Summary: | font & keytab problems with saved ssh sessions | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | [Applications] konsole | Reporter: | richlv |
Component: | general | Assignee: | Konsole Developer <konsole-devel> |
Status: | RESOLVED WORKSFORME | ||
Severity: | normal | ||
Priority: | NOR | ||
Version: | 1.5 | ||
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Platform: | unspecified | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Latest Commit: | Version Fixed In: | ||
Attachments: | borked console |
Description
richlv
2005-08-04 12:46:09 UTC
ping. i can still reproduce this with 3.5.1 any ideas ? I am not able to reproduce this here. Could you provide a screenshot of what you are seeing? Created attachment 19560 [details]
borked console
well, i don't know how much screenshot will help, but here it is :)
of course, i can't make a screenshot of F keys not working ;)
this is a screenshot of a bash session having a command "ssh localhost" (i also
tried "bash -c 'ssh localhost'" and others).
encoding and keyboard both are set to the same settings as when manually
ssh-ing to localhost (and everything works ok).
'locale' output is identical in both cases.
Can you try a couple of things: Run execute " konsole -e ssh <machine> " from the commandline and compare with the display shown by " xterm -e ssh <machine> " and let me know if the output is different. Please also try changing the character encoding via the Encoding menu ( Settings -> Encoding ) and see if that makes any difference. "konsole -e ssh localhost" works fine, symbols are displayed ok, function keys work. "xterm -e ssh localhost" also works just fine. when i have a session created from within settings->configure konsole "session" tab, this session has display garbled and function keys not working. i've tried setting encoding to iso-8859-1, iso-8859-13 and utf-8., this makes no difference for the display. just as for simple ssh or "konsole -e ssh localhost" sessions, keytab is set to xfree 4 one. (kde 3.5.4 currently, as slackware does not have latest kde packaged yet). Any changes in recent Konsole versions (either KDE 3 or KDE 4)? ah, it seems that actually the problem was my inability to find where to set TERM for saved profiles... i now edited the saved profile files and manually changed TermN values from "linux" to "xterm", and terminals now work as expected. though i still see no way to change these values other than editing the config file directly, i'm glad i finally can use profiles =) > though i still see no way to change these values other than editing the config file directly, i'm glad i finally can use profiles =)
settings->edit current profile, look for the 'edit environment' button ("general" tab, it's below the big 'change icon' button)
"settings->edit current profile" - there's no such entry, at least in kde 3.5.9... Ah, I thought you were looking at KDE4 :-). I forget where exactly it is for KDE3 (I no longer have KDE3 running anywhere to check), but I'm pretty sure I remember it being there (I always changed the terminal type to "linux"). it can be set for a particular session in settings->configure konsole->session, but as far as i remember from my extensive testing, this setting never propogated to saved profiles... |