Xsession.options (5)
Leading comments
$Id: Xsession.options.5 189 2005-06-11 00:04:27Z branden $ Copyright 1998-2001, 2003-2004 Branden Robinson <branden@debian.org>. This is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. This is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FO...
NAME
Xsession.options - configuration options for Xsession(5)DESCRIPTION
/etc/X11/Xsession.options contains a set of flags that determine some of the behavior of the Xsession(5) Bourne shell (sh(1)) script. See the Xsession(5) manpage for further information.Xsession.options may contain comments, which begin with a hash mark (oq#cq) and end at the next newline, just like comments in shell scripts. The rest of the file consists of options which are expressed as words separated by hyphens, with only one option per line. Options are enabled by simply placing them in the file; they are disabled by prefixing the option name with oqno-cq.
Available options are:
- allow-failsafe
- If the oqfailsafecq argument is passed to the Xsession script, an emergency X session is invoked, consisting of only an x-terminal-emulator(1) in the upper-left hand corner of the screen. No window manager is started. If an x-terminal-emulator program is not available, the session exits immediately.
- allow-user-resources
- If users have a file called .Xresources in their home directories, these resources will be merged with the default X resources when they log in.
- allow-user-xsession
- If users have an executable file called .xsession in their home directories, it can be used as the startup program for the X session (see Xsession(5)). If the file is present but not executable, it may still be used, but is assumed to be a Bourne shell script, and executed with sh(1).
- use-session-dbus
- If the dbus package is installed, the session bus will be activated at X session launch.
- use-ssh-agent
- If the ssh-agent(1) program is available and no agent process appears to be running already, the X session will be invoked by exec'ing ssh-agent with the startup command, instead of the startup command directly.
All of the above options are enabled by default. Additional options may be supported by the local administrator. Xsession(5) describes how this is accomplished.