Provided by: x11-common_7.7+23ubuntu4_all 

NAME
Xsession - initialize X session
SYNOPSIS
Xsession [ session-type ]
DESCRIPTION
/etc/X11/Xsession is a Bourne shell (sh(1)) script which is run when an X Window System session is begun
by startx(1) or a display manager such as xdm(1). (Some display managers only invoke Xsession when
specifically directed to so by the user; see the documentation for your display manager to find out
more.) Administrators unfamiliar with the Bourne shell will likely find the Xsession.options(5)
configuration file easier to deal with than Xsession itself.
Xsession is not intended to be invoked directly by the user; to be effective it needs to run in a special
environment associated with X server initialization. startx, xdm, xinit(1), and other similar programs
handle this.
By default on a Debian system, Xsession is used by both common methods of starting the X Window System,
xdm (or another X display manager) and startx. To change this for xdm, edit the ‘DisplayManager*session’
resource in the /etc/X11/xdm/xdm-config file — for other display managers, consult their documentation.
To stop startx from using Xsession by default, replace the contents of the /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc file.
The Xsession script is quite flexible, and extensive customization of the X startup procedure is possible
without modifying the script itself. See “CUSTOMIZING THE STARTUP PROCEDURE” below.
SESSION TYPES
Xsession may optionally be passed a single argument indicating the type of X session to be started. It
is up to the display manager to set the argument. To pass Xsession an argument from startx or xinit,
/etc/X11/Xsession (or /etc/X11/xinit/xinitrc) must be called explicitly with a path, as in startx
/etc/X11/Xsession failsafe. By default, three different arguments are supported:
failsafe
invokes a session consisting solely of an x-terminal-emulator(1) (no window manager is launched).
If the x-terminal-emulator program cannot be found, the session exits. The ‘failsafe’ argument is
ignored if there is no ‘allow-failsafe’ line in Xsession.options.
default
produces the same behavior as if no session type argument had been given at all.
program
starts program if it can be found in the $PATH. This is usually a session manager or a very
featureful window manager. If program is not found, the Xsession script proceeds with its default
behavior. This argument is ignored if there is no ‘allow-user-xsession’ line in Xsession.options.
(If the administrator does not want users writing their own .xsession files, it makes little sense
to permit them to specify the names of arbitrary programs to run.) Note that the restriction may
be easy to bypass, e.g. by using a .gnomerc file instead.
DEFAULT STARTUP PROCEDURE
Initially, Xsession performs some housekeeping. It declares a set of built-in functions (see “BUILT-IN
SHELL FUNCTIONS” below) and variables, then attempts to create a log file for the X session, or append to
an existing one. Historically this is called an ‘error’ file, but it catches all sorts of diagnostic
output from various X clients run in the user's session, not just error messages. If it is impossible to
write to an error file, the script (and thus the X session) aborts. For convenience, once the error file
is successfully opened, Xsession reports the fact that the session has started, the invoking username,
and the date to the error file. This makes it easier to discern which X session produced a particular
line of output in the file.
Xsession next confirms that its script directory, Xsession.d, exists. If it does not, the script aborts.
After the script directory is confirmed to be present, Xsession uses run-parts(1) to identify files in
that directory that should be sourced (executed) in the shell's environment. Only files named in a
certain way are sourced; see the run-parts manual page for a description of valid characters in the
filename. (This restriction enables the administrator to move experimental or problematic files out of
the way of the script but keep them in an obvious place, for instance by renaming them with ‘.old’ or
‘.broken’ appended to the filename.)
SUPPLIED SCRIPTS
Five shell script portions are supplied by default to handle the details of the session startup
procedure.
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/20x11-common_process-args
Arguments are processed as described in “SESSION TYPES” above. The startup program, if one is
identified at this point, is merely stored for later reference, and not immediately executed.
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/30x11-common_xresources
X resources are merged. run-parts is again used, this time to identify files in the
/etc/X11/Xresources directory that should be processed with ‘xrdb -merge’. Next, if the line
‘allow-user-resources’ is present in Xsession.options, the user's $HOME/.Xresources file is merged
in the same way.
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/35x11-common_xhost-local
Give access to the X server to the same user on the local host. If the xhost command is
available, it will use it to allow any process of the same user running on the local host to
access the X server.
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/40x11-common_xsessionrc
Source global environment variables. This script will source anything in $HOME/.xsessionrc if the
file is present. This allows the user to set global environment variables for their X session,
such as locale information.
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/50x11-common_determine-startup
Determine startup program. The X client to launch as the controlling process (the one that, upon
exiting, causes the X server to exit as well) is determined next. If a program or failsafe
argument was given and is allowed (see above), it is used as the controlling process. Otherwise,
if the line ‘allow-user-xsession’ is present in Xsession.options, a user-specified session program
or script is used. In the latter case, two historically popular names for user X session scripts
are searched for: $HOME/.xsession and $HOME/.Xsession (note the difference in case). The first
one found is used. If the script is not executable, it is marked to be executed with the Bourne
shell interpreter, sh. Finally, if none of the above succeeds, the following programs are
searched for: /usr/bin/x-session-manager, /usr/bin/x-window-manager, and
/usr/bin/x-terminal-emulator. The first one found is used. If none are found, Xsession aborts
with an error.
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/90x11-common_ssh-agent
Start ssh-agent(1), if needed. If the line ‘use-ssh-agent’ is present in Xsession.options, and no
SSH agent process appears to be running already, ssh-agent is marked to be used to execute the
startup program determined previously. Note: this functionality may move to the ssh package in
the future.
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/99x11-common_start
Start the X session. The startup program is executed, inside a Bourne shell if it is not
executable, and inside an ssh-agent if necessary. The shell's exec command is used to spare a
slot in the process table.
CUSTOMIZING THE STARTUP PROCEDURE
Of course, any of the existing files can be edited in place.
Because the order in which the various scripts in /etc/X11/Xsession.d are executed is important, files to
be added to this directory should have a well-formed name. The following format is recommended:
* a two-digit number denoting sequence;
* the name of the package providing the script (or ‘custom’ for locally-created scripts);
* an underscore;
* a description of the script's basic function, using only characters allowed by run-parts.
Here is an example of how one might write a script, named 40custom_load-xmodmap, to invoke xmodmap(1):
SYSMODMAP="/etc/X11/Xmodmap"
USRMODMAP="$HOME/.Xmodmap"
if [ -x /usr/bin/X11/xmodmap ]; then
if [ -f "$SYSMODMAP" ]; then
xmodmap "$SYSMODMAP"
fi
fi
if [ -x /usr/bin/X11/xmodmap ]; then
if [ -f "$USRMODMAP" ]; then
xmodmap "$USRMODMAP"
fi
fi
Those writing scripts for Xsession to execute should avail themselves of its built-in shell functions,
described below.
BUILT-IN SHELL FUNCTIONS
message is used for communicating with the user. It is a wrapper for the echo(1) command and relies upon
echo for its argument processing. This function may be given an arbitrarily long message string, which
is formatted to the user's terminal width (breaking lines at whitespace) and sent to standard error. If
the DISPLAY environment variable is set and the xmessage(1) program is available, xmessage is also used
to display the message.
message_nonl is used for communicating with the user when a trailing newline is undesirable; it omits a
trailing newline from the message text. It otherwise works as message.
errormsg is used for indicating an error condition and aborting the script. It works as message, above,
except that after displaying the message, it will exit Xsession with status 1.
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables affect the execution of Xsession:
HOME specifies the user's home directory; various files are searched for here.
TMPDIR names a default directory for temporary files; if the standard X session error file cannot be
opened, this variable is used to locate a place for one.
COLUMNS
indicates the width of terminal device in character cells. This value is used for formatting
diagnostic messages.
INPUT FILES
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/
is a directory containing Bourne shell scripts to be executed by Xsession. Files in this
directory are matched using run-parts and are sourced, not executed in a subshell.
/etc/X11/Xresources/
is a directory containing files corresponding to Debian package names, each of which contains
system-wide X resource settings for X clients from the corresponding package. The settings are
loaded with xrdb -merge. Files in this directory are matched using run-parts.
/etc/X11/Xsession.options
contains configuration options for the /etc/X11/Xsession script. See Xsession.options(5) for more
information.
$HOME/.Xresources
contains X resources specific to the invoking user's environment. The settings are loaded with
xrdb -merge. Note that $HOME/.Xdefaults is a relic from X Version 10 (and X11R1) days, before
app-defaults files were implemented. It has been deprecated for over ten years at the time of
this writing. .Xresources should be used instead.
$HOME/.xsession
is a sequence of commands invoking X clients (or a session manager such as xsm(1)). See the
manual page for xinit for tips on writing an .xsession file.
OUTPUT FILES
$HOME/.xsession-errors
is where standard output and standard error for Xsession script and all X client processes are
directed by default.
$TMPDIR/filename
is where the X session error file is placed if $HOME/.xsession-errors cannot be opened. For
security reasons, the exact filename is randomly generated by tempfile(1).
AUTHORS
Stephen Early, Mark Eichin, and Branden Robinson developed Debian's X session handling scripts. Branden
Robinson wrote this manual page.
SEE ALSO
Xsession.options(5), X(7), run-parts(1), ssh-agent(1), startx(1), tempfile(1), xdm(1), xmessage(1),
xmodmap(1), xrdb(1), sh(1)
Debian Project 2004-11-04 Xsession(5)