Hi Folks, I've googled around for this a fair bit but haven't found anything that seems to work: I have a lab full of machines running Fedora on which I need to disable the logout and reboot options from the GNOME logout menu. These lab machines are used to run long-running mathematical/scientific apps, and when they get shut down by a well-meaning person at the console, it can affect the work of other students. I trolled through gconf-editor, but couldn't find anything that popped out at me. I know the argument that it doesn't matter if shutdown/reboot appear on the menu since the user can just hit the power button, but there's an important psychological difference. A user is more likely to chose "shutdown" from a menu than hit the button on an up-and-running server that doesn't provide the option to shutdown. A post I found on-line suggested that chmod'ing /sbin/shutdown and /sbin/reboot to 0700 would fix the problem, but that didn't do it. Another suggested deleting the shutdown and reboot users, but I don't see that they're related to the GNOME logout menu. Any suggestions? -- Ben Steeves _ bcs@xxxxxxxxxx The ASCII ribbon campaign ( ) ben.steeves@xxxxxxxxx against HTML e-mail X GPG ID: 0xB3EBF1D9 http://www.metacon.ca/bcs / \ Yahoo Messenger: ben_steeves