Session name
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The name for this session definition. This name identifies your session in the Session Definitions list.
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Show clients on X terminal desktop
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Select to run all clients in a single window, and have your display appear similar to the standard display of an X terminal. This is sometimes referred to as "single window" mode. This option is required for XDMCP connections.
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Show clients on my desktop
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Select to run clients in separate windows like operating system applications. This is sometimes referred to as "multiple window" mode.
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On last client
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Specify what action should happen when the last client is closed. For X Client sessions, this action occurs after the amount of time specified by Delay (secs). For XDMCP connections, this action occurs immediately when you log out.
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Reset session
Reset the session. Resetting returns the server to the same state it had before clients used the session.
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Stop session
Close the session.
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Stop session and exit X Manager
Close the session. If this is the last running session, also exit X Manager.
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Do nothing
Continue running the session without a reset. This is useful for applications that expect your environment to remain unchanged.
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Delay (secs)
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Specify the number of seconds of inactivity that must pass before the session is reset or stopped. If a client connects during this interval, the Reset session or Stop session setting is ignored. This setting applies X Client definitions, not XDMCP connections.
Note: This option does not apply if the session is running an XDMCP desktop. When you log off of the desktop, the On last client action occurs immediately (no timeout).
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Automatically start session
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Automatically start this session when X Manager starts.
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Disable sharing
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Disables sharing for X clients and XDMCP connections that use this session.
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Limit number of session instances to
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Sets a maximum limit on the number of instances of this session that can be launched by a user. This does not limit the number of clients that can run using the same session instance. It does not affect how many instances of other session types can run.
Note: In domain mode, all sessions for any given user are known to the domain, and the domain enforces the limit per user. A user cannot log in to multiple instances of X Manager for Domains and start the specified number of session instances on each X Manager for Domains.
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