Xsession(5)

NAME

   Xsession - initialize X session

SYNOPSIS

   Xsession [ session-type ]

DESCRIPTION

   /etc/X11/Xsession is a Bourne shell (sh(1)) script which is run when an
   X Window System session is begun by startx(1) or a display manager such
   as   xdm(1).    (Some   display  managers  only  invoke  Xsession  when
   specifically directed to so by the user; see the documentation for your
   display  manager to find out more.)  Administrators unfamiliar with the
   Bourne shell will likely  find  the  Xsession.options(5)  configuration
   file easier to deal with than Xsession itself.

   Xsession  is  not  intended  to  be invoked directly by the user; to be
   effective it needs to run in a special environment  associated  with  X
   server  initialization.   startx,  xdm,  xinit(1),  and  other  similar
   programs handle this.

   By default on a Debian system, Xsession is used by both common  methods
   of starting the X Window System, xdm (or another X display manager) and
   startx.  To change this  for  xdm,  edit  the  'DisplayManager*session'
   resource  in  the  /etc/X11/xdm/xdm-config  file  ---  for  other display
   managers, consult their  documentation.   To  stop  startx  from  using
   Xsession by default, replace the contents of the /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc
   file.

   The Xsession script is quite flexible, and extensive  customization  of
   the  X  startup  procedure  is  possible  without  modifying the script
   itself.  See "CUSTOMIZING THE STARTUP PROCEDURE" below.

   SESSION TYPES
   Xsession may optionally be passed a single argument indicating the type
   of X session to be started.  It is up to the display manager to set the
   argument.  To  pass  Xsession  an  argument  from  startx   or   xinit,
   /etc/X11/Xsession (or /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc) must be called explicitly
   with a path, as in  startx  /etc/X11/Xsession  failsafe.   By  default,
   three different arguments are supported:

   failsafe
          invokes a session consisting solely of an x-terminal-emulator(1)
          (no window manager is  launched).   If  the  x-terminal-emulator
          program  cannot  be  found,  the  session exits.  The 'failsafe'
          argument is ignored if there  is  no  'allow-failsafe'  line  in
          Xsession.options.

   default
          produces  the  same  behavior as if no session type argument had
          been given at all.

   program
          starts program if it can be found in the $PATH.  This is usually
          a  session  manager  or  a  very  featureful window manager.  If
          program is not found, the  Xsession  script  proceeds  with  its
          default  behavior.   This  argument  is  ignored  if there is no
          'allow-user-xsession'  line  in   Xsession.options.    (If   the
          administrator  does  not  want users writing their own .xsession
          files, it makes little sense to permit them to specify the names
          of arbitrary programs to run.)  Note that the restriction may be
          easy to bypass, e.g. by using a .gnomerc file instead.

   DEFAULT STARTUP PROCEDURE
   Initially, Xsession performs some housekeeping.  It declares a  set  of
   built-in   functions   (see   "BUILT-IN  SHELL  FUNCTIONS"  below)  and
   variables, then attempts to create a log file for  the  X  session,  or
   append  to  an  existing  one.   Historically this is called an 'error'
   file, but it catches all sorts of  diagnostic  output  from  various  X
   clients  run  in the user's session, not just error messages.  If it is
   impossible to write to an error  file,  the  script  (and  thus  the  X
   session)  aborts.  For convenience, once the error file is successfully
   opened, Xsession reports the fact that the  session  has  started,  the
   invoking  username,  and  the  date  to  the error file.  This makes it
   easier to discern which X session produced a particular line of  output
   in the file.

   Xsession  next  confirms that its script directory, Xsession.d, exists.
   If it does not, the script  aborts.   After  the  script  directory  is
   confirmed  to  be present, Xsession uses run-parts(1) to identify files
   in that directory that should be  sourced  (executed)  in  the  shell's
   environment.   Only  files  named in a certain way are sourced; see the
   run-parts manual page for a description  of  valid  characters  in  the
   filename.    (This   restriction  enables  the  administrator  to  move
   experimental or problematic files out of the way of the script but keep
   them  in an obvious place, for instance by renaming them with '.old' or
   '.broken' appended to the filename.)

   SUPPLIED SCRIPTS
   Five shell script portions  are  supplied  by  default  to  handle  the
   details of the session startup procedure.

   /etc/X11/Xsession.d/20x11-common_process-args
          Arguments  are  processed as described in "SESSION TYPES" above.
          The startup program, if one is  identified  at  this  point,  is
          merely stored for later reference, and not immediately executed.

   /etc/X11/Xsession.d/30x11-common_xresources
          X  resources  are merged.  run-parts is again used, this time to
          identify files in the /etc/X11/Xresources directory that  should
          be   processed   with   'xrdb   -merge'.    Next,  if  the  line
          'allow-user-resources'  is  present  in  Xsession.options,   the
          user's $HOME/.Xresources file is merged in the same way.

   /etc/X11/Xsession.d/35x11-common_xhost-local
          Give  access to the X server to the same user on the local host.
          If the xhost command is available, it will use it to  allow  any
          process of the same user running on the local host to access the
          X server.

   /etc/X11/Xsession.d/40x11-common_xsessionrc
          Source global environment variables.  This  script  will  source
          anything  in  $HOME/.xsessionrc  if  the  file  is present. This
          allows the user to set global environment variables for their  X
          session, such as locale information.

   /etc/X11/Xsession.d/50x11-common_determine-startup
          Determine  startup  program.   The  X  client  to  launch as the
          controlling process (the one that, upon exiting,  causes  the  X
          server  to  exit  as  well) is determined next.  If a program or
          failsafe argument was given and is allowed (see  above),  it  is
          used  as  the  controlling  process.   Otherwise,  if  the  line
          'allow-user-xsession'  is   present   in   Xsession.options,   a
          user-specified session program or script is used.  In the latter
          case, two historically popular names for user X session  scripts
          are  searched for: $HOME/.xsession and $HOME/.Xsession (note the
          difference in case).  The first  one  found  is  used.   If  the
          script  is  not executable, it is marked to be executed with the
          Bourne shell interpreter, sh.  Finally, if  none  of  the  above
          succeeds,    the    following   programs   are   searched   for:
          /usr/bin/x-session-manager,    /usr/bin/x-window-manager,    and
          /usr/bin/x-terminal-emulator.   The first one found is used.  If
          none are found, Xsession aborts with an error.

   /etc/X11/Xsession.d/90x11-common_ssh-agent
          Start ssh-agent(1), if needed.  If the line  'use-ssh-agent'  is
          present in Xsession.options, and no SSH agent process appears to
          be running already, ssh-agent is marked to be  used  to  execute
          the   startup   program   determined   previously.   Note:  this
          functionality may move to the ssh package in the future.

   /etc/X11/Xsession.d/99x11-common_start
          Start the X session.  The startup program is executed, inside  a
          Bourne shell if it is not executable, and inside an ssh-agent if
          necessary.  The shell's exec command is used to spare a slot  in
          the process table.

   CUSTOMIZING THE STARTUP PROCEDURE
   Of course, any of the existing files can be edited in place.

   Because  the  order in which the various scripts in /etc/X11/Xsession.d
   are executed is important, files to be added to this  directory  should
   have a well-formed name.  The following format is recommended:

   * a two-digit number denoting sequence;

   *  the  name  of  the  package  providing  the  script (or 'custom' for
   locally-created scripts);

   * an underscore;

   * a description of the script's basic function, using  only  characters
   allowed by run-parts.

   Here   is   an   example  of  how  one  might  write  a  script,  named
   40custom_load-xmodmap, to invoke xmodmap(1):

   SYSMODMAP="/etc/X11/Xmodmap"
   USRMODMAP="$HOME/.Xmodmap"

   if [ -x /usr/bin/X11/xmodmap ]; then
       if [ -f "$SYSMODMAP" ]; then
           xmodmap "$SYSMODMAP"
       fi
   fi

   if [ -x /usr/bin/X11/xmodmap ]; then
       if [ -f "$USRMODMAP" ]; then
           xmodmap "$USRMODMAP"
       fi
   fi

   Those writing scripts for Xsession to execute should  avail  themselves
   of its built-in shell functions, described below.

   BUILT-IN SHELL FUNCTIONS
   message  is  used for communicating with the user.  It is a wrapper for
   the echo(1) command and relies upon echo for its  argument  processing.
   This function may be given an arbitrarily long message string, which is
   formatted to the user's terminal width (breaking lines  at  whitespace)
   and sent to standard error.  If the DISPLAY environment variable is set
   and the xmessage(1) program is available,  xmessage  is  also  used  to
   display the message.

   message_nonl  is  used  for communicating with the user when a trailing
   newline is undesirable; it omits a trailing newline  from  the  message
   text.  It otherwise works as message.

   errormsg  is  used  for  indicating an error condition and aborting the
   script.  It works as message, above, except that after  displaying  the
   message, it will exit Xsession with status 1.

ENVIRONMENT

   The following environment variables affect the execution of Xsession:

   HOME   specifies  the user's home directory; various files are searched
          for here.

   TMPDIR names a default directory for temporary files; if the standard X
          session  error  file  cannot be opened, this variable is used to
          locate a place for one.

   COLUMNS
          indicates the width of terminal device in character cells.  This
          value is used for formatting diagnostic messages.

INPUT FILES

   /etc/X11/Xsession.d/
          is a directory containing Bourne shell scripts to be executed by
          Xsession.  Files in this directory are matched  using  run-parts
          and are sourced, not executed in a subshell.

   /etc/X11/Xresources/
          is  a directory containing files corresponding to Debian package
          names, each of which contains system-wide  X  resource  settings
          for  X clients from the corresponding package.  The settings are
          loaded with xrdb -merge.  Files in this  directory  are  matched
          using run-parts.

   /etc/X11/Xsession.options
          contains configuration options for the /etc/X11/Xsession script.
          See Xsession.options(5) for more information.

   $HOME/.Xresources
          contains  X  resources   specific   to   the   invoking   user's
          environment.   The  settings  are loaded with xrdb -merge.  Note
          that $HOME/.Xdefaults is a relic from X Version 10  (and  X11R1)
          days,  before  app-defaults files were implemented.  It has been
          deprecated for over ten years  at  the  time  of  this  writing.
          .Xresources should be used instead.

   $HOME/.xsession
          is  a  sequence  of  commands  invoking  X clients (or a session
          manager such as xsm(1)).  See the manual page for xinit for tips
          on writing an .xsession file.

OUTPUT FILES

   $HOME/.xsession-errors
          is  where standard output and standard error for Xsession script
          and all X client processes are directed by default.

   $TMPDIR/filename
          is   where   the   X   session   error   file   is   placed   if
          $HOME/.xsession-errors  cannot be opened.  For security reasons,
          the exact filename is randomly generated by tempfile(1).

AUTHORS

   Stephen Early, Mark Eichin, and Branden Robinson developed  Debian's  X
   session handling scripts.  Branden Robinson wrote this manual page.

SEE ALSO

   Xsession.options(5),   X(7),   run-parts(1),  ssh-agent(1),  startx(1),
   tempfile(1), xdm(1), xmessage(1), xmodmap(1), xrdb(1), sh(1)



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