Sorry, but i do not aggree with you. /etc/environment is not specific to the Xsession, but to the PAM-module pam_env; p.empl. the line
auth required pam_env.so inside /etc/pam.d/login enforces the evaluation of this file during every login into the session. by adding a similar line to /etc/pam.d/sudo for example, you can adopt this treatment for the execution of commands as another user via sudo, too. this is very usefull for daemons, because their init-scripts often use sudo for switching to lower-priviledged users like nobody or www-data. hope this helps cu! christian On Sun, Dec 02, 2001 at 04:22:19PM -0800, Craig Dickson wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > I put "FOO=blah" in /etc/environment and restarted crond, then I setup a > > small script executed from cron which simply did `echo $FOO` > > > > Result? nope. I'm afraid /etc/environment isn't that global. > > AFAIK, crond has nothing to do with /etc/environment. That file is read > by the X session startup scripts when you login. So the right test would > have been to set FOO=something in /etc/environment, then logout and login > again. > > How this relates to non-graphical logins, or even non-gdm logins, I do > not know. > > Craig > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- ------------------------- Christian Kesselheim infeurope S.A. 62, rue Charles Martel L-2134 Luxembourg Luxembourg Tel: (+352) 25.22.33.331 Fax: (+352) 25.22.33.222 GSM: (+ 49) 177.206.1004 Web: www.infeurope.lu -------------------------
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