On Monday 11 March 2019 09:40:53 Dr. Nikolaus Klepp wrote: > Hi Gene! > > Anno domini 2019 Mon, 11 Mar 07:49:50 -0400 > > Gene Heskett scripsit: > > On Monday 11 March 2019 04:49:49 Dr. Nikolaus Klepp wrote: > > > Anno domini 2019 Sun, 10 Mar 11:56:17 -0500 > > > > > > Michael scripsit: > > > > On Sunday 10 March 2019 11:02:50 am Gene Heskett wrote: > > > > > On Sunday 10 March 2019 11:35:32 BorgLabs - Kate Draven wrote: > > > > > > On Sunday 10 March 2019, J Leslie Turriff wrote: > > > > > > > Is there a way to make TDE aware of running non-Trinity > > > > > > > applications so that they can be resurrected after > > > > > > > Logout/Login? I have at least one X11-based application > > > > > > > (X2 - The Programmer's Editor) that I use extensively, and > > > > > > > it would be nice if it could remember across Logout/Login > > > > > > > events. I'm wondering if something like a DCOP wrapper > > > > > > > might do the job? > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Leslie > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ---------------------------------------------------------- > > > > > > >---- ------ - > > > > > > > > > > > > Load the application into your autostart dir. > > > > > > /home/foo/.trinity/autostart > > > > > > Also, check the program's setting to see if it has an > > > > > > autostart feature. > > > > > > > > > > > > Kate > > > > > > > > > > Hi Kate; I have some stuff in that caregory, and since I'm the > > > > > only (sorta human) user, I've found a start stanza for such in > > > > > /etc/rc.local works well if it doesn't need a login. And since > > > > > I setup ssh-keys, all that stuff now works well after a fresh > > > > > boot. So all my other machines that are alive, are mounted to > > > > > /sshnet at a reboot without my having to remember 4 to 6 of > > > > > those commands to do by hand each time. > > > > > > > > Gene, Kate, > > > > > > > > Would either of these work for launching several of these types > > > > of Konsole commands like (using keys for login): > > > > > > > > ssh "$PORT" -L 11111:$IP:25 -L 22222:$IP:110 "$ACCOUNT@$IP" > > > > > > > > at TDE login? > > > > > > Sure it works. But you have to make sure that you kill the ssh > > > instance when logging out of TDE :-) > > > > I am not, at least consciously. Is that why a logout here is a full > > hot reboot? > > That logout behaviour can be configured somewhere in tcontrol (I have > mine to just fhut down the machine and don't ask me again). The > problem with the ssh example is that when user A logs out and ssh is > not closed, and a user B logs in, then B still has the portredirection > of A in place ... which could lead to funny helpdesk calls, 'cause the > cure number 1 aka "reboot" will seamingly fix the problem for user B > ... till user A wants to log in and calls the helpdeskt which tells > him to reboot which solves the problem for user A till user B wants to > log in and calls ... *sigh* ... things could be so easy if users just > were not creative :-) > > Nik > Yeah Nik, but we are creative. Like my email handling here. This reply was as the result of hitting the + key, which takes me to the next unread message, I chose to reply to list (or I can tap the + key to go to the next unread). clicked on that button, and now I'm typing. When I've said with my fingers what I want, a ctrl+return sends it. Wash, rinse, repeat. Fetchmail runs and gets new mail on a 3 minute loop, hands it off to procmail which runs it past spamd, then clamd, which sends the spam straight to the spam folder, the detected viri to a mailfile I delete occasionally, and puts the rest into /var/spool/mail. Inotifywait sees the closing of that file and exits with the name of that file, which saves the name for a couple millisecs, in a bash script that sends kmail a getmail message and restarts inotifywait. I start "mailwatcher" in the /etc/init.d facility, and kmail is started when I log in. So all I do is the wash. rinse, repeat. Computers are for doing your work for you, so make em do it. :) Besides, I'm getting lazy in my dotage, in addition to being slowly converted to bionic. I've gained plastic eyes and a pacemaker in the last 5 months since I hit 84. ;-) As D.A. said, thanks for the fish. Yes I'm careing for my wife of 30 years this fall, whose slowly failing from COPD and osteoporosis, but I have enough other interests to keep me out of the bars. I'm in the middle of bringing a 5th machine tool to life, a 600x390mm gantry mill, by running it with LinuxCNC. So my garage and a shop building in the back yard both runeth over, plus I have most of the last 3 fancy blanket chests I'm making cut out, but got some badly warped mahogany for lids. I stuck the supplier for another $400 in air dried mahogany over that. I cut all the Green & Green joinery for those on a cnc mill, now awaiting assembly once warmer weather arrives and I can work outside. Too many hobbies for an old fart and the limited amount of real estate under roof and heated. Take care now Nik. Cheers, Gene Heskett -- "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/gene> --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: trinity-users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: trinity-users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Read list messages on the web archive: http://trinity-users.pearsoncomputing.net/ Please remember not to top-post: http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/mailing_lists/#top-posting