday 26 September 2010, Dale wrote:
> Dale wrote:
> > It appears that maybe portage got the order wrong or something was
> > amiss with KDE. I re-emerged the following:
> >
> > kdebase-menu
> > kdebase-menu-icons
> > kmenuedit
> > kdesu
> >
> > After that, it works again. So, either someth
Dale wrote:
It appears that maybe portage got the order wrong or something was
amiss with KDE. I re-emerged the following:
kdebase-menu
kdebase-menu-icons
kmenuedit
kdesu
After that, it works again. So, either something was built in the
wrong order or KDE had some issue with something. O
Yohan Pereira wrote:
On Saturday 25 September 2010 2:51:45 pm Dale wrote:
In the Advanced tab, I set it to run as user root. When I then
select to run the item from the menu, a little GUI window will pop up
and ask me for the root password.
i just tried that and it worked perfectly
On Saturday 25 September 2010 2:51:45 pm Dale wrote:
> In the Advanced tab, I set it to run as user root. When I then
> select to run the item from the menu, a little GUI window will pop up
> and ask me for the root password.
i just tried that and it worked perfectly for konqueror, maybe you
Yohan Pereira wrote:
On Saturday 25 September 2010 8:33:09 am Dale wrote:
Well, I don't really know what it is using. I just set up the menu item
to run the program as root.
i assume you mean you setup a menuitem to run a paticular application as root
like say to run konsole/konquero
Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
On Saturday 25 September 2010, Dale wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
On 09/23/2010 04:18 AM, Dale wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the followin
On Saturday 25 September 2010 8:33:09 am Dale wrote:
> Well, I don't really know what it is using. I just set up the menu item
> to run the program as root.
i assume you mean you setup a menuitem to run a paticular application as root
like say to run konsole/konqueror as root.
> I don't know i
On Saturday 25 September 2010, Dale wrote:
> Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> > On 09/23/2010 04:18 AM, Dale wrote:
> >> Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> >>> On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
> When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
>
> $sudo gui-admin
> No protoco
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
On 09/23/2010 04:18 AM, Dale wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
$sudo gui-admin
No protocol specified
gui-admin: cannot connect to X server :0
( Assume gui-admin is an X pr
On 09/23/2010 04:18 AM, Dale wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
$sudo gui-admin
No protocol specified
gui-admin: cannot connect to X server :0
( Assume gui-admin is an X program )
But (gk|kde)su(do
On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 21:18, Dale wrote:
> Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
>>
>> On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
>>>
>>> When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
>>>
>>> $sudo gui-admin
>>> No protocol specified
>>> gui-admin: cannot connect to X server :0
>>>
>>> ( Assume gui-
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
$sudo gui-admin
No protocol specified
gui-admin: cannot connect to X server :0
( Assume gui-admin is an X program )
But (gk|kde)su(do)? works. This is somewhat confusing.
On 09/22/2010 09:48 PM, Andrey Vul wrote:
When I launch X programs via sudo, I get the following:
$sudo gui-admin
No protocol specified
gui-admin: cannot connect to X server :0
( Assume gui-admin is an X program )
But (gk|kde)su(do)? works. This is somewhat confusing.
sudo doesn't keep the $
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