2008-11-18
lts.conf
5
File Formats and Conversions
LTSP
5
lts.conf
Main configuration file for LTSP
Any line beginning with a '#' is considered a comment. Options are
of the format:
VARIABLE=value
Description
This file gets parsed when LTSP client starts up. The section
defined by [default] gets applied to all clients, unless there is a
specification for a particular client that overrides it. The per-client
specs are prefixed by [<mac address>]
You may also name an arbitrary section with a name, with settings
underneath that section. You may then inherit that section with the
LIKE variable. The Example section has an illustration
of this.
boolean values are specified by 'Y,y,True,true' for true and
'N,n,False,false' for false
lts.conf - general parameters
CONFIGURE_FSTAB
boolean, default True
/etc/fstab is generated by boot scripts
CRONTAB_01..CRONTAB_10
string, default unset
A crontab line to add for a thin client.
DNS_SERVER
string, default unset
A valid IP for domain name server Used to build the client's
resolv.conf file. Not needed by default.
SEARCH_DOMAIN
string, default unset
sets a valid search domain in the clients's resolv.conf file.
Used to build the resolv.conf file. Not needed by default.
Needed if DNS_SERVER is set
HOSTNAME
string, default unset
This parameter sets the host name for the thin client, for
situations when if no DNS is available. A hostname is auto-generated
if no hostname is set.
HOSTNAME_BASE
string, default ltsp
This parameter sets the base for the autogenerated host name
for the thin client.
HOSTNAME_EXTRA
string, default ip
This parameter determines weather autogenerated host names are
appended with information based on the ip address or mac address.
Values are "ip" or "mac".
NBD_SWAP
boolean, default False
Set this to True if you want to turn on NBD
swap.
If you enable this, you'll need to add the line:
nbdswapd: ALL: keepalive
to your /etc/hosts.allow file.
NBD_SWAP_PORT
integer, default 9572
The port on which NBD swapping will occur. This is set to 9572
by default.
NBD_SWAP_SERVER
IP address, default SERVER
The NBD swap server can exist on any server on the network
that is capable of handling it. You can specify the IP address of
that server. The default is whatever the value of
SERVER set to.
SERVER
IP address, default unset
This is the server that is used for the
XDM_SERVER, TELNET_HOST,
XFS_SERVER and SYSLOG_HOST, if
any of those are not specified explicitly. If you have one machine
that is acting as the server for everything, then you can just
specify the address here and omit the other server parameters. If
this value is not set, it will be auto detected as the machine that
the thin client booted from.
SYSLOG_HOST
IP address, default unset
If you want to send logging messages to a machine other than
the default server, then you can specify the machine here. If this
parameter is NOT specified, then it will use the
SERVER parameter described above.
USE_LOCAL_SWAP
boolean, default False
If you have a hard drive installed in the thin client, with a
valid swap partition on it, this parameter will allow the thin
client to swap to the local hard drive.
TIMEZONE
string, default unset
The timezone code for the thin client to use.
TIMESERVER
IP address, default unset
The address of an NTP time server that the thin client can set
it's time from. If unset, the thin client just uses the BIOS
time.
SHUTDOWN_TIME
string, format hh:mm:ss in 24 hour format, default
unset
Time at which thin client will automatically shut down.
LTSP_RW_DIRS
string, default varies by distro
A list of directories mounted at boot with writeable
permissions. The directory tree and permissions will be preserved,
but no files within any directories will be copied.
Changing this value will override the defaults. you may append
to the list by using the LTSP_RW_DIRS_EXTRA variable instead.
LTSP_COPY_DIRS
string, default varies by distro
A list of directories mounted at boot with writeable
permissions. The directory tree, files and permissions will be
preserved.
Changing this value will override the defaults. you may append
to the list by using the LTSP_COPY_DIRS_EXTRA variable
instead.
LTSP_BINDFILES
string, default varies by distro
A list of files mounted at boot with writeable permissions.
The file will be copied to a writeable location and then
bind-mounted on top of the original file.
Changing this value will override the defaults. you may append
to the list by using the LTSP_BINDFILES_EXTRA variable
instead.
LTSP_FATCLIENT
boolean, default unset
Enable Fat Client support.
FAT_RAM_THRESHOLD
integer, default 300
Disable fat client support if less RAM is present.
NFS_HOME
string, default unset
Use NFS for mounting homedirs, instead of sshfs.
NFS_HOME_OPTIONS
string, default unset
Mount options to use with NFS_HOME.
lts.conf - local devices
LOCALDEV
boolean, default True
This parameter enables local devices support, like CD's and
USB sticks. Users plugging them in should see them on the desktop,
after they've been allowed to access the FUSE subsystem on the
server. Check your distibutions docs to see how this is done on your
distribution.
LOCALDEV_DENY_CD
boolean, default False
This parameter disables local device support for CD and
DVD-rom devices.
LOCALDEV_DENY_FLOPPY
boolean, default False
This parameter disables local device support for floppy
devices.
LOCALDEV_DENY_INTERNAL_DISKS
boolean, default True
This parameter disables local device support for internal ATA
and SCSI hard disk devices.
LOCALDEV_DENY_USB
boolean, default False
This parameter disables local device support for USB
devices.
LOCALDEV_DENY
string, default unset
This parameter disables local device support for devices
matching certain patterns. Values are specified as a comma-separated
list of sysfs attributes, which can be obtained by using udevadm
info (or udevinfo). for example:
udevadm info -q env -n /dev/hda
ID_TYPE=disk
ID_BUS=ata
should return a list of the attributes
relevent to /dev/hda. to exclude this disk and disks like it using
LOCALDEV_DENY: LOCALDEV_DENY="ID_BUS:ata+ID_TYPE:disk" would match
devices that were on the ata bus that were disks.
lts.conf - scripts and modules
MODULE_01...MODULE_10
string, default unset
Up to 10 kernel modules can be loaded by using these
configuration entries. The entire command line that you would use
when running insmod can be specified here. For example:
MODULE_01 = uart401.o
MODULE_02 = "sb.o io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1"
MODULE_03 = opl3.o
If the value of this parameter is an absolute path name, then
insmod will be used to load the module.
Otherwise, modprobe will be used.
In normal circumstances, you shouldn't need to specify
anything here, as most hardware will be auto-detected.
RCFILE_01...RCFILE_10
A custom rc file, default unset
Additional RC scripts can be executed by the
ltsp-client-setup script. Just put the script in
the /opt/ltsp/i386/etc/init.d directory, and
specify the name of the script in one of these entries. Note that
you must specify a full path, relative to the chroot. So, for
example, if you have an RC file called
/opt/ltsp/i386/etc/init.d/myrcfile, you'd
specify:
RCFILE_01=/etc/init.d/myrcfile
In your lts.conf file.
lts.conf - printer parameters
PRINTER_0_DEVICE
string, default unset
The device name of the printer. Valid device names such as
/dev/lp0, or /dev/usblp0
are allowed.
PRINTER_0_PORT
integer, default 9100
The TCP/IP Port number to use for the print server.
PRINTER_0_TYPE
string, default unset
Can either be set to P (for parallel), U (for USB) or S (for
serial). Autodetected in most cases (except for serial).
PRINTER_0_WRITE_ONLY
boolean, default False
Some parallel printers may need this set in order for the thin
client to communicate to them properly. If you have problems with a
parallel printer only printing part of the print job, try setting
this to True.
PRINTER_0_SPEED
integer, default 9600
Should be set to the baud rate of the printer (serial printers
only).
PRINTER_0_FLOWCTRL
string, default unset
Should be set to the flow control desired for the printer
(serial printers only).
PRINTER_0_PARITY
boolean, default False
Specifies whether parity should be enabled for the printer
(serial printers only).
PRINTER_0_DATABITS
integer, default 8
Specifies how many data bits for the printer (serial printers
only).
PRINTER_0_OPTIONS
string, default unset
Specifies specific options for the printer (serial printers
only).
LDM_PRINTER_LIST
string, default unset
Comma separated list of printers that will be displayed for
that thin client (requires patched cups, included in Debian and
Ubuntu).
LDM_PRINTER_DEFAULT
string, default unset
Default printer for the thin client.
SCANNER
boolean, default unset
This parameter enables scanners for the thin client.
lts.conf - keyboard parameters
CONSOLE_KEYMAP
A valid console keymap, default en
Allows you to specify a valid console keymap for TELNET_HOST
sessions.
XKBLAYOUT
A valid xkb layout, default unset
Consult the X.org documentation for valid settings.
XKBMODEL
A valid xkb model, default unset
Consult the X.org documentation for valid settings.
XKBVARIANT
A valid xkb variant, default unset
Consult the X.org documentation for valid settings.
XKBRULES
A valid xkb rules specifier, default
unset
Consult the X.org documentation for valid settings.
XKBOPTIONS
A valid xkb options specifier, default
unset
Consult the X.org documentation for valid settings.
lts.conf touchscreen parameters
USE_TOUCH
Enable touchscreen
default <unset>, Enable touchscreen
X_TOUCH_DEVICE
Path to device
/dev/ttyS0
set device for touchscreen
X_TOUCH_DRIVER
Touchscreen driver
elographics
set driver for touchscreen
X_TOUCH_MAXX
integer
3588
Xmax
X_TOUCH_MAXY
integer
3526
Ymax
X_TOUCH_MINX
integer
433
Xmin
X_TOUCH_MINY
integer
569
Ymin
X_TOUCH_UNDELAY
integer
10
Untouch delay
X_TOUCH_RTPDELAY
integer
10
Repeat touch delay
Sound and volume control parameters
These parameters allow you to control the volume on the thin
client.
SOUND
boolean, default True
This parameter enables sound for the thin client.
SOUND_DAEMON
string, default pulse
This parameter sets which sound daemon to use on the thin
client. Values are esd, nasd, and pulse (default).
VOLUME
integer, default 90
This represents an integer percentage of the volume, ranging
from 0 to 100%.
HEADPHONE_VOLUME
integer, default unset
This represents an integer percentage of the headphone volume,
ranging from 0 to 100%.
PCM_VOLUME
integer, default unset
This represents an integer percentage of the PCM volume,
ranging from 0 to 100%.
CD_VOLUME
integer, default unset
This represents an integer percentage of the CD input volume,
ranging from 0 to 100%.
FRONT_VOLUME
integer, default unset
This represents an integer percentage of the front speaker
volume, ranging from 0 to 100%.
MIC_VOLUME
integer, default unset
This represents an integer percentage of the microphone input
volume, ranging from 0 to 100%.
lts.conf - Xorg parameters
These parameters affect how Xorg behaves.
USE_XFS
boolean, default False
Instructs the thin client to look at the
XFS_SERVER option, and use XFS for serving
fonts.
XFS_SERVER
IP address, default unset
If you are using an X Font Server to serve fonts, then you can
use this entry to specify the IP address of the host that is acting
as the font server. If this is not specified, it will use the
default server, which is specified with the
SERVER entry described above.
CONFIGURE_X
If you want to be able to configure the individual settings of
the X configuration file, without having the X automatically
configure the graphics card for you, you must enable this option. By
default this option is turned off. To turn it on do: CONFIGURE_X = True.
You don't need this option just for keyboard and mouse settings. It
corresponds to the graphic card and monitor options only.
X_CONF
string, default unset
If you want to create your own complete X.org config file, you
can do so and place it in the
/opt/ltsp/<arch>/etc/X11 directory. Then,
whatever you decide to call it needs to be entered as a value for
this configuration variable. For example: X_CONF =
/etc/X11/my-custom-xorg.conf Note that for the thin client, you
reference it from /etc/X11.
X_RAMPERC
default '100', Percentage of RAM for X server
Some programs allocate a large amount of ram in the X.org
server running on your thin client. Programs like
Firefox and Evince can use up
so much ram, that they eventually exhaust all your physical ram, and
NBD swap, causing your thin client to crash. If you find your
clients being booted back to a login prompt, or freezing up when
viewing certain PDF's or web pages, this may be the problem.
The X_RAMPERC variable stands for X RAM
PERCent, and is a number between 0 and 100 that specifies how much
of the free space on your thin client X.org is allowed to consume.
You'll generally want to set it at something lower than 100 percent,
if you're having problems. Experimentation has shown a value between
80 and 90 will usually keep the terminal alive. What will then
happen is the program consuming the memory will die, as opposed to
the thin client itself. If you're having unexplained terminal
problems, specifying:
X_RAMPERC = 80
in your lts.conf file may improve
things.
X_VIRTUAL
string, default unset
If you want to have a virtual screen which is larger than the
physical screen on your thin client, you would configure that by
providing a string of the form "width height" in this parameter,
similar to the xorg.conf format.
XDM_SERVER
IP address, default unset
If you're using the older startx screen
script, and need to specify a different XDMCP server, then you can
specify the server here. If this parameter is NOT specified, then it
will use the SERVER parameter described
above.
XSERVER
You can use this parameter to override which X server the thin
client will run. For PCI and AGP video cards, this parameter should
not be required. The thin client should normally be able to
auto-detect the card.
If, for some reason you do need to manually set it, here are
some valid values:
ark, ati, atimisc, chips, cirrus_alpine cirrus, cirrus_laguna,
cyrix, dummy, fbdev fglrx, glint, i128, i740, i810, imstt, mga,
neomagic, newport, nsc, nv, r128, radeon, rendition, riva128, s3,
s3virge, savage, siliconmotion, sis, sisusb, tdfx, tga, trident,
tseng, v4l, vesa, vga, via, vmware, voodoo
X_MOUSE_DEVICE
string, default unset
This is the device node that the mouse is connected to. If it
is a serial mouse, this would be a serial port, such as
/dev/ttyS0 or /dev/ttyS1.
This is not needed for PS/2 or USB mice, as they are
auto-detected.
X_MOUSE_PROTOCOL
Should be auto-detected. However, valid entries
include:
sunkbd, lkkbd, vsxxxaa, spaceorb, spaceball, magellan,
warrior, stinger, mousesystems, sunmouse, microsoft, mshack,
mouseman, intellimouse, mmwheel, iforce, h3600ts, stowawaykbd,
ps2serkbd, twiddler, twiddlerjoy
X_MOUSE_EMULATE3BTN
boolean, default unset
Normally unset, may need to be set to Y
for certain 2 button mice.
X_NUMLOCK
boolean, default False
If this variable is set to True, then the
numlock key will be defaulted to on when the terminal boots. Note
that the numlockx command must be installed in
the chroot for this to work.
X_COLOR_DEPTH
Integer: 2, 4, 8, 16, 24, 32 default
24
This is the number of bits to use for the colour depth.
Possible values are 8, 16,
24 and 32. 8 bits will give
256 colours, 16 will give 65536 colours, 24 will give 16 million
colours and 32 bits will give 4.2 billion colours! Not all X servers
support all of these values. The default value for this is
24.
X_HORZSYNC
min-max values
This sets the X.org HorizSync configuration
parameter. This should be auto-detected for your monitor, however,
if you want to force a lower resolution, use this parameter to do
so.
X_VERTREFRESH
min-max values
This sets the X.org VertRefresh
configuration parameter. This should be auto-detected for your
monitor. If you need to force a lower resolution, use this parameter
to do so.
X_VIDEO_RAM
string, default unset
This sets the X.org VideoRam configuration
parameter. The setting is in kilobytes. This should be auto-detected
for your monitor. If you need to force a different video ram
setting, use this parameter to do so.
X_OPTION_01...X_OPTION_12
A valid Device option
This allows you to specify Option settings
in the xorg.conf file, to add options to the
video driver. A common use for this will be to test turning off
acceleration in your driver, if you're having trouble. An example
usage would be:
X_OPTION_01 = "\"NoAccel\"" X_OPTION_02 = "\"AnotherOption\" \"True\""
You probably won't need these except in special
circumstances.
X_MONITOR_OPTION_01...X_MONITOR_OPTION_10
string, default unset
A valid Monitor option, that would normally be used in an
xorg.conf file.
X_MODE_0, X_MODE_1, and
X_MODE_2
string, default unset
These set the X.org ModeLine configuration.
For example, if your thin client comes up in a higher resolution
than what you want, say, 1280x1024, specifying:
X_MODE_0 = 1024x768
should get your desired resolution on startup.
X_MODE_* require XRANDR_DISABLE=True to work. For drivers that
support XRANDR, the XRANDR_MODE_* variabled are preferred. See the
XRANDR section.
X_BLANKING
A positive integer
When set, X_BLANKING will cause DPMS
standby to activate after the number of seconds provided. If the
monitor does not support DPMS, then the blanking screensaver will
activate. If X_BLANKING is set to 0, the monitor
will remain on indefinitely. NOTE: This does not apply to the
xdmcp or startx screen script.
Also, server-side Xclients such as power managers and screensavers
may override this setting.
lts.conf options - XRANDR options
XRANDR_DISABLE
boolean, default False
Disables XRANDR output handling so that the older
X_MODE_0 way of setting resolution works. This is
useful on older Xorg drivers that don't support XRANDR.
XRANDR_OUTPUT_0 ... XRANDR_OUTPUT_8
string, default unset
Define xrandr output - can also be used for multihead
positioning
XRANDR_MODE_0 ... XRANDR_MODE_8
string, default unset
Valid video mode resolution. Sets mode for corresponding
output.
XRANDR_NEWMODE_0 ... XRANDR_NEWMODE_8
string, default unset
Specifies a valid modeline for a corresponding output.
XRANDR_RATE_0 ... XRANDR_RATE_8
string, default unset
Sets refresh rate for the corresponding output.
XRANDR_DPI_0 ... XRANDR_DPI_8
string, default unset
Sets the DPI for the corresponding output.
XRANDR_ROTATE_0 ... XRANDR_ROTATE_8
string, default unset
Sets the rotation for the corresponding output.
XRANDR_REFLECT_0 ... XRANDR_REFLECT_8
string, default unset
Sets the reflection for the corresponding output.
XRANDR_SIZE_0 ... XRANDR_SIZE_8
string, default unset
Sets the resolution for the corresponding output (for xrandr
<1.2).
XRANDR_ORIENTATION_0 ...
XRANDR_ORIENTATION_8
string, default unset
Sets the orientation for the corresponding output (for xrandr
<1.2).
lts.conf options - screen scripts
SCREEN_01...SCREEN_12
string, default ldm
Up to 12 screen scripts can be specified for a thin client.
This will give you up to 12 sessions on the thin client, each
accessible by pressing the Ctrl-Alt-F1 through Ctrl-Alt-F12
keys.
Currently, possible values include: kiosk, ldm, menu, rdesktop
(deprecated), shell, ssh, startx (deprecated), telnet, xdmcp,
xfreerdp, xterm
Look in the
$CHROOT/usr/share/ltsp/screen.d directory for
more scripts, or write your own, and put them there.
TELNET_HOST
IP address, default unset
If the thin client is setup to have a character based
interface, then the value of this parameter will be used as the host
to telnet into. If this value is NOT set, then it will use the value
of SERVER above.
lts.conf options - LDM options
LDM_AUTOLOGIN
boolean, default False
This option allows the thin client to login automatically
without the need for a username and password. To set it set LDM_AUTOLOGIN = True
for the corresponding thin client. This will attempt to log in the
thin client with username = hostname and password = hostname. You
can also set a user and password with
LDM_USERNAME and LDM_PASSWORD
variables.
LDM_DEBUG
boolean, default unset
Turns on ldm debugging on the thin client. Log is written to
/var/log/ldm.log on the thin client itself.
LDM_DIRECTX
boolean, default False
This is arguably the most important LDM option, as it allows
you to turn off the encrypted X tunnel via SSH, and instead run a
less secure, but much faster unencrypted tunnel. Users who have
slower thin clients will want to set this to
True. It is set to True by
default in Fedora.
LDM_GUESTLOGIN
boolean, default False
This option places a GUEST LOGIN button underneath the entry
field for username and password. To set it set LDM_GUESTLOGIN = True
for the corresponding thin client. You can also set a user and
password with LDM_USERNAME = John and LDM_PASSWORD = secret,
although not setting these will default to the hostname of the thin
client.
LDM_GUEST_SERVER
string, default unset
This is a space-separated list of available servers where
guest logins are available. The first server in the list will be the
default guest login server unless the user selects another from the
preferences menu at login time.
LDM_USER_ALLOW
string
This option allows you to give access to certain thin clients
based on the username set in /etc/passwd. For
example, thin client A should only be used by Jane, Bob, and Fred,
while thin client B is to be used by Harry only. By adding these
options to the corresponding mac addresses you allow or deny access
to the thin clients in question. Example:
[thin:client:A:mac:address]
LDM_USER_ALLOW = Jane,Bob,Fred
[thin:client:B:mac:adddress]
LDM_USER_ALLOW = Harry
LDM_LOGIN_TIMEOUT
integer
This lets LDM automatically login after the set amount of time
in seconds. If you specify this option, then do not specify
LDM_AUTOLOGIN. Use it in this format:
[thin:client:mac:address]
LDM_LOGIN_TIMEOUT = 25
Note that you will need to also set LDM_GUESTLOGIN=True for
LDM_LOGIN_TIMEOUT to be useful.
LDM_USERNAME
string, default unset
This is the username that LDM will use for autologin.
LDM_PASSWORD
string, default unset
This is the password that LDM will use for autologin.
LDM_SYSLOG
boolean, default False
Normally, LDM logs to a simple file on the thin client, namely
/var/log/ldm.log. This has the advantage of
being fast, but the disadvantage of being hard to read for the
administrator in the event of a problem, as the administrator must
either spawn a shell screen session, or enable root login in tty1.
By setting this option to "True", you can log up to the server
if you've enabled your server's syslog for remote
logging.
LDM_SERVER
string, default unset
This is a space-separated list of available servers for LDM to
log into. The first server in the list will be the default server
unless the user selects another from the preferences menu at login
time.
LDM_LANGUAGE
string, default unset
This allows the system administrator to override the default
locale settings on the server by setting the environment variables
LANG, LANGUAGE and LC_ALL at login.
Use the LANG variable to set the default locale for LDM's user
interface.
LDM_SSHOPTIONS
string
Allows you to specify custom options to the ssh sessions
started between LDM and the server.
NETWORK_COMPRESSION
boolean, default False
Enables compression of the SSH traffic over the network. Note
that while this will reduce your network traffic, it will increase
your cpu load.
SSH_OVERRIDE_PORT
integer, default unset
If you run your ssh server different from the defult, you may
set the port the thin client will use with this parameter.
SSH_FOLLOW_SYMLINKS
boolean, default True
Causes sshfs mounted filesystems for
local applications to follow symlinks. Should not need to be
modified under normal circumstances.
LDM_SESSION
string, default unset
Used to chose the default session on the server.
LDM_XSESSION
string, default Xsession
Allows you to specify custom script on the server for LDM to
run, rather than the server's standard script for starting an X
session (usually Xsession).
LDM_LIMIT_ONE_SESSION
boolean, default False
Only allow a given user to log into one thin-client at a
time.
LDM_LIMIT_ONE_SESSION_PROMPT
boolean, default False
Prompt to kill processes of other logins when other logins are
detected. Requires LDM_LIMIT_ONE_SESSION to be set.
LDM_THEME
string, default unset
Specify the name of the LDM theme. It can reference a
directory in /usr/share/ldm/themes, or be specified as a full path
to the theme dir (both relative to the chroot).
To use the theme in
/opt/ltsp/i386/usr/share/ldm/themes/MYTHEME,
you'd specify:
LDM_THEME=MYTHEME
In your lts.conf file.
Alternately, To use the theme in
/opt/ltsp/i386/etc/MYTHEME, you'd
specify:
LDM_THEME=/etc/MYTHEME
In your lts.conf file.
Local Applications
LOCAL_APPS
boolean, default True
Enables support for running local apps on the thin
client.
LOCAL_APPS_EXTRAMOUNTS
string, default unset
This parameter enables extra mount points to be mounted on the
thin client with sshfs. This require a commas separated list of
directory.
LOCAL_APPS_MENU
boolean, default False
Enables overriding of menu items from remote (server)
applications. If this is set to True, local
applications in the users menu will be used instead of the
applications on the server.
LOCAL_APPS_MENU_ITEMS
string, default unset
This item should contain a comma separated list of application
names as they appear on their .desktop files.
LOCAL_APPS_WHITELIST
string, default unset
Used to allow only specified space-separated commands to be
run as local apps, allow all is default if unset. Full-paths are
required for each command. No spaces in the names are
allowed.
Samples
K12LTSP
# Global defaults for all clients
# if you refer to the local server, just use the
# "server" keyword as value
# see lts_parameters.txt for valid values
################
[default]
#X_COLOR_DEPTH=16
LOCALDEV=True
SOUND=True
NBD_SWAP=True
SYSLOG_HOST=server
#XKBLAYOUT=de
SCREEN_02=shell
SCREEN_03=shell
SCREEN_04=shell
SCREEN_05=shell
SCREEN_06=shell
SCREEN_07=ldm
# LDM_DIRECTX=True allows greater scalability and performance
# Turn this off if you want greater security instead.
LDM_DIRECTX=True
# LDM_SYSLOG=True writes to server's syslog
LDM_SYSLOG=True
################
# A setting stanza for an old machine
################
[oldmachine]
X_COLOR_DEPTH=8
X_MODE_0=800x600
################
# Example of the LIKE variable
################
[01:23:DE:AD:BE:EF]
LIKE=oldmachine
SCREEN_02=shell
################
#[MAC ADDRESS]: Per thin client settings
################
[00:11:25:84:CE:BA]
XSERVER = vesa
X_MOUSE_DEVICE=/dev/ttyS0
X_MOUSE_PROTOCOL=intellimouse
###############
# A Thin Client Print server
# (switch off X by pointing tty7 to shell,
# to save ressources)
###############
[00:11:25:93:CF:00]
PRINTER_0_DEVICE=/dev/usblp0
SCREEN_07=shell
###############
# A workstation that executes a specific
# command after login
###############
[00:11:25:93:CF:02]
LDM_SESSION=/usr/bin/myloginscript
NOTES
Notes about lts.conf that don't fit anywhere else go here...
SEE ALSO
Other manpage references go here...