Hello,
a weird and funny question (because I'm using FreeBSD in the desktop for 10 years now). I've upgraded xorg and KDE, and after a relogging some of my applications don't have LANG/MM_CHARSET set in env (and these are, in turn, inherited from login class that is iset in master.passwd). So I cannot type national symbols in some Xorg applications (like konsole; and it doesn't display national symbols either), but can in local console. Firefox also understands national symbols when entered. If I export LANG/MM_CHARSET in konsole and launch from it another one - it's behaving just nicely.
I remember once I've dealt with this problem, but absolutely don't remember how. Putting the environment directly in the konsole profile that's the thing I would avoid, so the question is what is making Xorg behave that way ?
I'm starting it with ssdm (previously with kdm), so...
Thanks.
a weird and funny question (because I'm using FreeBSD in the desktop for 10 years now). I've upgraded xorg and KDE, and after a relogging some of my applications don't have LANG/MM_CHARSET set in env (and these are, in turn, inherited from login class that is iset in master.passwd). So I cannot type national symbols in some Xorg applications (like konsole; and it doesn't display national symbols either), but can in local console. Firefox also understands national symbols when entered. If I export LANG/MM_CHARSET in konsole and launch from it another one - it's behaving just nicely.
I remember once I've dealt with this problem, but absolutely don't remember how. Putting the environment directly in the konsole profile that's the thing I would avoid, so the question is what is making Xorg behave that way ?
I'm starting it with ssdm (previously with kdm), so...
Thanks.