Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: xterminal
Special Forums UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers xterminal Post 27364 by mysth on Friday 30th of August 2002 03:51:46 AM
Old 08-30-2002
xterminal

hi there,

i am not quite sure, if this belongs here...

well, since wednesday i am using an xterminal from HP. it is connectet to another pc (as it should be), that pc is used by others, too.
My problem is, that everytime i run mozilla (doesn't matter if new or old version, i tryed both) and open more than two windows, it just closes. The same with OpenOffice.
Gernerlly I can say, if i use to much grafic it breaks down.
On the pc my KDE is then using a 100% cpu time.

My chef says, it is just mozilla, for the xterminal just gets the grafic and puts it to the monitor.

but i guess it is some sort of buffer overflow...

i have no experience with xterminals...
...but it is really hard for me to work on an half runnig system.

so if anybody has an idea what i could do (besides suggesting i should use a normal pc), i'd be more than glad
 
SUXTERM(1)							   User Commands							SUXTERM(1)

NAME
sux - wrapper around su which will transfer your X credentials SYNOPSIS
sux [OPTS] [-] [username] [ARGS]] suxterm [OPTS] [-] [username] DESCRIPTION
sux is a wrapper around the standard su command which will transfer your X credentials to the target user. Note, suxterm forces ARGS to be 'xterm', and will try to launch an xterminal window. QUICK CALLING
'sux user' and 'sux - user' behave just like su but transfer $DISPLAY and the X cookies. OPTIONS
--untrusted To generate an untrusted cookie, see 'xauth'. --timeout <period> To generate a temporary cookie for <period> seconds, see 'xauth'. -m,-p --preserve-environment In this case sux will override XAUTHORITY to the so that xauth does not try to use the original user's .Xauthority file (which it obviously could not do anyway due to access rights). --no-cookies Just transfer DISPLAY, not the cookies. You could do this if you have already transfered the cookies in a previous invocation of sux. --copy-cookies Copy the cookies using xauth. This is the default method (and only method most of the time). --use-xauthority Instead of transferring the cookies, set the XAUTHORITY environment variable to access the original .Xauthority file. There's a couple caveats with this method. First, due to the access right issues it's only usable by root. But even then it may not work if the .Xauthority file is accessed via NFS, e.g. if the home directories are on NFS (note that this is quite dangerous already since your cookies will travel unencrypted over the network). Then, if root runs commands like xauth add/remove, the .Xauthority's owner- ship will belong to him. This will leave the original user in trouble as he will no longer be able to access X! So only use this option with great care. Finally, this method does not work if you also want to use '--untrusted' or '--timeout'. --display specify which display to use (in case of having more than one available). AUTHOR
Originally written by Francois Gouget <fgouget@free.fr> Manpage written by Millis Miller <millis@faztek.org> REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <millis@faztek.org>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICU- LAR PURPOSE. SEE ALSO
su (1), xauth (1) sux 1.0 Sept 2003 SUXTERM(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:30 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy