![]() ![]() ![]() It's not generally a good idea to go around removing random system directories just because you don't know why they are there. It is likely to be the default LXDE profile that LXDE ships with whereas LXDE-pi is a customised profile that RPF uses for their branding / look-and-feel. Or just a useless, confusing, remnant, which could / should be removed altogether ? What use if any is the other "LXDE" folder ? Is it used as a kind of template, for new users maybe ? I guess - and have verified in fact - that the second (LXDE-pi) is the one used for my ![]() Tangentially : under /etc/xdg/lxsession/ I have 2 folders named LXDE and LXDE-pi. LXDE's autostart is documented on lxde's site, I always create my local user's configs, it means you have to take notice if the system-wide config is updated as your local version won't have those updates, but then I was brought up on unix systems where there were hundreds of users (and we didn't have root access). Also no quoting or escaping is done, each line is literally split into arguments based on spaces. The at the start of a line in autostart means that if that command crashes then autostart will automatically start it again.Īll commands are run in parallel and no they are not run in a shell, the command is executed directly. It'd be good to know how/why it differs from shell.Īlso, can you confirm that the "approved" way (in current Raspbian circles) is to edit the global file rather than the local one? (Note: I'm not saying that I would edit the global file, since, as I noted, that just doesn't feel right to me, but I want to know what the solons think on the matter). Maybe without it, it runs synchronously.Īnyway, as I asked previously, is this stuff actually documented anywhere?Īlso, as you note, it is almost, but not quite like it is being parsed by a shell. ![]() I thought the meant to run it "in the background" (aka, "asynchronously"). Are you sure the is optional? That seems kind of, if you'll excuse the expression, dumb. ![]()
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