RS-6000 (is there an elegant way to kill "X"?)
m-hirano at sra.co.jp
m-hirano at sra.co.jp
Mon Sep 17 17:36:24 AEST 1990
In article <3511 at awdprime.UUCP> ron at woan (Ronald S. Woan) writes:
>>:In article <957 at nlsun1.oracle.nl>, hbergh at oracle.nl (Herbert van den
>>:Bergh) writes:
>>:In article <IVAN%NEPJT.90Sep13133133 at nepjt.ncsuvx.ncsu.edu>
>>:ivan%nepjt at ncsuvx.ncsu.edu (Ivan Maldonado) writes:
>>:>Under the absence of a "screen saver" utility, I find myself
>>:>doing a "ps -a" and a "kill PID" to kill "X" from the console
>>:>all the time.
>>:Herbert> It has been mentioned here before:
>>:Herbert> Typing Ctrl-Alt-Backspace on the graphics screen keyboard will
>>:Herbert> stop the X server.
>>:
>>:Then again, a lot of us disable this "feature" when invoking X to make
>>:using xlock more secure... ctrl-alt-bspace doesn't really seem any
>>:more elegant than a kill...
I think this is the first time posting to this newsgroup from
Japan :-) .
Even if My english is funny, I hope you can understand what I
want to say :-)
I always think that "Ctrl-Alt-Backspace" is NOT a elegant
way to kill X server.
So, I ported "xinit" included in X11R4 MIT distribution and
replaced IBM's shell script xinit to this.
Then I wrote a ".xserverrc" in my home directory like this
X -n :0 -T -f 70 -c 60 -a 2 -fn rom17
and at the end of .xinitrc, I do "exec xterm".
So I exit from xterm invoked by .xinitrc, my X server is going to
kill just like another machine's X server.
Thank you for reading.
from Japan with LOVE...
Motonori "Heita" Hirano
Software Research Associates, Inc., Japan
E-mail: m-hirano at sra.co.jp
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