Network connectivity is normal and working fine. As I mentioned, I can log in through a console, SSH, failsafe, etc. and operate fine. I am using LDAP for authentication. All routing and DNS settings are fine, and the network works as normal. The root user can operate any network-utilizing utilities fine from within GNOME, and console-based and X utilities work for everyone else, just not from within GNOME. I created another test account, this time pointing to a different home directory, this time using the local directory /tmp/guest2 instead of the default, NFS-mounted /home/guest2. I was able to log into GNOME successfully. Any ideas? Oliver On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 10:53:31 -0700, Brian D. McGrew <brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > OK ... So then it's pretty safe to assume that it's not something in > the environment then. How about network connectivity? Are you able to > reach the rest of your network without any problems? What are you > using for authentication? NIS or LDAP? > > What about your defualtrouter and DNS setup, is that all correct? I > assume that you can open a browser and get to the web ok (logged in as > root, of course)? > > Also one lat thing to try ... Create a user that's in your > authentication system but put the home directory local on the > workstation and see if that works? I'm wondering if there is some > issue with write permissions in the authentication process. > > -brian > > Brian D. McGrew { brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx || > pacemakertaker@xxxxxxxxx } > -- > > YOU! Off my planet! > > > On Aug 26, 2004, at 10:46 AM, Oliver Aaltonen wrote: > > > Using RHEL3's defaults. > > > > [guest@ibmlnx21 guest]$ cat .bashrc > > # .bashrc > > > > # User specific aliases and functions > > > > # Source global definitions > > if [ -f /etc/bashrc ]; then > > . /etc/bashrc > > fi > > [guest@ibmlnx21 guest]$ cat .bash_profile > > # .bash_profile > > > > # Get the aliases and functions > > if [ -f ~/.bashrc ]; then > > . ~/.bashrc > > fi > > > > # User specific environment and startup programs > > > > PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin > > > > export PATH > > unset USERNAME > > [guest@ibmlnx21 guest]$ echo $PATH > > /usr/kerberos/bin:/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/X11R6/bin:/home/ > > guest/bin > > > > Oliver > > > > On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 10:34:57 -0700, Brian D. McGrew > > <brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Show us your .bash_profile and .bashrc files. Are all the users using > >> default system files or are any of these customized? Also, is > >> /usr/X11R6/bin in your path and /usr/X11R6/lib in your > >> LD_LIBRARY_PATH? > >> > >> -brian > >> > >> Brian D. McGrew { brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx || > >> pacemakertaker@xxxxxxxxx } > >> -- > >>> YOU! Off my planet! > >> > >> > >> On Aug 26, 2004, at 10:32 AM, Oliver Aaltonen wrote: > >> > >>> Yes, I should have mentioned that as well. KDE sits at the same blank > >>> screen with cursor after successfully authenticating the user via > >>> GDM. > >>> As I mentioned previously, the "failsafe" session works fine. > >>> > >>> Oliver > >>> > >>> On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 10:24:40 -0700, Brian D. McGrew > >>> <brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> Those two lines look good. The only reason for the automounter > >>>> would > >>>> be a matter of simplicity not functionality. > >>>> > >>>> Have you tried logging in with KDE or any other window manager > >>>> besides > >>>> gnome? > >>>> > >>>> -brian > >>>> > >>>> Brian D. McGrew { brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx || > >>>> pacemakertaker@xxxxxxxxx } > >>>> -- > >>>>> YOU! Off my planet! > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> On Aug 26, 2004, at 10:19 AM, Oliver Aaltonen wrote: > >>>> > >>>>> Relevant line from server's /etc/exports: > >>>>> /home 128.119.158.0/24(rw,sync) > >>>>> > >>>>> Relevant line from client's /etc/fstab: > >>>>> 128.119.163.32:/home /home nfs > >>>>> rw,hard,intr > >>>>> 0 0 > >>>>> > >>>>> I did not consider using the automounter, since I assumed a simple > >>>>> mount via fstab would do the trick. I will look into this. > >>>>> > >>>>> Oliver > >>>>> > >>>>> On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 10:08:59 -0700, Brian D. McGrew > >>>>> <brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>>> Ok ... so if it occurs with a brand new user with nothing special > >>>>>> in > >>>>>> the login, (unlike my login environment which is going 14 years > >>>>>> old > >>>>>> now) then lets have a look at your /etc/fstab on the client and > >>>>>> the > >>>>>> /etc/exports file from the server. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Also, if I may ask, why aren't you using the automounter (amd) > >>>>>> instead > >>>>>> of hard mounting the in the fstab? > >>>>>> > >>>>>> -brian > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Brian D. McGrew { brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx || > >>>>>> pacemakertaker@xxxxxxxxx } > >>>>>> -- > >>>>>>> YOU! Off my planet! > >>>>>> > >>>>>> > >>>>>> On Aug 26, 2004, at 10:00 AM, Oliver Aaltonen wrote: > >>>>>> > >>>>>>> Brian, > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> I should mention this happens with all of the users. I've even > >>>>>>> created > >>>>>>> some "fresh" accounts, using RHEL3's defaults, and the same > >>>>>>> problems > >>>>>>> occur. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> Here are the permissions under one of the test accounts: > >>>>>>> drwx------ 5 guest guest 4096 Aug 26 16:20 . > >>>>>>> drwxr-xr-x 5 root root 4096 Aug 25 14:13 .. > >>>>>>> -rw------- 1 guest guest 60 Aug 26 14:32 > >>>>>>> .bash_history > >>>>>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 guest guest 24 Sep 18 2003 > >>>>>>> .bash_logout > >>>>>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 guest guest 191 Sep 18 2003 > >>>>>>> .bash_profile > >>>>>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 guest guest 124 Sep 18 2003 .bashrc > >>>>>>> drwx------ 3 guest guest 4096 Aug 25 18:00 .gconfd > >>>>>>> drwxr-xr-x 2 guest guest 4096 Aug 25 18:00 .gnome2 > >>>>>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 guest guest 120 Aug 20 2003 .gtkrc > >>>>>>> -rw-rw-r-- 1 guest guest 11 Aug 26 14:31 > >>>>>>> guest_test.txt > >>>>>>> drwxr-xr-x 3 guest guest 4096 Aug 24 14:01 .kde > >>>>>>> -rw------- 1 guest guest 607 Aug 26 14:31 .viminfo > >>>>>>> -rw------- 1 guest guest 0 Aug 26 16:20 > >>>>>>> .Xauthority > >>>>>>> -rw------- 1 guest guest 0 Aug 26 16:20 > >>>>>>> .xsession-errors > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> Oliver > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 09:50:41 -0700, Brian D. McGrew > >>>>>>> <brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>>>>>> I would have a look in the users home directory and make sure > >>>>>>>> that > >>>>>>>> you > >>>>>>>> have correct permissions on all the dot files (.gnome, .gtkrc, > >>>>>>>> etc) > >>>>>>>> and > >>>>>>>> that the correct ownership is set. I saw this problem once on > >>>>>>>> Solaris > >>>>>>>> with Sun's gnome recently. > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> -brian > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> Brian D. McGrew { brian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx || > >>>>>>>> pacemakertaker@xxxxxxxxx } > >>>>>>>> -- > >>>>>>>>> YOU! Off my planet! > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> On Aug 26, 2004, at 9:48 AM, Oliver Aaltonen wrote: > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> I am experiencing a problem logging onto the GNOME desktop with > >>>>>>>>> the > >>>>>>>>> following setup: > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> Server (RHEL3 AS) is exporting /home via NFS and running an > >>>>>>>>> LDAP > >>>>>>>>> server for authentication. Client (RHEL3 WS) is mounting /home > >>>>>>>>> via > >>>>>>>>> an > >>>>>>>>> entry in /etc/fstab. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> The mount works fine, and client is set up for LDAP > >>>>>>>>> authentication > >>>>>>>>> correctly. I can log in through the console or SSH into the > >>>>>>>>> client > >>>>>>>>> machine and access the user's home directory and work perfectly > >>>>>>>>> normally. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> The only problem I have is when I try to log onto the client > >>>>>>>>> machine > >>>>>>>>> using GDM to run X locally. If I log in as one of the users on > >>>>>>>>> the > >>>>>>>>> server, with their home directory in the mounted share, the > >>>>>>>>> user > >>>>>>>>> is > >>>>>>>>> authenticated and the screen turns blank with a cursor and sits > >>>>>>>>> there, > >>>>>>>>> not bringing up a GNOME desktop. I can log in through GDM into > >>>>>>>>> a > >>>>>>>>> "failsafe" session, but not GNOME. If I log in as root on the > >>>>>>>>> client > >>>>>>>>> machine, everything works fine, and the GNOME desktop comes up > >>>>>>>>> correctly. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> There are no obvious errors in the logs that I can find. > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> Any thoughts? Thanks in advance, > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> Oliver > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>>> -- > >>>>>>>>> redhat-list mailing list > >>>>>>>>> unsubscribe > >>>>>>>>> mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe > >>>>>>>>> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>>>> > >>>>>> > >>>>>> > >>>> > >>>> > >> > >> > > -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list