On Tue, 2006-05-02 at 15:17 -0500, Aaron Konstam wrote: > On Tue, 2006-05-02 at 17:32 +0200, François Patte wrote: > > Mikkel L. Ellertson a écrit : > > > François Patte wrote: > > > > > >>Bonjour, > > >> > > >>I am facing a problem that I don't understand. I installed FC4 on my > > >>laptop and wireless is working fine but if I launch the wireless > > >>connection after the boot (using for instance ifup eth1) I loose the > > >>ownership of the X session, ie I am unable to open any graphical > > >>application. > > >> > > >>If I kill my session and log again, I recover this ownership (and the > > >>wireless connection is not lost...). > > >> > > >>Who can help me? > > >> > > >>Thank you. > > > > > > Dumb question - is your hostname changing when you bring up the > > > network connection? If so, this will cause problems in X. > > > > This seems to be exactly the problem and it seems to be present only > > with gnome..... (not appears with kde...) I don't buy that. KDE may restart X when the hostname changes, but X depends on the hostname being set. Read on. > > What can i do? How to guess the hostname you will get when you want to > > use a wifi in an airport for instance? Shall I put all possible names in > > /etc/hosts? > > > > I'm interrested to the solution of this problem.... > > > > Thanks. > Well here is my question. If you are using wireless communication > using DHCP to multiple access points why are you defining a hostname? > Take the hostname the dhcp server gives you. That will only work if X comes up AFTER the machine receives its IP and hostname from the DHCP server. Remember that the local X session is tied to the X server with its display at "hostname:0". If the hostname changes to "newhostname" and you DON'T restart X, there'll be no "newhostname:0" display and you won't be able to open any new X clients. End of story. If you're not sure if you'll get DHCPd before or after X comes up, the best bet is to define a fixed hostname and tie it to 127.0.0.1 in your /etc/hosts file (you already have one..."localhost") and ignore any hostname the DHCP server gives you. Edit your dhclient.conf file and add 'supersede host-name "localhost"' to the stanza that defines your connection. For example (stripped down to minimums), timeout 60; retry 60; reboot 10; select-timeout 5; initial-interval 2; interface "wlan0" { supersede host-name "localhost"; <<<---NOTE! Ignore DHCP request subnet-mask, broadcast-address, time-offset, routers, domain-name-servers; require subnet-mask, domain-name-servers; } Alternately, you can accept the hostname the DHCP server gives you and then add some commands to /usr/sbin/dhclient-script (e.g. "/usr/sbin/gdm-restart") so X restarts with the new hostname. I leave that as an exercise for the reader. BTW, this is one of the reasons why your system defaults to "localhost" if you don't have a hostname configured--so X can start. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- - Rick Stevens, Senior Systems Engineer rstevens@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx - - VitalStream, Inc. http://www.vitalstream.com - - - - 500: Internal Fortune Cookie Error - ----------------------------------------------------------------------