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+<part id="kde-for-administrators">
+<partinfo>
+<authorgroup>
+<author>
+<personname>
+<firstname>Waldo</firstname>
+<surname>Bastian</surname>
+</personname>
+<email>bastian@kde.org</email>
+</author>
+<othercredit role="reviewer">
+&Philip.Rodrigues;
+&Philip.Rodrigues.mail;
+</othercredit>
+</authorgroup>
+</partinfo>
+
+<title>&kde; for Administrators</title>
+
+<chapter id="kde-internals">
+<title>&kde; Internals</title>
+
+<sect1 id="kde-for-admins-overview">
+<title>Overview</title>
+<para>to be written</para>
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="directory-layout">
+<title>Directory Layout</title>
+
+<para>&kde; defines a filesystem hierarchy which is used by the &kde;
+environment itself as well as all &kde; applications. In general &kde;
+stores all its files in a directory tree with a fixed structure.
+</para>
+
+<para>By default &kde; uses two directory trees:</para>
+
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>One at the system level (for example <filename
+class="directory">/opt/kde3</filename>).</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>One at the user level in the user's home directory
+(usually <filename class="directory">
+~/.kde</filename>)</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+<para>As a system administrator you can create additional trees. Such
+additional trees can be used for <link
+linkend="user-profiles">profiles</link></para>
+
+<informalexample><para>&SuSE; &Linux; for example uses:</para>
+
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para><filename
+class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde</filename></para></listitem>
+<listitem><para><filename
+class="directory">/opt/kde3</filename>. (This is
+&SuSE;-specific; other distributions may use
+<filename class="directory">/usr</filename> or <filename
+class="directory">/usr/kde3</filename>)</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para><filename
+class="directory">/etc/opt/kde3</filename>. (This was added by
+&SuSE;).</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+<para>If you have the KIOSK Admin tool v0.7 or later installed you can
+check which directory trees are used with the following command:
+<userinput><command>kiosktool-kdedirs</command>
+<option>--check</option></userinput></para>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>&kde; and &kde; applications look up files by scanning all the
+&kde; directory trees. The directory trees are checked in order of
+precedence. When a file is present in multiple directory trees, the
+file from the last tree takes precedence. Normally, the tree
+located in the user's home directory has the highest precedence. This
+is also the directory tree to which changes are written.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>For information about the <literal>text/plain</literal> &MIME; type
+the following files are searched:</para>
+
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para><filename
+class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/mimelnk/text/plain.desktop</filename></para></listitem>
+<listitem><para><filename
+class="directory">/opt/kde3/share/mimelnk/text/plain.desktop</filename></para></listitem>
+<listitem><para><filename
+class="directory">/etc/opt/kde3/share/mimelnk/text/plain.desktop</filename></para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+<para>If a user makes a change, the change is written to <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/mimelnk/text/plain.desktop</filename></para>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>For configuration files the story is slightly different. If
+there are multiple configuration files found in the directory trees
+with the same name, their content is combined. The precedence order of
+the directory trees plays a role here. When two files define the same
+configuration key, the file with the highest precedence determines
+which value is used for the key.</para>
+
+<informalexample><para>
+For example, if the following two files exist, with these contents:</para>
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry><term><filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/config/foobar</filename></term>
+<listitem><programlisting>
+Color=red
+Shape=circle
+</programlisting>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename>/etc/opt/kde3/share/config/foobar</filename></term>
+<listitem><programlisting>
+Color=blue
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+<para>The files will be merged to result in:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+Color=red
+Shape=circle
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+
+</informalexample>
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="specifying-directories">
+<title>Specifying Directories</title>
+
+<para>
+
+<segmentedlist>
+<segtitle>Environment Variable</segtitle>
+<segtitle>Example Setting(s)</segtitle>
+<segtitle>Comment</segtitle>
+
+<seglistitem>
+<seg><envar>KDEHOME</envar></seg>
+<seg><filename class="directory">~/.kde</filename></seg>
+<seg></seg>
+</seglistitem>
+
+<seglistitem>
+<seg><envar>KDEROOTHOME</envar></seg>
+<seg><filename class="directory">/root/.kde</filename></seg>
+<seg>Different variable to prevent
+root writing to $KDEHOME of the user after running
+<command>su</command>.</seg>
+</seglistitem>
+
+<seglistitem>
+<seg><envar>KDEDIR</envar></seg>
+<seg><filename class="directory">/opt/kde3</filename>, <filename
+class="directory">/usr</filename>, <filename
+class="directory">/usr/kde3</filename></seg>
+<seg>Vendor dependent. Used by &kde; 2. If not set, falls back to
+compiled-in default.</seg>
+</seglistitem>
+
+<seglistitem>
+<seg><envar>KDEDIRS</envar></seg>
+<seg><filename class="directory">/opt/kde3</filename>, <filename
+class="directory">/usr</filename>, <filename
+class="directory">/usr/kde3</filename></seg>
+<seg>New in &kde;3. Can list multiple locations separated by a
+colon. If not set, falls back to $<envar>KDEDIR</envar></seg>
+</seglistitem>
+
+</segmentedlist>
+</para>
+<para>Don't <emphasis>need</emphasis> to be set, defaults work just fine.</para>
+<para>Running &kde;2 next to &kde;3? Point $<envar>KDEDIR</envar> to
+&kde; 2 and $<envar>KDEDIRS</envar> to &kde; 3.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>A staff member at a university could have the following
+settings:</para>
+<programlisting>
+KDEHOME='~/.kde3'
+KDEROOTHOME='/root/.kde3'
+KDEDIRS='/opt/kde_staff:/opt/kde3'
+</programlisting>
+
+</informalexample>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="user-profiles">
+<title>User Profiles</title>
+
+<para>In the previous example <filename
+class="directory">/opt/kde_staff</filename> contained additional settings
+and applications for staff members. <quote>User Profiles</quote> allow you
+to add this directory only for certain users and not for others. Add the
+following to <filename>/etc/kderc</filename>:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[Directories-staff]
+prefixes=/opt/kde_staff
+</programlisting>
+
+<para>This creates a profile named <quote>staff</quote> that adds the
+<filename class="directory">/opt/kde_staff</filename> directory
+tree. (Note that &SuSE; &Linux; uses
+<filename>/etc/kde3rc</filename> instead of
+<filename>/etc/kderc</filename>. Now that we have a named profile it
+can be assigned to users.</para>
+
+<para>To map profiles to users a mapping file needs to be specified in
+<filename>/etc/kderc</filename>:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[Directories]
+userProfileMapFile=/etc/kde-user-profile
+</programlisting>
+
+<para>It is now possible to assign a profile based on either the user name
+or based on the &UNIX; group the user is part of.</para>
+
+<para>To assign the staff profile to all users that are a member of the
+&UNIX; group staff_members add the following to
+<filename>/etc/kde-user-profile</filename>:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[General]
+groups=staff_members
+[Groups]
+staff_members=staff
+</programlisting>
+
+<para>It is also possible to assign a profile to a single user:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[Users]
+bastian=staff
+</programlisting>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="directory-layout-revisited">
+<title>Directory Layout Revisited</title>
+
+<para>Each directory tree used by &kde; has a fixed directory structure.
+Directories that are not relevant for a certain tree, or simply not used can
+be left out though. For example, directories used for temporary files are
+usually only found under <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEHOME</envar></filename> but not in any other
+directory tree.</para>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="architecture-specific-directories">
+<title>Architecture-specific Directories</title>
+
+<para>Architecture (OS and CPU type) specific directories:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">bin</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Used for &kde; executables.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">lib</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Used for &kde; libraries.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">lib/kde3</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>This directory contains components, plugins, and other
+runtime loadable objects for use by &kde; 3.<replaceable>x</replaceable>
+applications.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="shared-directories">
+<title>Shared Directories</title>
+
+<para>Shared: Not architecture specific, can be shared between different
+archs.</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/applnk</filename></term>
+<listitem><para><literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> files for
+&kde;-menu (old)</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/applications</filename></term>
+<listitem><para><literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> files for
+&kde;-menu (since &kde; 3.2)</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/apps</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Contains application-specific data files. Each
+application has a sub-directory here for storing additional data
+files.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/config</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Configuration files. Configuration files are normally
+named after the application they belong to plus the letters
+<quote>rc</quote>. A special case is <filename>kdeglobals</filename>.
+This file is read by all &kde; applications.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename
+class="directory">share/config/session</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>This directory is used by session management and is
+normally only available under <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEHOME</envar></filename>. At the end of a
+session &kde; applications store their state here. The file names
+consist of the name of the application followed by a number. The
+session manager <command>ksmserver</command> stores references to
+these numbers when saving a session in
+<filename>ksmserverrc</filename>.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/doc/HTML</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>This directory contains documentation for &kde;
+applications. Documentation is categorized by language and the
+application it belongs to. Normally at least two files can be found in
+a directory: <filename>index.docbook</filename>, which contains the
+documentation in the unformatted DocBook format, and
+<filename>index.cache.bz2</filename>, which contains the same
+documentation formatted as <command>bzip2</command>-compressed
+&HTML;. The &HTML; version is used by &khelpcenter;. If the &HTML;
+version is missing, &khelpcenter; will regenerate it from the DocBook
+version but this is a time-consuming process.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/icons</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Under this directory icons are stored. Icons are
+categorized by theme, dimension and usage category.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/mimelnk</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>In this directory,<literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> files that describe &MIME; types
+are stored. &kde; uses &MIME; types to identify the type of a
+file.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/services</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>This directory contains <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> files that describe services. Services
+are like applications but are usually launched by other applications instead
+of the user. Services do not appear in the &kde; menu.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/servicetypes</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>This directory contains <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> files that describe
+servicetypes. A servicetype usually represents a certain programming
+interface. Applications and Services include in their <literal
+role="extension">>.desktop</literal> files the servicetypes that they
+provide.</para> </listitem></varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/sounds</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>This directory contains sound files.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/templates</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>This directory contains templates for creating files
+of various types. A template consists of a <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> file that describes the file and
+that includes a reference to a file in the <filename
+class="directory">.source</filename> sub-directory. The templates in
+this directory appear in the <guimenu>Create New</guimenu> menu
+available on the desktop and in the file browser. When a user selects
+a template from the menu its source file is copied.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename class="directory">share/wallpapers</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>This directory contains images that can be used as
+background picture</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+</variablelist>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="host-specific-directories">
+<title>Host-specific Directories</title>
+
+<para>There are three host-specific directories that are usually
+symlinked to other locations. If the directories do not already exist,
+the following symlinks and directories will be created using the
+<command>lnusertemp</command> utility:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename>$<envar>KDEHOME</envar>/socket-$<envar>HOSTNAME</envar></filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Usually <filename
+class="directory">/tmp/ksocket-$<envar>USER</envar>/</filename>, this
+is used for various &UNIX; sockets.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename>$<envar>KDEHOME</envar>/tmp-$<envar>HOSTNAME</envar></filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Usually <filename
+class="directory">/tmp/kde-$<envar>USER</envar>/</filename>, this is used for temporary files.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename>$<envar>KDEHOME</envar>/cache-$<envar>HOSTNAME</envar></filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Usually <filename
+class="directory">/var/tmp/kdecache-$<envar>USER</envar>/</filename>,
+this is used for cached files.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+<para>Since both <filename class="directory">/tmp</filename> and
+<filename class="directory">/var/tmp</filename> are world writable,
+there is a possibility that one of the above directories already
+exists but is owned by another user. In that case the
+<command>lnusertemp</command> utility will create a new directory with
+an alternative name and link to that instead.</para>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="configuration-files">
+<title>Configuration Files</title> <para>&kde; uses a simple
+text-based file format for all its configuration files. It consists of
+key-value pairs that are placed in groups. All &kde; configuration
+files use <acronym>UTF</acronym>-8 encoding for text outside the
+<acronym>ASCII</acronym> range.</para>
+
+<para>The start of a group is indicated by a group name that is placed
+in square brackets. All the key-value entries that follow belong to
+the group. The group ends when either another group starts or when the
+end of the file is reached. Entries at the top of the
+file that are not preceded by a group name belong to the default
+group.</para>
+
+<informalexample><para>The following example shows a configuration
+file that consists of two groups. The first group contains the keys
+<varname>LargeCursor</varname> and <varname>SingleClick</varname>, the
+second group contains the keys <varname>Show hidden files</varname>
+and <varname>Sort by</varname>:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[KDE]
+LargeCursor=false
+SingleClick=true
+</programlisting>
+
+<programlisting>
+[KFileDialog Settings]
+Show hidden files=false
+Sort by=Name
+</programlisting>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>Entries in a group consist of a key and value separated by an equals
+sign. The key can contain spaces and may be followed by options placed in
+square brackets. The part after the equals sign is the value of the
+entry. Any white space surrounding the equals sign is ignored, as is any
+trailing white space. Put more concisely, the format is:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+<replaceable>entry</replaceable>=<replaceable>value</replaceable>
+</programlisting>
+
+<para>If a value is supposed to include a space at the begin or end
+then this can be achieved by using a backslash followed by an
+<quote>s</quote>.</para>
+
+<para>There are several other backslash codes; here is a complete
+list:
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para><token>\s</token> can be used as space</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para><token>\t</token> can be used to include a tab</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para><token>\r</token> for a carriage return character</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para><token>\n</token> for a linefeed character (new line)</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para><token>\\</token> to include the backslash itself</para>
+</listitem>
+</itemizedlist></para>
+
+<informalexample><para>In the following example the value of the
+<varname>Caption</varname> entry starts with two spaces while the
+<varname>Description</varname> entry contains three lines of
+text. Linefeeds in backslash notation are used to separate the
+different lines.</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[Preview Image]
+Caption=\s My Caption
+Description=This is\na very long\ndescription.
+</programlisting>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>Empty lines in configuration files are ignored, as are lines that
+start with a hash mark (<quote>#</quote>). The hash mark can be used to add
+comments to configuration files. It should be noted that when a &kde;
+application updates a configuration file the comments are
+<emphasis>not</emphasis> preserved.</para>
+
+<para>There can be multiple configuration files with the same name in the
+<filename class="directory">share/config</filename> sub-directory of the
+various &kde; directory trees. In this case the information of all these
+configuration files is combined on a key-by-key basis. If the same key
+within a certain group is defined in more than one place, the key value read
+from the directory tree with the highest precedence will be used.
+Configuration files under <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEHOME</envar></filename> always have the highest
+precedence. If a key in a certain group is defined multiple times in a
+single file, the value of the last entry is used.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>If <filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/config/foobar</filename>
+contains:
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=red
+Shape=circle
+</programlisting>
+and <filename>/etc/opt/kde3/share/config/foobar</filename> contains
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=blue
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+the result will be:
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=red
+Shape=circle
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+</informalexample>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>If
+ <filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/config/foobar</filename>
+ contains
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=red
+Shape=circle
+[MyGroup]
+Color=green
+</programlisting>
+and <filename>/opt/kde_staff/share/config/foobar</filename> contains
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=purple
+Position=20,20
+</programlisting>
+and <filename>/etc/opt/kde3/share/config/foobar</filename> contains
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=blue
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+the result will be:
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=green
+Shape=circle
+Position=20,20
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>To prevent users being able to override default settings,
+settings can be marked immutable. Settings can be made immutable
+individually, per group or per file. An individual entry can be locked
+down by adding <userinput>[$i]</userinput> behind the key, &eg;:
+<programlisting>
+Color[$i]=blue
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+<para>A group of entries can be locked down by placing
+<userinput>[$i]</userinput> behind the group name, &eg;:
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup][$i]
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+<para>To lock down the entire file, start the file with
+<userinput>[$i]</userinput> on a single line, &ie;:
+<programlisting>
+[$i]
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>If
+ <filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/config/foobar</filename>
+ contains:
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=red
+Shape=circle
+</programlisting>
+and <filename>/etc/opt/kde3/share/config/foobar</filename> contains:
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup][$i]
+Color=blue
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+the result will be:
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=blue
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+</informalexample>
+
+<informalexample><para>If
+ <filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/config/foobar</filename>
+ contains:
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=red
+Shape=circle
+</programlisting>
+and <filename>/opt/kde_staff/share/config/foobar</filename> contains
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=purple
+Shape=rectangle
+</programlisting>
+and <filename>/etc/opt/kde3/share/config/foobar</filename> contains
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup][$i]
+Color=blue
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+the result will be
+<programlisting>
+[MyGroup]
+Color=purple
+Shape=rectangle
+Position=10,10
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+</informalexample>
+
+
+<para>So-called <quote>Shell Expansion</quote> can be used to provide more
+dynamic default values. With shell expansion the value of a configuration
+key can be constructed from the value of an environment variable or from the
+output of a shell command. To enable shell expansion for a configuration
+entry, the key must be followed by <token>[$e]</token>. Normally the
+expanded form is written into the user's configuration file after first use.
+To prevent that, it is recommend to lock the configuration entry down by
+using <token>[$ie]</token>. The user can't change it then of course.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>In the following example the value for the <varname>Host</varname>
+entry is determined by the output of the <command>hostname</command>
+program. This setting is also locked down to ensure that the value is always
+determined dynamically.</para>
+
+<para>The value for the <varname>Email</varname> entry is determined by
+filling in the values of the $<envar>USER</envar> and $<envar>HOST</envar>
+environment variables. When <systemitem class="username">joe</systemitem> is
+logged in on <systemitem class="systemname">joes_host</systemitem> this will
+result in a value equal to <literal>joe@joes_host</literal>. The setting is
+not locked down.</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[Mail Settings]
+Host[$ie]=$(hostname)
+Email[$e]=${USER}@${HOST}
+</programlisting>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>Most configuration entries can be indexed with a language code. In
+this case, the language that the user has selected for use on the desktop is
+used to look up the key value. If the default language (American English)
+has been selected or if there is no index that corresponds to the selected
+language, the key entry without index is used.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>In the following example the value of the <varname>Caption</varname>
+entry depends on the language. If the user has selected French as language
+(language code <literal>fr</literal>) the value of the entry will be
+<quote>Ma L&eacute;gende</quote>. In all other cases the value <quote>My
+Caption</quote> will be used.</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[Preview Image]
+Caption=My Caption
+Caption[fr]=Ma L&eacute;gende
+</programlisting>
+</informalexample>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>In this example the value of the <varname>Caption</varname> entry
+depends on the language. If the user has selected French as language
+(language code <literal>fr</literal>) the value of the entry will be
+<quote>Ma L&eacute;gende.</quote> In all other cases the value <quote>My
+Caption</quote> will be used.</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[Preview Image]
+Caption=My Caption
+Caption[fr]=Ma L&eacute;gende
+</programlisting>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>In general the entries that can appear in a configuration file are not
+documented. With &kde; 3.2 a start has been made to change this. In
+<filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/config.kcfg</filename>, files
+can be found that provide a formal description of the possible entries in a
+configuration file. These are used by the new &kde; Configuration Editor
+when available.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>Here is an example &XML; configuration file:
+<programlisting>
+<markup>
+&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;
+&lt;!DOCTYPE kcfg SYSTEM "http://www.kde.org/standards/kcfg/1.0/kcfg.dtd"&gt;
+&lt;kcfg&gt;
+ &lt;kcfgfile name="korganizerrc"/&gt;
+ &lt;group name="General"&gt;
+ &lt;entry type="Bool" key="Auto Save"&gt;
+ &lt;label&gt;Enable automatic saving of calendar&lt;/label&gt;
+ &lt;default&gt;true&lt;/default&gt;
+ &lt;/entry&gt;
+ &lt;entry type="Int" key="Auto Save Interval"&gt;
+ &lt;default&gt;10&lt;/default&gt;
+ &lt;/entry&gt;
+ &lt;/group&gt;
+&lt;/kcfg&gt;
+</markup>
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+<para>It has the same effect as:
+<programlisting>
+[General]
+Auto Save=false
+Auto Save Interval=25
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+</informalexample>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="kde-startup-sequence">
+<title>&kde; Startup Sequence</title>
+
+<sect2 id="kdm">
+<title>&kdm;</title>
+
+<para>Always runs as <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>! Uses
+<filename>$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/config/kdmrc</filename> and
+<filename>/etc/X11/xdm/Xservers</filename>. The latter contains entries
+like:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+:0 local /usr/X11R6/bin/X :0 vt07
+</programlisting>
+
+<para>Relevant startup files are also: </para>
+<simplelist>
+<member>
+[X-*-Core] section in <filename>kdmrc</filename>
+</member>
+<member>
+Setup - <filename>/etc/X11/xdm/Xsetup</filename>
+</member>
+<member>
+User enters username &amp; password
+</member>
+<member>
+Startup - <filename>/etc/X11/xdm/Xstartup</filename> - prepare as root
+</member>
+<member>
+Session - <filename>/etc/X11/xdm/Xsession</filename> - starts session as user
+</member>
+<member>
+= For a KDE session: <command>kde</command> or <command>startkde</command>
+</member>
+<member>
+= If present <filename>~/.xsession</filename> or <filename>~/.xinitrc</filename>
+</member>
+<member>
+Reset - <filename>/etc/X11/xdm/Xreset</filename> - after session finished
+</member>
+</simplelist>
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="startkde">
+<title>The &kde; Startup Script: <command>startkde</command></title>
+
+<para>The &kde; startup sequence starts with the
+<filename>startkde</filename> script. In most cases this script gets called
+from the display manager (&kdm;) once the user has been authenticated. Their
+are two very important lines in the <filename>startkde</filename>
+script:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+LD_BIND_NOW=true kdeinit +kcminit +knotify and kwrapper
+ksmserver $KDEWM
+</programlisting>
+
+<para>The first line starts the <command>kdeinit</command> master process.
+The <command>kdeinit</command> master process is used to start all other
+&kde; processes. It show up in the output of <command>ps
+<option>aux</option></command> as <computeroutput>kdeinit:
+Running...</computeroutput>. The arguments after <command>kdeinit</command>
+are the names of additional processes to be started. The <token>+</token>
+indicates that <command>kdeinit</command> needs to wait till the process has
+finished. <command>kdeinit</command> also starts
+<command>dcopserver</command>, <command>klauncher</command> and
+<command>kded</command>.</para>
+
+<para>The second of the two lines asks <command>kdeinit</command> to start
+the <command>ksmserver</command> session manager process. The session
+manager determines the lifetime of the session. When this process exits, the
+user is logged out.</para>
+
+</sect2>
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="background-processes">
+<title>Background Processes</title>
+
+<para>All &kde; background services are user-specific: unlike system daemons
+they are not shared between users. As well as being unique per user they are
+also unique per X-server display. The processes are:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>dcopserver</command></term>
+<listitem><para>Desktop communication</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>kded</command></term>
+<listitem><para>Generic service daemon.</para>
+<para>Triggers <link linkend="ksycoca">Sycoca</link> database updates when
+needed</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>kcminit</command></term>
+<listitem><para>Initialization service</para>
+<para>See <xref linkend="kcminit"/> for more information.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>klauncher</command></term>
+<listitem><para>Program launch (this is <emphasis>not</emphasis> the
+<keycombo action="simul">&Alt;<keycap>F2</keycap>
+</keycombo>dialog!)</para>
+<para>See <xref linkend="klauncher"/> for more information.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>knotify</command></term>
+<listitem><para>User notifications.</para>
+<para>See <xref linkend="knotify"/> for more information.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>ksmserver</command></term>
+<listitem><para>Session management</para>
+<para>See <xref linkend="ksmserver"/> for more information.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+</variablelist>
+
+<sect2 id="kdeinit">
+<title><command>kdeinit</command></title>
+<para><command>kdeinit</command> is used to start all other &kde;
+programs. <command>kdeinit</command> can start normal binary program files
+as well as <command>kdeinit</command> loadable modules
+(<acronym>KLM</acronym>s). <acronym>KLM</acronym>s work just like binary
+program files but can be started more efficiently. <acronym>KLM</acronym>s
+live in <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/lib/kde3</filename></para>
+
+<para>The drawback is that programs started this way appear as
+<computeroutput><command>kdeinit</command></computeroutput> in the output of
+<command>top</command> and <command>ps</command>. Use <command>top
+<option>-c</option></command> or <command>ps <option>aux</option></command>
+to see the actual program name:</para>
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>%</prompt><userinput><command>ps <option>aux</option></command></userinput>
+<computeroutput>
+waba 23184 0.2 2.1 23428 11124 ? S 21:41 0:00 kdeinit: Running...
+waba 23187 0.1 2.1 23200 11124 ? S 21:41 0:00 kdeinit: dcopserver --nosid
+waba 23189 0.2 2.4 25136 12496 ? S 21:41 0:00 kdeinit: klauncher
+waba 23192 0.7 2.8 25596 14772 ? S 21:41 0:00 kdeinit: kded
+waba 23203 0.8 3.4 31516 17892 ? S 21:41 0:00 kdeinit:
+knotify
+</computeroutput>
+</screen>
+
+<para><computeroutput>kdeinit: Running...</computeroutput> indicates the
+master <command>kdeinit</command> process. The other processes listed are
+programs started as <acronym>KLM</acronym>s.</para>
+
+<para>When <command>kdeinit</command> starts for the first time it will
+launch <command>dcopserver</command>, <command>klauncher</command>, and
+<command>kded</command>, as well as any additional programs specified on its
+command line in the <command>startkde</command> script, normally
+<command>kcminit</command> and <command>knotify</command>.</para>
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="dcopserver">
+<title><command>dcopserver</command></title>
+
+<para><command>dcopserver</command> is a daemon which provides inter-process
+communication (&DCOP;) facilities to all &kde; applications. The &DCOP;
+facilities are accessible from the command shell via the
+<command>dcop</command> command line tool. &DCOP; is essential for all &kde;
+applications.</para>
+
+<para>Some related files:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.DCOPserver_$<envar>HOSTNAME</envar>_$<envar>DISPLAY</envar></filename></term>
+<listitem><para>&eg; <filename>.DCOPserver_linux__0</filename>. Controlled by $<envar>DCOPAUTHORITY</envar></para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename>/tmp/.ICE-unix/dcop<replaceable>pid</replaceable>-<replaceable>number</replaceable></filename></term>
+<listitem><para>&eg; <filename>dcop7634-1069677856</filename>. This is
+the file that the <filename>DCOPserver</filename> file above points to.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.ICEauthority</filename></term>
+<listitem><para>Authorization information controlled by
+$<envar>ICEAUTHORITY</envar></para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="kcminit">
+<title>kcminit</title>
+
+<para><command>kcminit</command> executes initialization services during
+startup. Initialization services are specified in the .desktop files of
+applications or services via the <varname>X-KDE-Init</varname> line:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+[Desktop Entry]
+Encoding=UTF-8
+Exec=kcmshell energy
+Icon=energy_star
+Type=Application
+X-KDE-Library=energy
+X-KDE-Init=energy
+</programlisting>
+
+<para>Initialization services are typically used for initializing
+hardware based on user-specified settings.</para>
+
+<para><userinput><command>kcminit
+<option>--list</option></command></userinput> can be used to show all
+initialization services and <userinput><command>kcminit
+<replaceable>service</replaceable></command></userinput> can be used to
+execute a single service explicitly. This can be useful when investigating
+startup problems.</para>
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="klauncher">
+<title><command>klauncher</command></title>
+
+<para><command>klauncher</command> is a daemon which is responsible for
+service activation within &kde;. It operates in close connection with the
+<command>kdeinit</command> master process to start new processes. &kde;
+applications communicate with <command>klauncher</command> over &DCOP; in
+order to start new applications or services.</para>
+
+<para>Best known from the error message: <computeroutput><errortext>
+KLauncher could not be reached via DCOP </errortext></computeroutput> which
+either indicates a serious problem with the <command>dcopserver</command> or
+that <command>klauncher</command> crashed.</para>
+
+<para><command>klauncher</command> can be restarted by restarting
+<command>kdeinit</command> from a console window. Make sure that
+$<envar>HOME</envar>, $<envar>DISPLAY</envar> and the various
+$<envar>KDEDIR(S)</envar> are set correctly when doing so!</para>
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="knotify">
+<title><command>knotify</command></title>
+
+<para>The primary task of <command>knotify</command> is to relay sound
+notifications to the sound server, it also provides alternative notification
+methods.</para>
+
+</sect2>
+
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="ksmserver">
+<title>KSMServer</title>
+
+<para><command>ksmserver</command> is &kde;'s session manager. On startup
+the session manager launches auto-start applications and restores
+applications from the previous session. The applications to auto-start are
+indicated by <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> files in the
+<filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/autostart</filename>
+directory. Whether or not to auto-start an application can be made
+conditional upon some configuration entry determined by the
+<varname>X-KDE-autostart-condition</varname> entry in the <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> file.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>The <filename>ktip.desktop</filename> file for example
+contains:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+X-KDE-autostart-condition=ktiprc:TipOfDay:RunOnStart:true
+</programlisting>
+
+<para>This means that the <filename>ktiprc</filename> configuration
+file is checked for a <varname>RunOnStart</varname> entry in the
+<varname>[TipOfDay]</varname> section. If no such entry is found,
+<literal>true</literal> is assumed, which means that
+<application>ktip</application> is one of the applications that is
+auto-started by default.</para>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>Some of the applications auto-started by <command>ksmserver</command>
+are:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>kdesktop</command></term>
+<listitem><para>The &kde; desktop</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>&kicker;</command></term>
+<listitem><para>The &kde; panel</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>ktip</command></term>
+<listitem><para>A tip of the day program</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>kwrited</command></term>
+<listitem><para>A utility to receive system messages sent to the user</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>&klipper;</term>
+<listitem><para>A clipboard utility that docks in the panel</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term><command>kalarm</command></term>
+<listitem><para>A utility that warns about upcoming events and appointments</para>
+</listitem>
+
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+<para><command>kdesktop</command> in its turn automatically starts
+applications stored in <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEHOME</envar>/Autostart</filename>. <command>kdesktop</command>
+will automatically open any files stored in this directory including
+documents, binary files or applications in the form of <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> files.</para>
+
+<para>The &kde; session manager also restores one of the previous
+sessions. A session contains a collection of applications as well as
+application-specific information that reflects the state of the applications
+at the time the session was saved. Sessions are stored in the
+<filename>ksmserverrc</filename> configuration file which contains
+references to application-specific state information. The
+application-specific state information is saved in <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEHOME</envar>/share/config/session</filename>.
+The state information of &kwin; contains the location of the application
+windows of all the other applications in the session.
+</para>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="environment-variables">
+<title>Environment variables</title>
+
+<para>Some important environment variables used by &kde;:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>$<envar>KDEDIR</envar></term>
+<listitem><para>Has to be set if
+<envar>KDEDIRS</envar> is not set and has to point to the root of the
+&kde; installation tree. Allows &kde; to find its data like icons,
+menus and libraries.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDEDIRS</envar></term>
+<listitem><para>Overrides <envar>KDEDIR</envar> and allows you to specify
+multiple directories where &kde; searches for its data. Useful if you want
+or have to install some programs to a different prefix than the rest of
+&kde;.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term><envar>$KDEHOME</envar></term><listitem><para>If
+not set, &kde; uses <filename class="directory">~/.kde</filename> as
+the directory where personal data is stored.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDEROOTHOME</envar></term><listitem><para>If
+not set, &kde; uses <filename class="directory">~root/.kde</filename>
+as the directory for <systemitem class="username">root</systemitem>'s
+personal data. Was introduced to prevent &kde; from accidently
+overwriting user data with root permissions when the user runs a &kde;
+program after switching with <command>su</command> to <systemitem
+class="username">root</systemitem>.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDEWM</envar></term><listitem><para>If the
+<envar>KDEWM</envar> environment variable has been set, then it will
+be used as &kde;'s window manager within the
+<command>startkde</command> script instead of &kwin;.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDE_LANG</envar></term><listitem><para>Overrides
+the &kde; language configuration, &eg; <userinput>KDE_LANG=fr kprogram
+&amp;</userinput> starts a program with French translation if the
+necessary files are installed.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDE_MULTIHEAD</envar></term><listitem><para>Set
+this variable to <literal>true</literal> to indicate that &kde; is running
+on a multi-head system.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDE_FORK_SLAVES</envar></term>
+<listitem><para>(Since &kde; 3.2.3) Set this variable to spawn
+<acronym>KIO</acronym>-slaves directly from the application process
+itself. By default <acronym>KIO</acronym>-slaves are spawned using
+<command>klauncher</command>/<command>kdeinit</command>. This option is
+useful if the <acronym>KIO</acronym>-slave should run in the same
+environment as the application. This can be the case with
+<application>Clearcase</application>.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDE_HOME_READONLY</envar></term>
+<listitem><para>Set this variable to indicate that your home directory is
+mounted as read-only.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDE_NO_IPV6</envar></term><listitem><para>
+(Since &kde; 3.2.3) - Set this variable to disable <acronym>IPv6</acronym>
+support and <acronym>IPv6</acronym> <acronym>DNS</acronym>
+lookups.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDE_IS_PRELINKED</envar></term><listitem><para>
+(Since &kde; 3.2) - Set this variable to indicate that you have prelinked
+your &kde; binaries and libraries. This will turn off
+<command>kdeinit</command>.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDE_UTF8_FILENAMES</envar></term><listitem><para>If
+this environment variable is set, &kde; assumes all filenames are in
+<acronym>UTF-8</acronym> encoding regardless of the current C
+locale.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDE_FULL_SESSION</envar></term><listitem><para>
+(Since &kde; 3.2) Automatically set to true by &kde; startup, it is used
+by &eg; &konqueror; to know if it should consider remaining in memory
+for future re-use when being closed. If not set, &konqueror; will exit
+after being closed (&eg; &kdesu; does that, it's also useful for
+debugging).</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDESYCOCA</envar></term><listitem><para>Allows
+you to specify the path and the name of the generated &kde; system
+configuration cache file.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDETMP</envar></term><listitem><para>Allows
+to specify another path than <filename
+class="directory">/tmp</filename> where &kde; stores its temporary
+files.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>KDEVARTMP</envar></term><listitem><para>Allows
+to specify another path than <filename
+class="directory">/var/tmp</filename> where &kde; stores its variable
+files.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>XDG_DATA_HOME</envar></term><listitem><para>
+(Since &kde; 3.2) Defines the base directory relative to which user-specific
+data files should be stored. Default is <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.local/share</filename></para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>XDG_DATA_DIRS</envar></term><listitem><para>
+(Since &kde; 3.2) Defines the preference-ordered set of base directories to
+search for data files in addition to the <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>XDG_DATA_HOME</envar></filename> base
+directory. Default is
+<literal>/usr/local/share/:/usr/share/</literal></para>
+
+<para>&kde; adds locations from $<envar>KDEDIRS</envar> and profiles
+as well. Used for <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> and
+<literal role="extension">.directory</literal> menu files. <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> files under <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>XDG_DATA_DIRS</envar>/applications</filename>.
+<literal
+role="extension">.directory</literal> files under
+$XDG_DATA_DIRS/desktop-directories
+</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>XDG_CONFIG_HOME</envar></term><listitem><para>
+(&kde; 3.2) - Defines the base directory relative to which user
+specific configuration files should be stored. Default is
+<filename class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.config</filename>.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry><term>$<envar>XDG_CONFIG_DIRS</envar></term><listitem><para>
+(&kde; 3.2) - Defines the preference-ordered set of base directories
+to search for configuration files in addition to the $<envar>XDG_CONFIG_HOME</envar>
+base directory. The default is <filename class="directory">/etc/xdg</filename> &kde; adds locations from
+$<envar>KDEDIRS</envar> and profiles as well. Used by <literal role="extension">.menu</literal> descriptions in
+<filename class="directory">$<envar>XDG_CONFIG_DIRS</envar>/menus</filename>.
+</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="the-kdeinit-mystery">
+<title>The kdeinit Mystery</title>
+
+<!-- FIXME: Add more words. Fix markup -->
+
+<para><command>kdeinit</command> is used to start all other &kde;
+programs. <command>kdeinit</command> can start normal binary program f iles
+as well as <command>kdeinit</command> loadable modules
+(<acronym>KLM</acronym>s). <acronym>KLM</acronym>s work just like binary
+program files but can be started more efficiently. <acronym>KLM</acronym>s
+live in <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/lib/kde3</filename></para>
+
+<para>The drawback is that programs started this way appear as
+<computeroutput><command>kdeinit</command></computeroutput> in the
+output of <command>top</command> and <command>ps</command>. Use
+<command>top <option>-c</option></command> or <command>ps
+<option>aux</option></command> to see the actual program name:</para>
+
+<screen>
+<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>ps aux | grep bastian</command></userinput>
+<computeroutput>
+bastian 26061 0.0 2.2 24284 11492 ? S 21:27 0:00 kdeinit: Running...
+bastian 26064 0.0 2.2 24036 11524 ? S 21:27 0:00 kdeinit: dcopserver
+bastian 26066 0.1 2.5 26056 12988 ? S 21:27 0:00 kdeinit: klauncher
+bastian 26069 0.4 3.2 27356 16744 ? S 21:27 0:00 kdeinit: kded
+bastian 26161 0.2 2.7 25344 14096 ? S 21:27 0:00 kdeinit: ksmserver
+bastian 26179 1.1 3.4 29716 17812 ? S 21:27 0:00 kdeinit: kicker
+bastian 26192 0.4 3.0 26776 15452 ? S 21:27 0:00 kdeinit: klipper
+bastian 26195 1.0 3.5 29200 18368 ? S 21:27 0:00 kdeinit: kdesktop
+</computeroutput>
+</screen>
+<para>As you might have noticed, this has another side effect, making it
+difficult to kill a process that is causing trouble:</para>
+
+<screen><prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>killall kdesktop</command></userinput>
+<computeroutput>kdesktop: no process killed</computeroutput></screen>
+
+<para>You might be tempted to try <userinput><command>killall
+kdeinit</command></userinput>, but killing all kdeinit processes will have
+the effect of shutting down all of &kde;. In effect, total
+destruction!</para>
+
+<para>There are two simple solutions to this:</para>
+
+<screen><prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdekillall kdesktop</command></userinput>
+or good old
+<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kill 26195</command></userinput></screen>
+<para><command>kdekillall</command> is part of the &kde; <acronym>SDK</acronym>
+package.</para>
+
+</sect1>
+
+</chapter>
+
+<chapter id="customizing-kde">
+<title>Customizing &kde;</title>
+
+
+<sect1 id="desktop-icons">
+<title>Desktop Icons</title>
+
+<para>&kde; uses several types of icons:</para>
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>Documents</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para>Links to Websites (using <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file)</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para>Links to Applications (using <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file)</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para>Devices - Disks, Partitions &amp; Peripherals:
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>Explicit using <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para>Automatic via devices:// io-slave</para>
+</listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para>Vendor-specific (&eg; &SuSE;'s My Computer)</para>
+</listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+<sect2 id="desktop-icons-websites">
+<title>Websites</title>
+<para>
+Links to Websites using <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal>
+file: <menuchoice><guimenu>Create
+New</guimenu><guisubmenu>File</guisubmenu><guimenuitem>Link to
+Location (URL)</guimenuitem></menuchoice>. Change Icon using
+<guilabel>Properties</guilabel> dialogs. The resulting <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> file:
+<programlisting>
+[Desktop Entry]
+Encoding=UTF-8
+Icon=/opt/kde3/share/apps/kdesktop/pics/ksslogo.png
+Type=Link
+URL=http://www.kde.org/
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="desktop-icons-applications">
+<title>Applications</title>
+
+<para>Links to Applications using <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> file: <menuchoice><guimenu>Create
+New</guimenu><guisubmenu>File</guisubmenu><guimenuitem>Link to
+Application</guimenuitem></menuchoice>. You must provide details
+yourself. Drag from &kde; Menu: Either copy or link (creates symlink),
+much easier</para>
+
+<!-- Perhaps legacy and translated should be the other way around, but -->
+<!-- this is how it appears in Waldo's presentation. Need to check -->
+<!-- this -->
+
+<programlisting>
+[Desktop Entry]<co id="boilerplate"/>
+Encoding=UTF-8
+GenericName=IRC Client<co id="generic-desc"/>
+GenericName[af]=Irc Kli&euml;t
+GenericName[de]=IRC Programm
+...
+GenericName[zu]=Umthengi we IRC<co id="legacy"/>
+SwallowExec=<co id="translated"/>
+Name=KSirc
+Name[af]=Ksirc
+Name[de]=KSirc
+...
+</programlisting>
+
+<calloutlist>
+<callout arearefs="boilerplate"><para>Boiler plate</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="generic-desc"><para>Translated generic description, not used on desktop</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="legacy"><para>Legacy, can be removed</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="translated"><para>Translated name as it appears on desktop</para>
+</callout>
+</calloutlist>
+
+<para>Desktop Icons</para>
+<programlisting>
+...
+Name[zu]=Ksirc
+MimeType=<co id="co-mimetype"/>
+Exec=ksirc %i %m<co id="co-exec"/>
+Icon=ksirc<co id="co-icon"/>
+TerminalOptions=<co id="co-terminaloptions"/>
+Path=<co id="co-path"/>
+Type=Application<co id="co-type"/>
+Terminal=0<co id="co-terminal"/>
+X-KDE-StartupNotify=true<co id="co-x-kde-startupnotify"/>
+X-DCOP-ServiceType=Multi<co id="co-x-dcop-servicetype"/>
+Categories=Qt;KDE;Network<co id="co-categories"/>
+</programlisting>
+
+<calloutlist>
+<callout arearefs="co-mimetype"><para>Supported &MIME; types, not used on
+desktop</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-exec"><para>The command line to execute</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-icon"><para>The icon, from icon theme or full path</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-terminaloptions"><para>Only used if terminal is
+needed</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-path"><para>Working directory for command</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-type"><para>More boiler plate</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-terminal"><para>Use true if terminal is needed,
+text application</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-x-kde-startupnotify"><para>Show bouncy cursor,
+disable if it doesn't work.</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-x-dcop-servicetype"><para>Has app started ok?
+Remove if it doesn't work</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="co-categories"><para>Categories for &kde; Menu, not
+used on desktop</para>
+</callout>
+</calloutlist>
+
+
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="desktop-icons-exec">
+<title>The <varname>Exec</varname> option in <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> files</title>
+
+<para>Following the command, you can have several place holders which will
+be replaced with the actual values when the actual program is run:
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%f</term> <listitem><para>A single file name; used when dropping
+file on icon, or with file associations.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%F</term>
+<listitem><para>A list of files; use for applications that can
+open several local files at once.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%u</term>
+<listitem><para>A single &URL;: if the app can
+handle &eg; &FTP; or &HTTP; &URL;s itself, otherwise &kde;.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%U</term>
+<listitem><para>A list of
+&URL;s; will download the file first and pass a local file to the app
+(!!)</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%d</term>
+<listitem><para>The folder of the file to open; useful if app needs to
+have file in current working directory.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%D</term>
+<listitem><para>A list of folders, not very practical.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%i</term>
+<listitem><para>The icon; <option>--icon</option> option; &kde; app
+will use icon from <varname>Icon</varname>= line in taskbar.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%m</term>
+<listitem><para>The mini-icon; legacy.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+<varlistentry>
+<term>%c</term>
+<listitem><para>The caption; <option>--caption</option> option; &kde;
+app will use name from <varname>Name</varname>= line in
+taskbar.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+
+</variablelist>
+</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>Examples:
+<segmentedlist>
+<segtitle><varname>Exec</varname> line</segtitle>
+<segtitle>Command executed</segtitle>
+<seglistitem><seg>ksirc %i</seg><seg><command>ksirc --icon ksirc</command></seg>
+</seglistitem>
+<seglistitem><seg>cd %d; kedit $(basename %f)</seg><seg><command>cd /tmp; kedit file.txt</command></seg>
+</seglistitem>
+</segmentedlist>
+</para>
+</informalexample>
+
+<!--Dont' know what this refers to: -->
+<!--See What's This (Shift-F1) in Properties Dialog-->
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="desktop-icons-devices">
+<title>Devices</title>
+<para>
+Links to Devices using <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file:
+o Create New -> Device
+
+</para>
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="where-to-define">
+<title>Where to Define</title>
+
+<para>Many places to define Desktop Icons:
+<itemizedlist>
+
+<listitem><para><filename class="directory">~/Desktop</filename>:
+copied from <filename
+class="directory">/etc/skel/Desktop</filename></para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para><filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/apps/kdesktop/Desktop</filename>
+(merged)</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para><filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/apps/kdesktop/DesktopLinks</filename>
+(copied)</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>Device Icons (dynamically
+merged)</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>Distribution Specific SUSE Linux copies certain icons
+in startkde.theme from <filename
+class="directory">/opt/kde3/share/config/SuSE/default/</filename></para></listitem>
+
+</itemizedlist>
+</para>
+</sect2>
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="kde-menu">
+<title>&kde; Menu</title>
+
+<sect2 id="how-it-works">
+<title>How it Works</title>
+
+<para>In &kde; 3.2 a common menu format is introduced at
+<ulink
+url="http://freedesktop.org/Standards/menu-spec/">http://freedesktop.org/Standards/menu-spec/</ulink></para>
+<para>Before &kde; 3.2:
+<itemizedlist>
+
+<listitem><para>Directory structure under <filename
+class="directory">share/applnk</filename></para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>Directory structure represents menu
+structure</para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>Each <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file
+represents a single application</para></listitem>
+
+</itemizedlist>
+</para>
+
+<para>It was difficult to rearrange the structure in &kde; 3.2 so the
+new menu format:
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>Defines structure in a single .menu file</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Is based on categories</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>is shared between <acronym>GNOME</acronym> and &kde;</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Supports applnk style menus as well</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>Example from <filename>applications.menu</filename>:
+<programlisting>
+<markup>
+ &lt;Menu&gt;
+ &lt;Name&gt;Office&lt;/Name&gt;
+ &lt;Directory&gt;suse-office.directory&lt;/Directory&gt;
+ &lt;Include&gt;
+ &lt;Filename&gt;Acrobat Reader.desktop&lt;/Filename&gt;
+ &lt;Filename&gt;kde-kpresenter.desktop&lt;/Filename&gt;
+ &lt;Filename&gt;kde-kword.desktop&lt;/Filename&gt;
+ &lt;/Include&gt;
+ &lt;Menu&gt;
+</markup>
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+<para>Menu entry with 3 applications:
+<itemizedlist>
+
+<listitem><para><filename>/usr/share/applications/Acrobat
+Reader.desktop</filename></para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para><filename>/opt/kde3/share/applications/kde/kpresenter.desktop</filename></para></listitem>
+
+<listitem><para><filename>/opt/kde3/share/applications/kde/kword.desktop</filename></para></listitem>
+
+</itemizedlist>
+</para>
+</informalexample>
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="stored-where">
+<title>Stored Where?</title>
+
+<para><literal role="extension">.menu</literal> files describing the
+menu structure. The files are stored in <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/etc/xdg/menus</filename> and
+<filename class="directory">/etc/xdg/menus</filename>. These store the
+system-wide menu structure and are controlled by
+$<envar>XDG_CONFIG_DIRS</envar>. <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.config/menus</filename> stores
+user-specific changes to the menu structure and is controlled by
+$<envar>XDG_CONFIG_HOME</envar>. For more information, see <ulink
+url="http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/basedir-spec">http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/basedir-spec</ulink>.</para>
+
+<para><literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> files describe the
+applications and are stored in: <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/applications</filename>,
+<filename class="directory">/usr/share/applications</filename>,
+<filename
+class="directory">/usr/local/share/applications</filename>. These are
+the system-wide application <literal
+role="extension">.desktop</literal> files which are controlled by
+$<envar>XDG_DATA_DIRS</envar>.</para>
+
+<para><filename
+class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.local/applications</filename>
+contains user-specific <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal>
+files and user-specific changes. It is controlled by
+$<envar>XDG_DATA_HOME</envar>. For more information, see <ulink
+url="http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/basedir-spec">http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/basedir-spec</ulink></para>
+
+
+<para><literal role="extension">.directory</literal> files describing
+the sub-menus are stored in: <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/desktop-directories</filename>,
+<filename class="directory">/usr/share/desktop-directories</filename>, <filename
+class="directory">/usr/local/share/desktop-directories</filename>.
+These are the system-wide menu <literal
+role="extension">.directory</literal> files, controlled by
+$<envar>XDG_DATA_DIRS</envar>. The user-specific changes are stored in <filename class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.local/desktop-directories</filename>.
+These are controlled by $<envar>XDG_DATA_HOME</envar>. For more
+information, see <ulink url="http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/basedir-spec">http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/basedir-spec</ulink></para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>Example from <filename>applications.menu</filename>:
+<programlisting>
+<markup>
+ &lt;Menu&gt;
+ &lt;Name&gt;Art&lt;/Name&gt;
+ &lt;Directory&gt;suse-edutainment-art.directory&lt;/Directory&gt;
+ &lt;Include&gt;
+ &lt;Category&gt;X-SuSE-Art&lt;/Category&gt;
+ &lt;/Include&gt;
+ &lt;/Menu&gt;
+</markup>
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+
+<para><literal>Art</literal> is the internal name for this
+menu. <filename>suse-edutainment-art.directory</filename> defines the
+name and icon for this menu, and the menu includes all applications
+that have <literal>X-SuSE-Art</literal> listed as a category, &eg;:
+<programlisting>
+Categories=Qt;KDE;Education;X-SuSE-Art
+</programlisting></para>
+
+<para><filename>suse-edutainment-art.directory</filename> defines the
+name and icon for this menu:
+<programlisting>
+[Desktop Entry]
+Name=Art and Culture
+Icon=kcmsystem
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+</informalexample>
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="common-pitfalls">
+<title>Common Pitfalls</title>
+
+<para>Applications <emphasis>not</emphasis> in the menu do
+<emphasis>not</emphasis> exist with regard to other applications or
+file associations: If you remove an application from the menu, &kde; assumes you don't want to use it.</para>
+
+<para>When applications are unwanted in the menu, either place them in
+<filename>.hidden</filename> menu or a dedicated menu with
+<programlisting>
+NoDisplay=true
+</programlisting> in the <literal
+role="extension">.directory</literal> file</para>
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="essential-menus">
+<title>Essential Menus</title>
+
+<para><filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/etc/xdg/menus/applications-merged/</filename>
+contains <filename>kde-essential.menu</filename> which includes some
+essential menus that are normally not shown in the &kde; menu itself:
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>Control Center has a hidden Settings menu whose
+contents are defined by <filename>kde-settings.menu</filename> and
+whose icon and name are defined by <filename>kde-settings.directory</filename></para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para>Info Center has a hidden Information menu whose
+contents are defined by <filename>kde-information.menu</filename> and
+whose icon and name are defined by <filename>kde-information.directory</filename>.</para>
+</listitem>
+
+<listitem><para>Screensavers contains a hidden System/Screensavers menu,
+whose contents are defined by
+<filename>kde-screensavers.menu</filename> and whose icon and name
+are defined by
+<filename>kde-system-screensavers.directory</filename>.
+<filename>$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/desktop-directories/kde-system-screensavers.directory</filename>
+contains:
+<programlisting>
+NoDisplay=true
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+</listitem>
+</itemizedlist></para>
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="old-style-menus">
+<title>Old-Style Menus</title>
+
+<para>&kde; continues to support old-style menus that are defined by
+the directory structures in <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/applnk</filename>
+(system wide) and <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/applnk</filename>
+(user specific). This is observed unless the <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file has a <varname>Categories</varname>= line. In that case the categories determine the location in the menu.</para>
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="ksycoca">
+<title><application>KSycoca</application></title>
+<para><application>KSycoca</application> caches menu structure and
+information about all available applications. You can rebuild the
+database with
+<userinput><command>kbuildsycoca</command></userinput>. The database
+which is built lives in <filename
+class="directory">/var/tmp/kdecache-${<envar>USER</envar>}/ksycoca</filename>.
+It is automatically updated by <application>KDED</application>,
+checked during &kde; login, and <application>KDED</application>
+watches for changes while logged in.</para>
+
+<para>To disable watching for changes (since it may hurt over NFS) add
+the following to <filename>kdedrc</filename>:
+<programlisting>
+[General]
+CheckSycoca=false
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+
+<para>To force regeneration, run <userinput><command>touch $<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/services/update_ksycoca</command></userinput>.</para>
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="kmenuedit">
+<title>&kmenuedit;</title>
+
+<para>&kmenuedit; is aimed at a single user setup. Changes to menu
+structure are saved to
+<filename>~/.config/menus/applications-kmenuedit.menu</filename>,
+changes to applications are saved in <filename
+class="directory">~/.local/share/applications/</filename> and changes
+to sub-menus (icon, name) are saved in <filename
+class="directory">~/.local/share/desktop-directories/</filename>. The
+KIOSK Admin Tool uses &kmenuedit; and copies the above changes to
+profile- or system-wide locations.
+</para>
+
+</sect2>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<!-- This section might be redundant. If it isn't, it needs some screenies -->
+<sect1 id="kde-panel">
+<title>&kde; Panel</title>
+
+<para>The &kde; panel is also known as &kicker;. It is modular and
+consists of the following components:
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>Applets</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Application buttons</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Special Buttons</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+</para>
+
+<para>By default, the panel contains the following applets:
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>Pager - shows the virtual desktops</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Taskbar</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>System Tray</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Clock</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+and the following special buttons:
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>&kde; menu</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Desktop Button</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+</para>
+
+<para>Various application buttons are also added, space permitting:
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>Home Button</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Browser Button</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>KMail Button</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+</para>
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="file-associations">
+<title>File Associations</title>
+
+<para>File associations associate a file type with an application or
+applications. The type of a file is established by determining its
+&MIME; type. &MIME; types known by &kde; are stored in <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/mimelnk</filename> and
+each application's <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file
+contains a list of &MIME; types supported by that application.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para><filename>kview.desktop</filename>:
+<programlisting>
+MimeType=image/gif;image/x-xpm;image/x-xbm;image/jpeg;
+image/x-bmp;image/png;image/x-ico;image/x-portable-bitmap;
+image/x-portable-pixmap;image/x-portable-greymap;
+image/tiff;image/jp2
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+
+<para><filename>kuickshow.desktop</filename>:
+<programlisting>
+MimeType=image/gif;image/x-xpm;image/x-xbm;image/jpeg;
+image/png;image/tiff;image/x-bmp;image/x-psd;image/x-eim;
+image/x-portable-bitmap;image/x-portable-pixmap;
+image/x-portable-greymap
+</programlisting>
+</para>
+
+<para>Both can open image/gif Which one is used to open a <literal role="extension">.gif</literal> file?</para>
+
+<para>The application with highest
+preference!. <filename>kview.desktop</filename> contains
+<programlisting>
+InitialPreference=3
+</programlisting>
+whereas <filename>kuickshow.desktop</filename> contains
+<programlisting>
+InitialPreference=6
+</programlisting>
+Therefore, &kuickshow; will be used to open <literal
+role="extension">.gif</literal> files.
+</para>
+
+<para>How can we make &kview; default?</para>
+
+<para>A user can change file association in the
+&kcontrolcenter;. These changes are stored in
+<filename>$<envar>HOME</envar>/.kde/share/config/profilerc</filename>.
+To use the same settings for multiple users, store these settings in
+user profile directory or the global &kde; config directory to use as
+default for multiple users.</para>
+
+</informalexample>
+
+</sect1>
+
+</chapter>
+
+<chapter id="locking-down-kde">
+<title>Locking Down &kde;</title>
+
+<sect1 id="how-it-works-the-basics">
+<title>How It Works - The Basics</title>
+
+<para>&kde;'s lock down features are centered around the following
+options:</para>
+
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para><link linkend="immutable-configuration-options">Make
+configuration options immutable</link></para></listitem>
+<listitem><para><link linkend="action-restrictions">Restriction of specific
+actions</link></para></listitem>
+<listitem><para><link linkend="url-restrictions">Restrict access to certain
+&URL;s</link></para></listitem>
+<listitem><para><link linkend="configuration-modules">Restrict access to
+certain configuration modules</link></para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="immutable-configuration-options">
+<title>Immutable Configuration Options</title>
+<subtitle>Locking Down &kde;</subtitle>
+
+<para>Immutable options allow system administrator to provide default
+settings that can not be changed by the user.</para>
+
+<para>Pre-existing configuration options of the user will be ignored once a
+configuration option is made immutable.</para>
+
+<para>Options can be controlled either on a per entry basis, per group of
+entries or on a file by file basis.</para>
+
+<para>If a file or group is immutable, all configuration options for that
+file or group are immutable, even those options for which the system
+administrator has no default provided.</para>
+
+<note><para>The support in applications for immutable options may vary from
+application to application. Although the user will not be able to make
+permanent changes to immutable configuration options, the user may still be
+presented with an user interface option to make such change.</para></note>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="action-restrictions">
+<title>Action Restrictions</title>
+
+<para>&kde; applications are built around the action-concept. Actions can be
+activated in various ways, typically via the menu-bar, one of the toolbars
+or a keyboard shortcut. <action>Save Document</action> is an example of an
+action. If you know the internal action name it is possible to restrict an
+action. When an action is restricted it will no longer appear in the
+menu-bar or toolbar. The internal name for the <action>Save
+Document</action> action is <option>action/file_save</option>. The lock
+down framework also provides a set of more abstract restrictions which can
+be used to disable functionality not covered by a single action. An example
+is the <option>shell_access</option> restriction which disables all
+functionality that would offer the user access to a &UNIX; shell.</para>
+
+<example>
+<title>Restrict User Access to Shells</title>
+
+<para>In order to prevent the user access to a command shell we can restrict
+the <option>shell_access</option> action by adding the following to
+<filename>kdeglobals</filename>:
+</para>
+
+<screen>[KDE Action Restrictions]
+shell_access=false</screen>
+
+<para>Since this affects the &kde; menu and the available applications, we
+must force an update of the sycoca database:</para>
+
+<screen><userinput><command>touch</command> <filename>$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/services/update_ksycoca</filename></userinput></screen>
+
+<para>Now re-login to &kde; and check the following points:</para>
+
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>The &kmenu;</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>In &konqueror;,
+<menuchoice><guimenu>Tools</guimenu><guimenuitem>Open
+Terminal</guimenuitem></menuchoice></para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>The <keycombo
+action="simul">&Alt;<keycap>F2</keycap></keycombo> run
+command</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+</example>
+<para>Full documentation about available actions can be found on <ulink
+url="http://www.kde.org/areas/sysadmin/">http://www.kde.org/areas/sysadmin/</ulink>.</para>
+
+<para>A few of the more interesting actions are listed below:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>action/options_configure</option></term>
+<listitem><para>The <guimenuitem>Configure</guimenuitem> option form the
+<guimenu>Settings</guimenu> menu</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>action/help_report_bug</option></term>
+<listitem><para>The <guimenuitem>Report Bug</guimenuitem> option from the
+<guimenu>Help</guimenu> menu.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>action/kdesktop_rmb</option></term>
+<listitem><para>&RMB; mouse button menu on the desktop.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>action/kicker_rmb</option></term>
+<listitem><para>&RMB; mouse button menu on the panel.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>user/root</option></term>
+<listitem><para>Hide all actions or applications that require <systemitem
+class="username">root</systemitem> access.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>shell_access</option></term>
+<listitem><para>Hides all actions or applications that provide shell
+access.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>print/system</option></term>
+<listitem><para>Disables the option to select the printing system
+(backend).</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>lock_screen</option></term>
+<listitem><para>Whether the user will be able to lock the
+screen</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>start_new_session</option></term>
+<listitem><para>Whether the user may start a second X session (see also
+&kdm;)</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>opengl_screensavers</option></term>
+<listitem><para>Whether OpenGL screensavers are allowed to be
+used.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>manipulatescreen_screensavers</option></term>
+<listitem><para>Permit screensavers that do not hide the entire
+screen</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="url-restrictions">
+<title>&URL; Restrictions</title>
+
+<para>There are three types of restrictions that can be applied to
+&URL;s:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term>list</term>
+<listitem><para>To control whether a directory listing is
+allowed.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term>open</term>
+<listitem><para>To control whether certain &URL;s can be
+opened</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term>Redirect</term>
+<listitem><para>To control whether one &URL; can open another &URL;, either
+automatically or via a hyperlink.</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+<para>Rules are checked in the order in which they are defined. The last
+rule that is applicable to a &URL; defines whether the &URL; may be
+accessed.</para>
+
+<para>The following rules disable opening http and https &URL;s outside
+<systemitem class="domainname">.ourcompany.com</systemitem>:</para>
+
+<screenco><areaspec>
+<area id="url_commas" coords="3"/>
+<area id="url_rule1" coords="3"/>
+<area id="url_rule2" coords="4"/>
+</areaspec>
+<screen>[KDE URL Restrictions]
+rule_count=2
+rule_1=open,,,,http,,,false
+rule_2=open,,,,http,*.ourcompany.com,,true</screen></screenco>
+
+<calloutlist>
+<callout arearefs="url_commas">
+<para>The first four commas skip over the selection criteria with respect to
+the originating &URL;. This part is only needed with redirect type
+rules.</para>
+</callout>
+<callout arearefs="url_rule1"><para><option>rule_1</option> forbids the
+opening of any http or https &URL;</para></callout>
+<callout arearefs="url_rule2"><para><option>rule_2</option> allows the
+opening of any http and https &URL; in the <systemitem
+class="domainname">.ourcompany.com</systemitem> domain. Note the wildcard
+<token>*</token> is only allowed at the start of a domain.</para></callout>
+</calloutlist>
+
+<para>The following rules makes that the user can no longer browse
+directories on the local file system that are outside his
+$<envar>HOME</envar> directory:</para>
+
+<screenco><areaspec>
+<area id="home_rule1" coords="3"/>
+<area id="home_rule2" coords="4"/>
+</areaspec>
+<screen>[KDE URL Restrictions]
+rule_count=2
+rule_1=list,,,,file,,,false
+rule_2=list,,,,file,,$HOME,true</screen></screenco>
+
+<calloutlist>
+<callout arearefs="home_rule1"><para><option>rule_1</option> forbids the
+listing of any local directory</para></callout>
+<callout arearefs="home_rule2"><para><option>rule_2</option> allows listing
+directories under the users own $<envar>HOME</envar>
+directory.</para></callout>
+</calloutlist>
+
+<para>$<envar>HOME</envar> and $<envar>TMP</envar> are special values to
+indicate the users home directory and the &kde; temporary directory of the
+user, &eg; <filename class="directory">/tmp/kde-bastian</filename></para>
+
+<para>The following rules makes that the user can no longer open local files
+that are outside his $<envar>HOME</envar> directory:</para>
+
+<screenco><areaspec>
+<area id="local_rule1" coords="3"/>
+<area id="local_rule2" coords="4"/>
+<area id="local_rule3" coords="5"/>
+</areaspec>
+<screen>[KDE URL Restrictions]
+rule_count=3
+rule_1=open,,,,file,,,false
+rule_2=open,,,,file,,$HOME,true
+rule_3=open,,,,file,,$TMP,true</screen></screenco>
+
+<calloutlist>
+<callout arearefs="local_rule1"><para><option>rule_1</option> forbids the
+opening of any local file</para></callout>
+<callout arearefs="local_rule2"><para><option>rule_2</option> allows opening
+files under the users own $<envar>HOME</envar> directory.</para></callout>
+<callout arearefs="local_rule3"><para><option>rule_3</option> allows opening
+files in the &kde; temporary directory of the user. This is needed by
+certain &kde; applications that first download a file or document to the
+temporary directory and then open it in an application.</para></callout>
+</calloutlist>
+
+
+<para>The redirection option controls whether documents from a certain
+location can refer, either automatically or manually via a hyperlink, to a
+certain other location. A set of default rules is present as a general
+security measure. For example documents located on the Internet may not
+refer to locally stored documents.</para>
+
+<para>For example, if we want to give the intranet-server <systemitem
+class="systemname">www.mycompany.com</systemitem> the possibility to refer
+to local files we could add the following rule:</para>
+
+<screen>[KDE URL Restrictions]
+rule_count=1
+rule_1=redirect,http,www.mycompany.com,,file,,,true</screen>
+
+<para>Instead of listing a protocol by name, it is also possible to specify
+a whole group of protocols. For that the following groups have been
+defined:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term>:local</term>
+<listitem><para>Protocols that access locally stored information, examples
+are file:/, man:/, fonts:/, floppy:/</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term>:internet</term>
+<listitem><para>Common internet protocols such as http and
+ftp</para></listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+<para>Information about protocols is stored in <literal
+role="extension">*.protocol</literal> files stored in
+<filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/services</filename>.</para>
+
+<para>The <option>Class</option>= entry defines the group a protocol is part
+of:
+<userinput><command>grep</command> <option>Class=</option>
+<filename>$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/services/*.protocol</filename></userinput></para>
+
+<para>General rules:</para>
+
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para>The :local protocols may refer to any other
+protocol</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>It's always allowed to refer to an :internet
+protocol</para></listitem>
+<listitem><para>Not all protocols are part of a group, fish:/ for
+example.</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="configuration-modules">
+<title>Configuration Modules</title>
+
+<para>&kde; has configuration modules to configure various aspects of the
+&kde; environment. Configuration modules appear in the Control Center, in the
+Configuration dialog of an application or in both.</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<para>The proxy configuration module appears in the Control Center but also
+as part of the <guilabel>Configure Konqueror</guilabel> dialog in
+&konqueror;</para>
+
+<para>Individual configuration modules can be started with
+<command>kcmshell</command> <replaceable>module</replaceable></para>
+
+<para>To start the Proxy module use:</para>
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem><para><command>kcmshell</command>
+<filename>kde-proxy.desktop</filename></para></listitem>
+<listitem><para><command>kcmshell</command> proxy</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+<para><note><para>Not all applications use configuration modules, often the
+configuration dialog is an integral part of the application
+itself.</para></note></para>
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>All configuration modules are strictly speaking part of the &kde;
+menu.</para>
+
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem>
+<para>The modules that are visible in the Control Center normally
+have a <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file in <filename
+class="directory">$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/applications/kde</filename>
+and are sorted under the hidden <guimenu>Settings-Modules</guimenu> menu by
+the <filename>kde-settings.menu</filename>, included from
+<filename>kde-essential.menu</filename></para>
+<screen><userinput><command>kbuildsycoca</command> <option>--menutest</option> 2&gt; /dev/null | <command>grep</command> Settings-Modules</userinput></screen>
+</listitem>
+<listitem>
+<para>Application specific modules normally have a <literal role="extension">.desktop</literal> file under
+<filename>$<envar>KDEDIR</envar>/share/applnk/.hidden</filename> which
+corresponds to the hidden .hidden menu, included as a result of
+<markup>&lt;KDELegacyDirs/&gt;</markup></para>
+<screen><userinput><command>kbuildsycoca</command> <option>--menutest</option> 2&gt; /dev/null | <command>grep</command> .hidden</userinput></screen>
+</listitem>
+<listitem><para>In &kde; 3.3 it is possible to edit the Control Center with
+<application>kcontroledit</application>.
+<application>kcontroledit</application> works just like
+<application>kmenuedit</application>, changes for current user only. Use
+<application>kiosktool</application> to make changes for
+everyone.</para></listitem>
+</itemizedlist>
+
+<para>Individual configuration modules can be disables by adding the
+following to <filename>kdeglobals</filename>:</para>
+
+<screen>[KDE Control Module Restrictions]
+<replaceable>module-id</replaceable>=false</screen>
+<para>For example, to disable the proxy module use</para>
+<screen>[KDE Control Module Restrictions]
+kde-proxy.desktop=false</screen>
+<para>Check the Control Center and the <guilabel>Configure
+Konqueror</guilabel> dialog if the proxy configuration is still
+there.</para>
+
+</sect1>
+<!--
+<sect1 id="making-it-work">
+<title>Making it Work</title>
+
+Making It Work
+KDE 3.2: Set $KDEDIRS from startkde script
+Distribute profiles to all clients
+
+</para>
+</sect1>
+-->
+</chapter>
+
+<chapter id="the-lazy-admin">
+<title>The Lazy Admin</title>
+
+<!-- This section appears to need quite a lot of additional words to -->
+<!-- make sense. Perhaps it would be better to comment it out if it -->
+<!-- can't be updated before the next release (Phil) -->
+<!-- FIXME: Commented it out until it's got some more content fleshing it -->
+<!-- out (Lauri)
+
+<sect1 id="lazy-admin-overview">
+<title>Overview</title>
+
+<para>
+The Lazy Admin
+Overview
+Deployment
+ How to get &kde; available on many clients
+Remote Desktop Sharing
+Take a look at someone else desktop
+DCOP
+ The DCOP command line tool makes it possible to control &kde; applications from the command line
+KDialog
+ A versatile tool to use standard &kde; dialogs in your own scripts
+
+
+
+Deployment
+Thin Clients
+Installing Software
+= AutoYaST
+= KickStart
+Maintaining Settings
+= /etc/kderc, other settings
+= Use rsync to copy files around
+= Shared filesystem such as NFS
+o store profiles themselves on NFS
+
+
+
+http://www.suse.de/~nashif/autoinstall/index.html
+
+</para>
+</sect1>
+-->
+<sect1 id="remote-desktop-sharing">
+<title>Remote Desktop Sharing</title>
+
+<para>Remote desktop sharing allows remote users to view and optionally
+control the desktop of the current user. The remote user needs to be sent
+an invitation, and it is possible to create a password protected standing
+invitation. This is ideal for tech support teams or administrators to gain
+access to users desktops in order to troubleshoot or remedy a problem or
+guide a user through a procedure.</para>
+
+<para>Remote desktop sharing involves two applications: &krfb; (&kde; remote
+frame buffer, a VNC server) and &krdc; (&kde; remote desktop connection; a
+VNC client.)</para>
+
+<para>&krfb; can be used by any user to create and manage invitations.
+Invitations create a one time password that allows the recipient to connect
+to your desktop. By default it is valid for only one successful connection,
+and expires after one hour if not used.</para>
+
+<para>Incoming connections are handled by the kinetd kded module. You can
+use the command <userinput><command>dcop</command> kded kinetd
+services</userinput> to see if it is running. &krfb; waits for connections
+on port 5900 by default. When an incoming connection is made, a dialog will
+appear to ask for confirmation by the current user.</para>
+
+<!-- TODO: Write a bit more here, with a walk through maybe? -->
+
+</sect1>
+
+<sect1 id="kde-diy">
+<title>&kde; DIY - Building Your Own Tools</title>
+
+<sect2 id="dcop">
+<title>DCOP</title>
+
+<para>
+Desktop COmmunication Protocol, <acronym>DCOP</acronym>, is a lightweight mechanism for inter-process communication.
+<acronym>DCOP</acronym> allows the user to interact with programs that are currently running.
+&kde; supplies two programs to utilitize <acronym>DCOP</acronym>:
+<application>dcop</application>, a command-line program, and
+<application>kdcop</application>, a <acronym>GUI</acronym> program.
+</para>
+<para>
+A few notes about using <command>dcop</command>:
+</para>
+
+<para>
+<itemizedlist>
+<listitem>
+<para>
+<command>dcop</command> [options] [application [object [function [arg1] [arg2] ... ] ] ]
+</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem>
+<para>
+Applications that can open more than one window at a time will be listed as
+&lt;application&gt;-<acronym>PID</acronym>
+</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem>
+<para>
+All the arguments are case-sensitve. setFullScreen and setfullscreen are two different functions.
+</para>
+</listitem>
+<listitem>
+<para>
+The regular expression token * can be used in the application and object arguments.
+<screen><prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>dcop</command><option> kon*</option></userinput>
+konqueror-16006
+konsole-8954
+</screen>
+</para>
+</listitem>
+
+</itemizedlist>
+
+</para>
+
+<para>Some example commands and their output are below:
+</para>
+
+<informalexample>
+<screen><prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>dcop</command><option> konsole*</option></userinput>
+konsole-8954
+</screen>
+<para>One &konsole; is running with a <acronym>PID</acronym> of 8954.</para>
+
+<screen><prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>dcop</command><option> konsole-8954</option></userinput>
+KBookmarkManager-.../share/apps/kfile/bookmarks.xml
+KBookmarkManager-.../share/apps/konqueror/bookmarks.xml
+KBookmarkNotifier
+KDebug
+MainApplication-Interface
+konsole (default)
+konsole-mainwindow#1
+ksycoca
+session-1
+session-2
+session-3
+session-4
+</screen>
+<para>Here you see that there are four sessions running.</para>
+
+<screen><prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>dcop</command><option> konsole-8954</option><option> konsole</option></userinput>
+QCStringList interfaces()
+QCStringList functions()
+int sessionCount()
+QString currentSession()
+QString newSession()
+QString newSession(QString type)
+QString sessionId(int position)
+void activateSession(QString sessionId)
+void nextSession()
+void prevSession()
+void moveSessionLeft()
+void moveSessionRight()
+bool fullScreen()
+void setFullScreen(bool on)
+ASYNC reparseConfiguration()
+</screen>
+<para>Here are the options for the main &konsole; program.
+</para>
+
+<screen><prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>dcop</command><option> konsole-8954</option><option> session-1</option></userinput>
+QCStringList interfaces()
+QCStringList functions()
+bool closeSession()
+bool sendSignal(int signal)
+void clearHistory()
+void renameSession(QString name)
+QString sessionName()
+int sessionPID()
+QString schema()
+void setSchema(QString schema)
+QString encoding()
+void setEncoding(QString encoding)
+QString keytab()
+void setKeytab(QString keyboard)
+QSize size()
+void setSize(QSize size)
+</screen>
+<para>Here are the options for the first session, session-1.</para>
+
+<screen><prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>dcop</command><option> konsole-8954</option><option> konsole</option><option> setFullScreen</option><parameter> true</parameter></userinput>
+</screen>
+<para>This sets &konsole; to full screen.</para>
+
+</informalexample>
+
+<para>
+When there is more than one application/object, which one should you use?
+ Got a reference?
+</para>
+<screen><prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>echo</command><option> $KONSOLE_DCOP</option></userinput>
+DCOPRef(konsole-7547,konsole)
+
+<prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>dcop</command><option> $KONSOLE_DCOP</option><option> newSession</option></userinput>
+session-6
+
+<prompt>&percnt; </prompt><userinput><command>dcopstart</command><option> konsole</option></userinput>
+konsole-9058
+
+
+#!/bin/sh
+konsole=$(dcopstart konsole-script)
+session=$(dcop $konsole konsole currentSession)
+dcop $konsole $session renameSession Local
+
+session=$(dcop $konsole konsole newSession)
+dcop $konsole $session renameSession Remote
+
+session=$(dcop $konsole konsole newSession)
+dcop $konsole $session renameSession Code
+dcop $konsole $session sendSession 'cd /my/work/directory'
+
+</screen>
+
+</sect2>
+
+<sect2 id="kdialog">
+<title>KDialog</title>
+<subtitle>&kde; DIY - Building Your Own Tools</subtitle>
+
+<para>You can use &kde; dialogs from your own scripts, to combine the power
+of &UNIX; shell scripting with the ease of use of &kde;.</para>
+
+<screen><userinput><command>kdialog</command> <option>--msgbox 'You have new mail!'</option></userinput></screen>
+
+<screen><userinput><command>kdialog</command> <option>--title 'New Mail'</option> <option>--msgbox 'You have new mail!'</option></userinput></screen>
+
+<para>The <application>KDialog</application> part can be replaced via
+<option>--caption</option> option</para>
+
+<screen><userinput><command>kdialog</command> <option>--title 'New Mail'</option> <option>--msgbox 'You have new mail!'</option> <option>--dontagain myfile:mykey</option></userinput></screen>
+
+<para>Saves whether to show again in
+<filename>$<envar>KDEHOME</envar>/share/config/myfile</filename> (by writing
+into this file the following lines:</para>
+
+<screen>[Notification Messages]
+mykey=false</screen>
+
+<para>Instead of <option>--msgbox</option> you can also use
+<option>--sorry</option> and <option>--error</option>, as appropriate. For
+instance, you might use <command>kdialog</command> <option>--sorry 'The
+network can not be reached'</option> or <command>kdialog</command>
+<option>--error 'Mail box can not be opened'</option>.</para>
+
+<para>It is also possible to create message boxes that accept a yes or no
+answer.</para>
+
+<screen><command>kdialog</command> <option>--yesno 'Do you want to connect
+to the Internet?'</option> <command>echo</command> <returnvalue>$?</returnvalue></screen>
+
+<informaltable>
+<tgroup cols="2">
+<thead>
+<row>
+<entry>Return Value</entry>
+<entry>Meaning</entry>
+</row>
+</thead>
+<tbody>
+<row><entry>0</entry><entry>Yes, OK, Continue</entry></row>
+<row><entry>1</entry><entry>No</entry></row>
+<row><entry>2</entry><entry>Cancel</entry></row>
+</tbody>
+</tgroup>
+</informaltable>
+
+<para>Make sure to store the result in a variable if you do not use it
+directly, the next command will fill $? with a new value You can use
+<option>--dontagain</option> here as well, it will remember the users choice
+and returns it the next times without showing the dialog any more.</para>
+
+<para>Further variations are:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>--warningyesno</option></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>like <option>--yesno</option> but with a different
+icon</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>--warningcontinuecancel</option></term>
+<listitem><para>With <guibutton>Continue</guibutton> and
+<guibutton>Cancel</guibutton> buttons.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>--warningyesnocancel</option></term>
+<listitem><para>With <guibutton>Yes</guibutton>, <guibutton>No</guibutton>
+and <guibutton>Cancel</guibutton> button. For example:</para>
+<screen><command>kdialog</command> <option>--warningyesnocancel 'Do you want
+to save the changes?'</option></screen>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+<screen><command>kdialog</command> <option>--inputbox "Enter your name:" "YourName"</option></screen>
+
+<para>The result is printed to stdout, to put it in a variable you can use
+<userinput>name=$(kdialog --inputbox "Enter your name:"
+"YourName")</userinput>. The last argument is optional, it is used to
+pre-fill the dialog.</para>
+
+<screen><userinput><varname>password</varname>=$(<command>kdialog</command> <option>--password "Enter your password:"</option>)</userinput></screen>
+
+<para>The <option>--dontagain</option> option does not work with
+<option>--inputbox</option> or <option>--password</option></para>
+
+<para>There are two dialogs that let the user make a choice from a
+list:</para>
+
+<variablelist>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>--menu</option></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>Lets the user select a single item from a list.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+<varlistentry>
+<term><option>--checklist</option></term>
+<listitem>
+<para>Lets the user select one or more items from a list.</para>
+</listitem>
+</varlistentry>
+</variablelist>
+
+<screen><userinput><varname>city</varname>=$(<command>kdialog</command> <option>--menu "Select a city" a London b Madrid c Paris d Berlin</option>)</userinput></screen>
+
+<para><varname>$city</varname> will <returnvalue>a</returnvalue>, <returnvalue>b</returnvalue>, <returnvalue>c</returnvalue> or <returnvalue>d</returnvalue>.</para>
+
+<screen><userinput><varname>city</varname>=$(<command>kdialog</command> <option>--checklist "Select cities" a London off b Madrid on c Paris on d Berlin off</option>)</userinput></screen>
+
+<para>Madrid and Paris will be pre-selected. The result with Madrid and
+Paris selected will be <returnvalue>"b"</returnvalue>
+<returnvalue>"c"</returnvalue>.</para>
+
+<para>If you add the <option>--separate-output</option> option, it will put
+<returnvalue>b</returnvalue> and <returnvalue>c</returnvalue> each on a line
+of its own, making the result easier to process.</para>
+
+<screen>file=$(kdialog --getopenfilename $HOME)
+file=$(kdialog --getopenfilename $HOME "*.png *.jpg|Image Files")
+file=$(kdialog --getsavefilename $HOME/SaveMe.png)
+file=$(kdialog --getexistingdirectory $HOME)</screen>
+
+</sect2>
+
+</sect1>
+
+</chapter>
+
+&groupware-with-kontact;
+
+</part>
+
+<!-- Keep this comment at the end of the file
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