Boot leads to guest session (Solved)
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Boot leads to guest session (Solved)
Hello,
I am new to Linux. I am running linuxmint-18.1-cinnamon-64bit on a lenovo T410.
Here is my problem:
When I switch on my computer it automatically opens in a guest session.
I log out of the session and am redirected to the connection window where the only login possible is the administrator one (which I want and select).
But I'm sure there is a way to solve this issue and land directly on the connection window or the admin. session.
Thanks in advance for your help !
I am new to Linux. I am running linuxmint-18.1-cinnamon-64bit on a lenovo T410.
Here is my problem:
When I switch on my computer it automatically opens in a guest session.
I log out of the session and am redirected to the connection window where the only login possible is the administrator one (which I want and select).
But I'm sure there is a way to solve this issue and land directly on the connection window or the admin. session.
Thanks in advance for your help !
Last edited by LockBot on Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 am, edited 2 times in total.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Re: Boot leads to guest session
I cannot follow. Mint 18.1 uses the mdm display manager, which does not have a guest session.
To confirm, what you really have do this:
Open a terminal and enter:
Paste the output here.
To confirm, what you really have do this:
Open a terminal and enter:
Code: Select all
inxi -Szxx
Re: Boot leads to guest session
Hello, thank you for your reply.Cosmo. wrote: ⤴Sat Apr 21, 2018 3:59 pm I cannot follow. Mint 18.1 uses the mdm display manager, which does not have a guest session.
To confirm, what you really have do this:
Open a terminal and enter:Paste the output here.Code: Select all
inxi -Szxx
You were right, I used the command you indicated and I have Mint 18.3
I still have the same problem and I can't seem to find a command that would tell the system to boot on admin.session.
Re: Boot leads to guest session
Open the login screen settings -> users -> enter in the last section our user name. Reboot.
Re: Boot leads to guest session
Thanks for your input.
I opened login session.
Manual connection = enabled
Allow guest to login: disabled
Automatic login: my admin. user ID
I still have the same problem after reboot with these parameters.
I opened login session.
Manual connection = enabled
Allow guest to login: disabled
Automatic login: my admin. user ID
I still have the same problem after reboot with these parameters.
Re: Boot leads to guest session
The first option should not matter, default is off.Julien_Skrobek wrote: ⤴Sun Apr 22, 2018 6:21 am Manual connection = enabled
Allow guest to login: disabled
Automatic login: my admin. user ID
With the second option disabled you should not ne able to enter a guest session. What makes you think, that you are in a guest session?
Regarding the third: Open a terminal and enter
whoami
. Enter the user name exactly, as whoami presents it.Re: Boot leads to guest session
My changes have no durability if I work in the session that opens at boot. In this case, at reboot the session is a clean slate.
If I logout and relog with my user name (which is correct, I tested using the command you indicated) everything is as I left it when I logged out of my previous session.
Re: Boot leads to guest session
What does whoami give in the supposed guest session?
Re: Boot leads to guest session
whoami command gives my admin. user name.
It seems all my changes remain this time, except for the wallpaper of the desk. I have tried multiple times to change it but each time I reboot it goes back to the standard Mint wallpaper.
The rest has durability.
I now believe you are right and there is one single session.
But why do I have to log out and relog to find the changed wallpaper again ?
Admittedly this is a much smaller problem that I first thought, but I still don't understand what goes on at reboot.
Re: Boot leads to guest session
You can bet on it. whoami does not lie.Julien_Skrobek wrote: ⤴Sun Apr 22, 2018 7:32 am I now believe you are right and there is one single session.
The problem is possibly caused by some wrong ownership of files and folders in your whom. To inspect this:
Mark the following command and press ctrl-c
Code: Select all
find $HOME ! -user $USER -type f
Mark the complete result inclusive the command with the mouse and press ctrl-shift-C
In the forum click the Code-button (looks like
</>
) above the text edit box, than press ctrl-v.Report in case, that there is no output.
Re: Boot leads to guest session
OK, your comment made me realize I had not specified that the wallpaper was located on an external drive.
I copied the jpeg into LM image folder and it works fine now, there is permanence.
However, if the problem was really this, it still doesn't explain to me why the wallpaper I chose came back when I logged out/re-logged.
Perhaps the os doesn't have the time to load the external drive at automatic login but logging out/login in gives it time to do it.
But now it works.
I copied the jpeg into LM image folder and it works fine now, there is permanence.
However, if the problem was really this, it still doesn't explain to me why the wallpaper I chose came back when I logged out/re-logged.
Perhaps the os doesn't have the time to load the external drive at automatic login but logging out/login in gives it time to do it.
But now it works.
Re: Boot leads to guest session
You have fond it. Very good.Julien_Skrobek wrote: ⤴Sun Apr 22, 2018 10:25 am Perhaps the os doesn't have the time to load the external drive at automatic login but logging out/login in gives it time to do it.
Re: Boot leads to guest session (Solved)
Thank you Cosmo, you really led me to that conclusion by telling me to check the path