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Diffstat (limited to '.b/etc/X11/xdm/Xaccess')
| -rw-r--r-- | .b/etc/X11/xdm/Xaccess | 98 |
1 files changed, 98 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.b/etc/X11/xdm/Xaccess b/.b/etc/X11/xdm/Xaccess new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c843888 --- /dev/null +++ b/.b/etc/X11/xdm/Xaccess @@ -0,0 +1,98 @@ +# +# Access control file for XDMCP connections +# +# To control Direct and Broadcast access: +# +# pattern +# +# To control Indirect queries: +# +# pattern list of hostnames and/or macros ... +# +# To use the chooser: +# +# pattern CHOOSER BROADCAST +# +# or +# +# pattern CHOOSER list of hostnames and/or macros ... +# +# To define macros: +# +# %name list of hosts ... +# +# To control which addresses xdm listens for requests on: +# +# LISTEN address [list of multicast groups ... ] +# +# The first form tells xdm which displays to respond to itself. +# The second form tells xdm to forward indirect queries from hosts matching +# the specified pattern to the indicated list of hosts. +# The third form tells xdm to handle indirect queries using the chooser; +# the chooser is directed to send its own queries out via the broadcast +# address and display the results on the terminal. +# The fourth form is similar to the third, except instead of using the +# broadcast address, it sends DirectQuerys to each of the hosts in the list +# The fifth form tells xdm which addresses to listen for incoming connections +# on. If present, xdm will only listen for connections on the specified +# interfaces and/or multicast groups. +# +# In all cases, xdm uses the first entry which matches the terminal; +# for IndirectQuery messages only entries with right hand sides can +# match, for Direct and Broadcast Query messages, only entries without +# right hand sides can match. +# + +#* #any host can get a login window + +# +# To hardwire a specific terminal to a specific host, you can +# leave the terminal sending indirect queries to this host, and +# use an entry of the form: +# + +#terminal-a host-a + + +# +# The nicest way to run the chooser is to just ask it to broadcast +# requests to the network - that way new hosts show up automatically. +# Sometimes, however, the chooser can't figure out how to broadcast, +# so this may not work in all environments. +# + +#* CHOOSER BROADCAST #any indirect host can get a chooser + +# +# If you'd prefer to configure the set of hosts each terminal sees, +# then just uncomment these lines (and comment the CHOOSER line above) +# and edit the %hostlist line as appropriate +# + +#%hostlist host-a host-b + +#* CHOOSER %hostlist # + +# +# If you have a machine with multiple network interfaces or IP addresses +# you can control which interfaces accept XDMCP packets by listing a LISTEN +# line for each interface you want to listen on. You can additionally list +# one or more multicast groups after each address to listen on those groups +# on that address. +# +# If no LISTEN is specified, the default is the same as "LISTEN *" - listen on +# all unicast interfaces, but not for multicast packets. If any LISTEN lines +# are specified, then only the listed interfaces will be listened on. +# +# IANA has assigned FF0X:0:0:0:0:0:0:12B as the permanently assigned +# multicast addresses for XDMCP, where X in the prefix may be replaced +# by any valid scope identifier, such as 1 for Node-Local, 2 for Link-Local, +# 5 for Site-Local, and so on. The default is equivalent to the example shown +# here using the Link-Local version to most closely match the old IPv4 subnet +# broadcast behavior. +# +# LISTEN * ff02:0:0:0:0:0:0:12b + +# This example shows listening for multicast on all scopes up to site-local +# +# LISTEN * ff01:0:0:0:0:0:0:12b ff02:0:0:0:0:0:0:12b ff03:0:0:0:0:0:0:12b ff04:0:0:0:0:0:0:12b ff05:0:0:0:0:0:0:12b |
