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Operating Systems Solaris Persistent Security Banner on Gnome Desktop Post 302566688 by bitlord on Thursday 20th of October 2011 11:02:42 PM
Old 10-21-2011
Hi,
I never herd of JEDI used in Windows, but I have experience using it with Solaris. In windows the banner is usually a thin line across the top of the desktop with the security label centered. It doesn't work like this in Solaris. Most of the time the banner is on Solaris TX systems and not regular Solaris systems. On the top menu bar of the JDS can display in the blank area to the right, but not across the whole screen. Also the apps like terminal can be setup to have a banner at the top of the window under the menu. At where I work we have both of them setup. Also we have the desktop background the same color as the label color, example green, red, etc..

I'm not at work right now so I can't look at the system and tell you which files to edit.

Why are you setting this up? It is not required to do this to STIG the box. An easy fix would be to create a walpaper with the label and not let the user change it.

Anyway I hope this helps.
 

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RATMENU(1)						      General Commands Manual							RATMENU(1)

NAME
ratmenu - create a menu to run commands SYNOPSIS
ratmenu [ -display displayname ] [ -font fname ] [ -fg foreground-color ] [ -bg background-color ] [ -io item-offset ] [ -label name ] [ -shell prog ] [ -align {left|center|right} ] [ -style {snazzy|dreary} ] [ -persist ] [ -version ] [ menuitem command ] ... DESCRIPTION
ratmenu is a simple program that accepts a list of menu item and command pairs on the command line. It creates a window that consists of nothing but a menu. When a particular item is selected, the corresponding command is executed. ratmenu does not recognize any usage of the rodent. It is entirely keystroke operated. Menu items must be followed by a command. The syntax is based on that of the dialog program. ratmenu accepts the following command line options. -display displayname Use the X display displayname, instead of the default display. -font fname (X Resource: font) Use the font fname, instead of the default font. -label name Change both the window and icon labels of the window to name. The default label is the last component of the path used to run ratmenu, typically, ratmenu. -fg foreground-color (X Resource: fgcolor) Set the foreground color to foreground-color. By default, the foreground color is black. -bg background-color (X Resource: bgcolor) Set the background color to background-color. By default, the background color is white. -io item-offset Set the first selected item to item-offset. By default, the first item is the top-most one, or item-offset 1. The next item down would be at item-offset 2. -style {snazzy|dreary} (X Resource: style) The default style is snazzy, where the highlight bar, which shows the currently selected item, remains stationary while all the menu items are rotated up or down when the cursor keys are moved. In dreary mode, the highlight bar moves up and down the menu as it does on all conventional keyboard controlled menus. -align {left|center|right} (X Resource: align) Align the text of the menu entries to the left, right, or center. Defaults to left. This is different from 9menu, which defaults to center. -shell prog Use prog as the shell to run commands, instead of /bin/sh. A popular alternative shell is rc(1). If the shell cannot be executed, ratmenu will silently fall back to using /bin/sh. -back prevmenu prevmenu is a command or shell script to run when the back key is pressed, usually a script that has ratmenu showing the pre- vious menu. Used to create nested menus, it gives the user a way to back out and return to the previous menu. Note that you can use this option for other things too. The command specified by the -back option is executed when the user hits one of the "back" keys. -persist (X Resource: persist) Ordinarily, ratmenu exits if a new window pops up on top of it, or if you switch to another window. This option tells ratmenu to hang around, like a regular window. -version This option prints the version of ratmenu on the standard output, and then exits with an exit value of zero. KEYSTROKES
The Up keystrokes move the selection to the next item up. The Down keystrokes move the selection to the next item down. When the selec- tion reaches the top or bottom, it scrolls around to the other side on pressing of the appropriate keystroke. The Select keystrokes execute the command corresponding to the currently selected menu item, and exit ratmenu. The Exit keystrokes quit ratmenu without doing anything. Up 'k', Up_arrow, BackSpace, '-', C-p Down 'j', Down_arrow, Space, Tab, '+', C-n, C-i Select 'l', Right_arrow, Return, C-f, C-m, C-j Back 'h', Left_arrow, C-b Exit 'q', Escape, C-g CONFIGURATION USING X RESOURCES
You can configure some items using xrdb to load appropriate X resources. There is an example configuration in the file /usr/share/doc/rat- menu/Xresources.ratmenu which shows all possible configuration items. Give it a look; it is fairly easy to figure out. EXAMPLES
ratmenu -label "Remotes xterm" acme "rsh acme xterm" herman "rsh herman 9term" & ratmenu -label 'X progs' ghostview ghostview xdvi xdvi xeyes xeyes xneko xneko & ratmenu -back ~/bin/mypreviousmenu "X Eyes" xeyes & SEE ALSO
ratpoison(1), ratpoisonrc(5), dialog(1) xrdb(1) Ratpoison Desktop Users Manual. AUTHORS
The initial idea for this program was by Arnold Robbins, after having worked with John Mackin's GWM Blit emulation. Matty Farrow wrote a version using libXg, from which some ideas were borrowed. This code was written by David Hogan and Arnold Robbins. Rich Salz motivated the -shell option. Jonathan Walther modified this code to play nicely with the ratpoison window manager by removing handling of mouse events and iconification. Zrajm C Akfohg made many improvements in his ratmen fork, including X resource handling, some of which were folded back in. Ratpoison Desktop For X Oct 10 2001 RATMENU(1)
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