You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
451 lines
18 KiB
451 lines
18 KiB
This is the Trinity Display Manager (TDM),
|
|
the TDE replacement for the X Display Manager (XDM).
|
|
|
|
configure options that affect TDM
|
|
---------------------------------
|
|
|
|
--with-pam[=service]
|
|
Compile TDM (and other parts of tdebase) with PAM support. The default
|
|
service is "tde". PAM is automatically used if found.
|
|
|
|
--with-tdm-pam=service
|
|
Override the PAM service used specifically by TDM. Depends on --with-pam.
|
|
|
|
--with-shadow
|
|
Compile TDM (and other parts of tdebase) with shadow password support.
|
|
Shadow passwords are automatically used if found. This affects TDM only
|
|
if PAM is not used.
|
|
|
|
--with-krb4[=path]
|
|
Compile TDM (and the LDAP TDEIO slave) with KTH Kerberos 4 support. Note
|
|
that this does not work with the Kerberos 4 compatibility layer found in
|
|
MIT Kerberos 5. This affects TDM only if PAM is not used.
|
|
|
|
--with-afs
|
|
Compile TDM with AFS support. Depends on --with-krb4.
|
|
|
|
--with-krb5auth[=path]
|
|
--with-rpcauth
|
|
Compile TDM with Kerberos 5 resp. secure RPC support for X authorization
|
|
cookies. It's pretty pointless to enable this if you don't use an X server
|
|
that supports it.
|
|
|
|
If you want user authentication against a Kerberos realm, compile TDM with
|
|
PAM support and use the appropriate module.
|
|
|
|
--without-xdmcp
|
|
Compile TDM without XDMCP support.
|
|
|
|
--with-tdm-xconsole
|
|
Compile TDM with a builtin "xconsole" replacement in the greeter. I don't
|
|
consider this too useful, but SuSE wanted it, so it's there. ;)
|
|
|
|
|
|
TDM's file system layout
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
${tde_confdir} is usually ${prefix}/share/config
|
|
${tde_datadir} is usually ${prefix}/share/apps
|
|
The indented locations are envisioned for a configuration shared with GDM.
|
|
|
|
${tde_confdir}/tdm/{tdmrc,Xservers,Xaccess,Xwilling,...}
|
|
${tde_datadir}/tdm/sessions/*.desktop
|
|
/etc/X11/sessions/,/usr/share/xsessions/
|
|
${tde_datadir}/tdm/pics/users/
|
|
${tde_datadir}/tdm/pics/
|
|
${tde_datadir}/tdm/faces/*.face{,.icon}
|
|
/usr/share/faces/
|
|
/var/run/xauth/A*
|
|
/var/run/xdmctl/xdmctl*
|
|
/var/run/tdm.pid
|
|
/var/lib/tdm/tdmsts
|
|
<site-specific>/*.dmrc
|
|
$HOME/.face{,.icon}
|
|
$HOME/.dmrc
|
|
|
|
|
|
How to setup TDM
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
TDM's config files are all located in ${tde_confdir}/tdm.
|
|
"make install" will create a probably working configuration, either by
|
|
deriving it from an already present TDM/XDM installation or by using
|
|
defaults if no previous installation is found.
|
|
|
|
You can change the configuration from the TDE Control Center. You will
|
|
find the "Login Manager" module in the "System Administration" group.
|
|
|
|
Have a look at README.pam in the tdebase top level directory if your
|
|
system uses PAM.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Configuring session types
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
Session types are now represented by .desktop files in appropriate locations.
|
|
The format of the .desktop files is (not yet) defined in the FreeDesktop.org
|
|
desktop entry spec. Differences to "standard" .desktop files are:
|
|
- the Type is fixed to XSession and can be omitted
|
|
- the Encoding is fixed to UTF-8 and can be omitted
|
|
- the Exec field will be passed to "eval exec" in a bourne shell; no macro
|
|
expansion is performed on it. "default", "custom" and "failsafe" are magic
|
|
constants that cause special actions.
|
|
- Name, Comment, TryExec and Hidden are supported
|
|
- the remaining keys have no meaning currently
|
|
Session types are internally identified by filename (without extension);
|
|
that's what will be saved to ~/.dmrc and what DESKTOP_SESSION will be set to.
|
|
For every magic Exec constant a session type of the same name exists.
|
|
|
|
Unless your system is configured differently already, you should create a
|
|
directory ${tde_confdir}/tdm/sessions and add this to tdmrc:
|
|
|
|
[X-*-Core]
|
|
SessionsDirs=${tde_confdir}/tdm/sessions,${tde_datadir}/tdm/sessions
|
|
|
|
(Note that you must use actual paths instead of variables, see the section
|
|
about TDM's file system layout.)
|
|
Do any changes only in the config directory - any changes in the data
|
|
directory will be lost after the next TDE update.
|
|
|
|
To override a session type, copy the .desktop file from the data dir to the
|
|
config dir and edit it at will. Removing the shipped session types can be
|
|
accomplished by "shadowing" them with .desktop files containing Hidden=true.
|
|
For the magic session types no .desktop files exist by default, but TDM
|
|
pretends they would, so you can override them like any other type.
|
|
I guess you already know how to add a new session type by now. ;-)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Running TDM from init
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
NOTE, that this description applies to RedHat 5.x and must be adapted for
|
|
other distributions/systems. Generally I'd advise _against_ starting TDM
|
|
directly from init - better use a proper init script, possibly by slightly
|
|
modifying the XDM init script shipped by your distribution.
|
|
|
|
Edit (as root) /etc/inittab.
|
|
|
|
Look for the line:
|
|
|
|
x:5:respawn:/usr/X11/bin/xdm -nodaemon
|
|
|
|
Replace it with:
|
|
|
|
x:5:respawn:/opt/trinity/bin/tdm
|
|
|
|
This tells init(8) to respawn TDM, the TDE display manager, when
|
|
the system is in run level 5.
|
|
Note that TDM does not need the -nodaemon option.
|
|
|
|
To start TDM, either run (as root) /sbin/telinit 5 (to switch to
|
|
run level 5), or (this is risky! don't do it until you _know_ you
|
|
want the system to boot into this every time!) edit /etc/inittab
|
|
and change the line:
|
|
|
|
id:3:initdefault:
|
|
|
|
to
|
|
|
|
id:5:initdefault:
|
|
|
|
If you do the latter step, then every time your system boots
|
|
successfully it will go into run level 5 and run TDM,
|
|
presenting you the exceedingly cute TDE login screen.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The command sockets
|
|
-------------------
|
|
|
|
This is a feature you can use to remote-control TDM. It's mostly intended
|
|
for use by ksmserver and kdesktop from a running session, but other
|
|
applications are possible as well.
|
|
|
|
The sockets are UNIX domain sockets which live in subdirectories of the
|
|
directory specified by FifoDir=. The subdir is the key to addressing and
|
|
security; the sockets all have the file name "socket" and file permissions
|
|
rw-rw-rw- (0666). This is because some systems don't care for the file
|
|
permissions of the socket files.
|
|
There are two types of sockets: the global one (dmctl) and the per-display
|
|
ones (dmctl-<display>).
|
|
The global one's subdir is owned by root, the subdirs of the per-display
|
|
ones' are owned by the user currently owning the session (root or the
|
|
logged in user). Group ownership of the subdirs can be set via FifoGroup=,
|
|
otherwise it's root. The file permissions of the subdirs are rwxr-x--- (0750).
|
|
|
|
The fields of a command are separated by tabs (\t), the fields of a list
|
|
are separated by spaces, literal spaces in list fields are denoted by "\s".
|
|
The command is terminated by a newline (\n).
|
|
The same applies to replies. The reply on success is "ok", possibly followed
|
|
by the requested information. The reply on error is an errno-style word (e.g.,
|
|
"perm", "noent", etc.) followed by a longer explanation.
|
|
|
|
Global commands:
|
|
|
|
"login" display ("now"|"schedule") user password [session_arguments]
|
|
- login user at specified display. if "now" is specified, a possibly
|
|
running session is killed, otherwise the login is done after the
|
|
session exits.
|
|
session_arguments are printf-like escaped contents for .dmrc. Unlisted
|
|
keys will default to previously saved values.
|
|
|
|
Per-display commands:
|
|
|
|
"lock"
|
|
- The display is marked as locked. If the X-Server crashes in this state,
|
|
no auto-relogin will be performed even if the option is on.
|
|
|
|
"unlock"
|
|
- Reverse the effect of "lock": re-enable auto-relogin.
|
|
|
|
"suicide"
|
|
- The currently running session is forcibly terminated. No auto-relogin is
|
|
attempted, but a scheduled "login" command will be executed.
|
|
|
|
Commands for all sockets:
|
|
|
|
"caps"
|
|
- Returns a list this socket's capabilities:
|
|
"tdm" - identifies tdm, in case some other DM implements this protocol, too.
|
|
"list", "activate", "lock", "suicide", "login" - the respective command
|
|
is supported.
|
|
"bootoptions" - the "listbootoptions" command and the "=" option to
|
|
"shutdown" are supported.
|
|
"shutdown <list>" - "shutdown" is supported and allowed to the listed users
|
|
(comma-separated). "*" means all authenticated users.
|
|
"shutdown" - "shutdown" is supported and allowed to everybody.
|
|
"nuke <list>" - forced shutdown is allowed to the listed users.
|
|
"nuke" - forced shutdown is allowed to everybody.
|
|
"reserve <number>" - reserve displays are configured and <number> are
|
|
available at this time.
|
|
|
|
"list" ["all"|"alllocal"]
|
|
- Return a list of running sessions. By default all active sessions are
|
|
listed. If "all" is specified, passive sessions are listed as well. If
|
|
"alllocal" is specified, passive sessions are listed as well, but all
|
|
incoming remote sessions are skipped.
|
|
Each session entry is a comma-separated tuple of:
|
|
- Display or TTY name
|
|
- VT name for local sessions
|
|
- Logged in user's name, empty for passive sessions and outgoing remote
|
|
sessions (local chooser mode)
|
|
- Session type or remote host for outgoing remote sessions, empty for
|
|
passive sessions
|
|
- A flag field:
|
|
- "t" for tty sessions
|
|
- "*" for the display belonging to the requesting socket
|
|
- "!" for sessions that cannot be killed by the requesting socket
|
|
- New flags might be added later
|
|
- New fields might be added later
|
|
|
|
"reserve" [timeout in seconds]
|
|
- Start a reserve login screen. If nobody logs in within the specified amount
|
|
of time (one minute by default), the display is removed again. When the
|
|
session on the display exits, the display is removed, too.
|
|
- Permitted only on sockets of local displays and the global socket.
|
|
|
|
"activate" (vt|display)
|
|
- Switch to a particular VT (virtual terminal). The VT may be specified
|
|
either directly (e.g., vt3) or by a display using it (e.g., :2).
|
|
- Permitted only on sockets of local displays and the global socket.
|
|
|
|
"listbootoptions"
|
|
- List available boot options.
|
|
=> "ok" list default current
|
|
default and current are indices into the list and are -1 if unset or
|
|
undeterminable.
|
|
|
|
"shutdown" ("reboot"|"halt") ["="bootchoice] \
|
|
("ask"|"trynow"|"forcenow"|"schedule"|\
|
|
start ("-1"|end ("force"|"forcemy"|"cancel")))
|
|
- Request a system shutdown, either a reboot or a halt/poweroff.
|
|
- An OS choice for the next boot may be specified from the list returned by
|
|
"listbootoptions".
|
|
- Shutdowns requested from per-display sockets are executed when the current
|
|
session on that display exits. Such a request may pop up a dialog asking
|
|
for confirmation and/or authentication.
|
|
- start is the time for which the shutdown is scheduled. If it starts with
|
|
a plus-sign, the current time is added. Zero means immediately.
|
|
- end is the latest time at which the shutdown should be performed if active
|
|
sessions are still running. If it starts with a plus-sign, the start time
|
|
is added. Minus one means wait infinitely. If end is through and active
|
|
sessions are still running, TDM can do one of the following:
|
|
* "cancel" - give up the shutdown.
|
|
* "force" - shut down nonetheless.
|
|
* "forcemy" - shut down nonetheless if all active sessions belong to the
|
|
requesting user. Only for per-display sockets.
|
|
- start and end are specified in seconds since the UNIX epoch.
|
|
- "trynow" is a synonym for "0 0 cancel", "forcenow" for "0 0 force" and
|
|
"schedule" for "0 -1".
|
|
- "ask" attempts an immediate shutdown and interacts with the user if active
|
|
sessions are still running. Only for per-display sockets.
|
|
|
|
"shutdown" "cancel" ["local"|"global"]
|
|
- Cancel a scheduled shutdown. The global socket always cancels the currently
|
|
pending shutdown, while per-display sockets default to cancelling their
|
|
queued request.
|
|
|
|
"shutdown" "status"
|
|
- Return a list with information about shutdowns.
|
|
The entries are comma-separated tuples of:
|
|
- ("global"|"local") - pending vs. queued shutdown. A local entry can be
|
|
returned only by a per-display socket.
|
|
- ("halt"|"reboot")
|
|
- start
|
|
- end
|
|
- ("ask"|"force"|"forcemy"|"cancel")
|
|
- Numeric user ID of the requesting user, -1 for the global socket.
|
|
- The next boot OS choice or "-" for none.
|
|
- New fields might be added later.
|
|
|
|
There are two ways of using the sockets:
|
|
- Connecting them directly. FifoDir is exported as $DM_CONTROL; the name
|
|
of per-display sockets can be derived from $DISPLAY.
|
|
- By using the tdmctl command (e.g., from within a shell script).
|
|
Try "tdmctl -h" to find out more.
|
|
|
|
Here is an example bash script "reboot into FreeBSD":
|
|
|
|
if tdmctl | grep -q shutdown; then
|
|
IFS=$'\t'
|
|
set -- `tdmctl listbootoptions`
|
|
if [ "$1" = ok ]; then
|
|
fbsd=$(echo "$2" | tr ' ' '\n' | sed -ne 's,\\s, ,g;/freebsd/I{p;q}')
|
|
if [ -n "$fbsd" ]; then
|
|
tdmctl shutdown reboot "=$fbsd" ask > /dev/null
|
|
else
|
|
echo "FreeBSD boot unavailable."
|
|
fi
|
|
else
|
|
echo "Boot options unavailable."
|
|
fi
|
|
else
|
|
echo "Cannot reboot system."
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
"It doesn't work!!"
|
|
-------------------
|
|
|
|
More input! ;-)
|
|
|
|
TDM accepts two command line options related to logging:
|
|
|
|
-debug <n>
|
|
<n> is a decimal or hexadecimal (prefix 0x) number.
|
|
The number is a bitfield, i.e., it is formed by summing up the
|
|
required values from this table:
|
|
1 (0x1) - core debugging. Probably the most useful one.
|
|
2 (0x2) - config reader debugging.
|
|
4 (0x4) - greeter debugging.
|
|
8 (0x8) - IPC debugging. This logs _all_ communication between the
|
|
core, the config reader and the greeter - including the
|
|
passwords you type, so edit the log before showing it to
|
|
somebody.
|
|
This attempts to synchronize the processes to interleave the
|
|
log messages optimally, but will probably fail unless you use
|
|
-debug 0x80 as well.
|
|
16 (0x10) - wait after forking session sub-daemon.
|
|
32 (0x20) - wait after starting config reader.
|
|
64 (0x40) - wait after starting greeter.
|
|
The wait options are only useful if you need to attach a debugger
|
|
to a process, but it crashes before you are able to do so without
|
|
the delay. See below.
|
|
128 (0x80) - don't use syslog for internally generated messages.
|
|
256 (0x100) - core Xauth debugging.
|
|
1024 (0x400) - run config reader and greeter through valgrind.
|
|
2048 (0x800) - run config reader and greeter through strace.
|
|
|
|
Logs from "-debug 7" are usually a good start.
|
|
|
|
-error <file>, -logfile <file>
|
|
<file> is the file to log various messages to. The default log file is
|
|
/var/log/tdm.log. For internal reasons there is no option in tdmrc to
|
|
permanently specify the log file location. If you redirect TDM's
|
|
standard error output to a file, TDM will log there.
|
|
If TDM is configured to use syslog (and it _very_ probably is on any
|
|
modern system), all internally generated messages are logged to the
|
|
"daemon" facility. The log usually can be found in /var/log/debug.log
|
|
and /var/log/daemon.log; make sure that daemon.* is logged (look at
|
|
/etc/syslog.conf).
|
|
If you have problems logging in and your system uses PAM (also quite
|
|
probable on modern systems), the "auth" and "authpriv" syslog facilities
|
|
are interesting, too.
|
|
|
|
Send me all the logs together with a detailed description of what you did
|
|
and what happened. If your problem is related to a specific configuration,
|
|
you should also attach a tar.gz archive of your TDM config directory.
|
|
|
|
If I request a backtrace from you and TDM didn't create one yet via the
|
|
usual drkonqi procedure, you'll have to do that yourself. The keyphrase
|
|
is "attaching gdb". How exactly this is done depends on the part that
|
|
crashes:
|
|
- master daemon. Actually you should never need to attach to it, as
|
|
you can start it within the debugger already:
|
|
# gdb --args tdm -nodaemon -debug 7
|
|
(gdb) run
|
|
- display subdaemon. Find (using ps) the process with a name like
|
|
"-:0" (where :0 is actually the display this process is for). This
|
|
process' PPID is the master daemon. Attach to it this way:
|
|
# gdb tdm <the PID you found>
|
|
(gdb) cont
|
|
If the subdaemon crashes before you can attach, add 16 to the debug flags
|
|
when you start TDM.
|
|
- config reader. You will have to add 32 to the debug flags almost certainly.
|
|
The PPID will be the master daemon as well.
|
|
# gdb tdm_config $(pidof tdm_config)
|
|
(gdb) cont
|
|
- greeter. If it's too fast, add 64 to -debug. The PPID will be the subdaemon.
|
|
# gdb tdm_greet $(pidof tdm_greet)
|
|
(gdb) cont
|
|
The simplification with "pidof" works only if you have only one display,
|
|
otherwise you have to find the PID manually (by using ps -fx).
|
|
Once you got gdb attached to the offending process, do whatever is needed
|
|
to make it crash (probably nothing, if you had to use a delay parameter).
|
|
Once it crashed, gdb will tell you a signal name, like SIGSEGV - that's the
|
|
first interesting part for me. Then you have to create the actual backtrace:
|
|
(gdb) bt
|
|
The output of this command is interesting for me.
|
|
I might request a backtrace even if nothing crashes, but instead hangs. In
|
|
this case don't use "cont" after attaching, but use "bt" right away. If the
|
|
process is already running, interrupt it with ctrl-c.
|
|
For obvious reasons you have to run gdb on a different virtual terminal than
|
|
the X server. To get there, press alt-ctrl-f1 and log in as root. To
|
|
switch to the X server's vt, press alt-ctrl-f7 (the exact function key may
|
|
be different on your system). You may also use a remote login from a
|
|
second machine. In any case it is advantageous to have mouse support on the
|
|
debugging console for copying the backtrace.
|
|
Note that a backtrace is usually _much_ more useful if the binary contains
|
|
debugging info, so you should install from source with the --enable-debug
|
|
configure flag if at all possible.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Random rambings and license information
|
|
---------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Version 0.1 of TDM is copyright
|
|
Matthias Ettrich <ettrich@trolltech.com>
|
|
All later versions copyright:
|
|
(C) 1997-2000 Steffen Hansen <hansen@kde.org>
|
|
Since version 0.90 (KDE 2.1) copyright:
|
|
(C) 2000-2003 Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@kde.org>
|
|
|
|
The files in the backend directory are licensed under the X licence
|
|
(see http://www.x.org/Downloads_terms.html for more info).
|
|
The files in the kfrontend directory are licensed under the GNU GPL.
|
|
|
|
Thanks to (in no particular order):
|
|
Michael Bach Jensen and Torsten Rahn for drawing icons.
|
|
Duncan Haldane for investigation of PAM issues.
|
|
Stephan Kulow for helping with the autoconf stuff.
|
|
Martin Baehr for intensive testing and writing the sample Xsession scripts.
|
|
Harald Hoyer <Harald.Hoyer@redhat.de> for the (now obsoleted) chooser.
|
|
SuSE for employing me (ossi) for three months to work on tdm.
|
|
BasysKom for sponsoring my (ossi's) work on the conversation plugin stuff.
|
|
... and _many_ others ...
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Have fun with it (and feel free to comment),
|
|
|
|
Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@kde.org>
|