Hi,
On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 11:25 AM Benjamin Berg
wrote:
> > If so, I agree it's better if we don't have the user entering their
> > password in their
> > own session. In an ideal world we'd have a "secure attention" key or key
> > sequence on the keyboard that users hit when it's time to type
On Fri, 2020-04-17 at 11:18 -0400, Ray Strode wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 9:58 AM Benjamin Berg
> wrote:
> > I do however think there is value in supporting such delegation from
> > the logind side. A primary motivator for me here is systemd-homed, as
> > it may freeze the user
Hi,
On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 9:58 AM Benjamin Berg wrote:
> I do however think there is value in supporting such delegation from
> the logind side. A primary motivator for me here is systemd-homed, as
> it may freeze the user session, making it impossible to re-authenticate
> from within.
So my
Hi,
On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 8:45 AM Benjamin Berg wrote:
> I feel that this means that we conceptually have a "composite" session
> that consists of multiple "normal" logind sessions. And I wonder if we
> could make this singleton "composite" session an explicit concept
> rather than something
Hi,
On Fri, 2020-04-17 at 09:22 -0400, Ray Strode wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 3:59 AM Marcel Hollerbach wrote:
> > I really like the idea of curtaining the session.
> > However, i am wondering if logind couldn't serve there as sort of
> > gatekeeper
> [...]
> > The idea is that a session in
Hi,
On Fri, Apr 17, 2020 at 3:59 AM Marcel Hollerbach wrote:
> I really like the idea of curtaining the session.
> However, i am wondering if logind couldn't serve there as sort of
> gatekeeper
[...]
> The idea is that a session in logind can be locked or unlocked. In case
> it is locked, logind
Hey,
On Thu, 2020-04-16 at 14:45 -0400, Ray Strode wrote:
> We don't really do a lot of this today, but one vision for the future is
> something like this:
Yup, something like that. I am really not sure about the details.
I feel that this means that we conceptually have a "composite" session
Hi,
On 4/16/20 8:45 PM, Ray Strode wrote:
Hey,
On Wed, Apr 8, 2020 at 12:04 AM Erik Jensen wrote:
Chrome Remote Desktop currently works on Linux by spinning up its own
Xvfb server and running a graphical session in that. However, as more
and more parts of the stack assume that a user will