Wally Bedford napisał(a):
> Konrad Dudek wrote:
>> Peter N. M. Hansteen napisał(a):
>>> Konrad Dudek <konrad__ciach__@warserwis.pl> writes:
>>>
>>>> I`ve compiled KDE 3.5.1 and I want to run KDM when system starts.
>>>
>>> Under most circumstances, you're better off installing binary packages
>>> off you friendly local neighborhood mirror, but on a fast enough
>>> machine even compiling KDE doesn't take long I guess.
>>>
>>>> I`ve read that I can add some lines to /etc/rc.conf, but other says
>>>> that I can change lines in /etc/ttys.
>>>
>>> I suspect you may have been reading FreeBSD docs, not OpenBSD ones.
>>> IIRC the only thing I needed to add the following to my /etc/rc.local
>>>
>>> kdm_flags=""
>>>
>>> if [ "X${kdm_flags}" != X"NO" ]; then
>>> /usr/local/bin/kdm ${kdm_flags} ;
>>> echo -n 'kdm '
>>> fi
>>>
>> Yes, it`s working, but my keyboard doesn`t 
>> When X starts, i can`t write anything.
>> Any ideas?
>>
>
>
> This is from a post regarding 3.5. I saved it in case I ever wanted to
> try it. HTH...
>
> It's a known problem. I have it too. Basically it came down to that
> the kdm can't grab control of the console AT THE INSTANT it's launched.
> It can't detect a keyboard input until the boot finishes (rc.local is
> not finished when it launches kdm). The fix I found was to hit the
> following:
>
> sleep 10 && /usr/local/bin/kdm
>
> By having it sleep until the boot finishes (at a login: prompt) the
> keyboard works. The problem I had was that after I logged in, I was
> brought to a very rude, crude and impossible window manager to work in.
> couldn't figure out a way to exit out of it except to crash Xwindows.
> once the KDM relaunched (by itself); the mouse stopped working (USB
> wireless). I gave up on KDM. There's other docs out there that
> describe this a bit better. Good luck.
>
> Tim Judd
Unfortunately it doesn`t work :/
--
Pozdrawiam
Konrad Dudek