GDM 2.3.90.6
EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEK
Fun fun fun, there is a security hole in gdm, (well only in the 2.3.90.x
series so those who don't run it be calm). Also it only affects those that
have automatic login setup (and for these people this bug can also be annoying
and not just a security hole). Basically gdm 'forgot' to reinitialize
the X server after an automatic login. Whoops. There's also an extra
related fix thrown in and some more translations.
And now for the standard part of the release announcement:
Ahh, so you have no clue what gdm is? Well if you've read this far ... let's
not get into that. Gdm is GNOME Display Manager, the little daemon that lets
you log in to your computer. It allows xdmcp multiple login displays,
selection of languages, multiple login sessions and generally is much cooler
then any xdm clone out there, mostly cuz it isn't an xdm clone to begin with.
I mean heck, it's even got a graphical configurator, so you don't have to use
the command line to hose your system anymore.
News:
=====
Highlights of 2.3.90.6:
2.3.90.6 stuff:
- SECURITY FIX! After an automatic session the display wasn't reinited
so clients could be left hanging around. This is only present in the
2.3.90.x series and only affects automatic logins.
- Automatic login is actually done on the first login only and Timed
login is actually done only on the first display (as it all should be)
- Translation updates (Germán Poo CaamaÅo, Jordi Mallach,
Hasbullah Bin Pit, TÅivo Leedjärv)
Note: Gdm2 was originally written by Martin K. Petersen , and
is now maintained by the Queen of England. Although when she's not answering
her email I usually cover for her.
Note2: If installing from the tarball do note that make install overwrites
most of the setup files, all except gdm.conf and gnomerc. It will however
save backups with the .orig extension first.
Note3: Distributors, packagers. Please, PLEASE use the standard Gnome script
when setting things up as gnome, or at least equivalently working scripts. It
should never be OK to just exec gnome-session, that is considered bad form.
The script needs to read (if available) the ~/.gnomerc and otherwise read
the /gdm/gnomerc file. This allows users and administrators to
setup custom startup for gnome.
Downloading:
============
http://download.gnome.org/GNOME/pre-gnome2/sources/gdm/
Have fun,
George
PS: I'm too tired to write a witty PS. Hmmm, that assumes all my previous
PS's were witty. Perhaps that's not so. However perhaps this PS is witty
anyway. My brain hurts.
George
Ja se vratim, a se mnou prijde zakon.
_____________________________________________
GPicScan 4.2
Updates from Beta 4.0 to 4.1
need confmake ( translate XML into .h and load and save ;-))
)
cat/main
release Beta 4.2
_____________________________________________
gnome-games 1.94.0
Hello young lads and ladies,
Here comes gnome-games "Such a tasty treat" 1.94.0 for Gnome 2.
You might need a newer libgnomeui than released to compile the current
gnome-games. The patch is available attached to bug #83916.
What's changed ?
================
* Correct help for all the games that have docs (me) (Closes: #81617)
* Same-gnome bug when changing themes (Xing Wang) (Closes: #80324)
* Changed Freecell's move one-by-one pref default (me) (Closes: #83465)
* Fixed gnometris gconf bug (me) (Closes: #82251)
* Fix the mahjongg space in string bug (me) (Closes: #82136)
* Crash on exit bug in gnome-stones fixed (me) (Closes: #81310)
* Remove Quit button from Aisleriot and Freecell's toolbar (me)
Translations
============
* Portuguese (Duarte Loreto)
* Danish (Ole Laursen)
* Dutch (Vincent van Adrighem)
* Polish (GNOME PL Team)
* Swedish (Christian Rose)
* Slovak (Stanislav Visnovsky)
* Norwegian (bokmal) (Kjartan Maraas)
* Spanish (Lucas Vieites)
* Japanese (T.Aihana)
* Chinese (traditional) (Abel Cheung)
* Vietnamese (T.M.Thanh)
Where to get it ?
=================
http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/pre-gnome2/sources/gnome-games/
and tag V1_94_0 in the gnome-games module on Gnome's CVS
Good gaming.
--
/Bastien Nocera
http://hadess.net
Web Webster
Web Webster has more than 20 years of writing and editorial experience in the tech sector. He’s written and edited news, demand generation, user-focused, and thought leadership content for business software solutions, consumer tech, and Linux Today, he edits and writes for a portfolio of tech industry news and analysis websites including webopedia.com, and DatabaseJournal.com.