On 20 Aug 2003, Matt Neimeyer wrote:

> Hrm... Easy enough to test.
> 
> Is there a way to disable that behavior? Or even just change the

Not that I know of.

> timeout? Why would I want that anyways?

I think that they were thinking that you would want it so that if you 
accidentally logged out you could log back in quickly without having to 
have gconfd start and parse your .gconf files.

But don't quote me on that.  :-)

Let me know if that helped!

--Jason

> 
> Thanks!
> 
> On Wed, 2003-08-20 at 10:38, Jason A. Pfeil wrote:
> > I don't think this is an NFS lock problem.  From your description, you are 
> > running a GNOME 2.x-based desktop.  That uses gconfd, a program to manage 
> > configuration information.  Gconfd does *not* exit when you log out.  It 
> > waits like five minutes in case you log in again.  So, it is holding its 
> > own lockfile open.  If you log out and then log back in at the text 
> > console and issue a gconftool-2 --shutdown you will be able to log in at 
> > another machine.
> > 
> > Alternatively, wait the five minutes for it to shut itself down.  :-)
> > 
> > --Jason
> > 
> > On 17 Aug 2003, Matt Neimeyer wrote:
> > 
> > > Hey all,
> > > 
> > > I've got three machines at home all running the same versions of
> > > everything (so far as I can tell). Machine A is running NFS and
> > > exporting several home directories. If I go to Machine B first and log
> > > on to my profile it works but when I log out and walk over to Machine C
> > > it gives me the following error.
> > > 
> > > Please contact your system administrator to resolve the following
> > > problem: Could not resolve the address "xml:readwrite:/home/matt/.gconf"
> > > in the configuration file "/etc/gconf/2/path": Failed to lock
> > > '/home/matt/.gconf/%gconf-xml-backend.lock/ior': probably another
> > > process has the lock, or your operating system has NFS file locking
> > > misconfigured (Resource temporarily unavailable)
> > > 
> > > If I go to either Machine B or Machine C first it works. If I log out
> > > then reboot I can go anywhere. If I don't reboot the first machine I log
> > > in to I can't log in anywhere else. This is for any profile and any
> > > order of machine log in/out.
> > > 
> > > Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
> > > 
> > > Matt
> > > 
> > > 
> > > --
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
> > > 
> > > 
> 
> 
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> 
> 

-- 
Jason A. Pfeil                           jason=at=jasonpfeil.com.NOSPAM


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