On Tue, Jul 11, 2006 at 12:05:57PM +0200, Guido Schwarzer wrote:
> Hi,
> 
...
> Did anybody experience similar problems with KDE sessions under Debian 
> Linux?

Nope :)

> Or does anybody have an idea what might cause these problems?

Check the usual stuff; disk quota, space in /tmp, /var/tmp, etc.

Look for errors in an affected user's .xsession-errors

Try for one affected user to delete
 ~affecteduser/.kde*
 /tmp/kde-affecteduser
 /tmp/ksocket-affecteduser
 /var/tmp/kdecache-affecteduser

The user will then have to set up his desktop again (all is stored below
~/.kde/ so deleting it will reset his settings and possibly also his
local calendars etc. etc. so do keep a backup!)

Finally, make sure that the "Activation Gestures" (under kcontrol ->
Regional & Accessibility -> Accessibility) for sticky keys and slow keys
are disabled. This has caught more than one user here - somehow it's a
natural thing for many of us to hold down the shift key for several
seconds when we're not typing anything - default KDE settings might
interpret this as a gesture to enable sticky/slow keys which will make
everything seem like your keyboard and mouse is broken...

Those are the best suggestions I have - I'm running KDE 3.5.2 under
Debian Sarge with SRSS 3.1.  No such problems :)

-- 

 / jakob

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