Hello Currently i'm using AIX 4.3.3. I've installed OpenSSH version 2.9p1 which by the way works with the way ive hacked it together to get X Displays working correctly. I can ssh into the system as myself export my display back no problem. I can ssh to a system as myself and ( su - userid ) and export my display back but i had to hack this together in order to get it to work. I had to copy "echo $display" setting and alias it to the su command when su'ing to another user in order for this to work. Since the verion of openssh 3.4 and above came i cant seem to ( so far ) hack this together to get this working. Not sure if the preveldge separation had anything to do with this or not. I have noticed that on Redhat this isnt an issue, displays are able to be settup correctly no matter how many times you su to different userid's the display can be issued back to your desktop. Have you noticed this on AIX ? Do you know of a way to correct this on AIX ? Is there anything more i can do ? I've even got IBM working on this since they now are providing support for OpenSSH but they are having problems figuring this out as well ! What ive done to make this work on AIX This is only working with version openssh 2.9p1 and below. 1) all users .profile ive added in these 2 lines. ############################## # This will setup our displays ############################## . /usr/local/bin/setdisp.ksh . /usr/local/bin/generic_alias 2) Contents of setdisp.ksh ############################################################# # # script: setdisp.ksh # # purpose: to set the display variable on login # ############################################################# # # Check if su, see if /tmp/ldisp for same date,time # DFILE=/tmp/ldisp if [ ${DISPLAY:-0} = "0" ] ; then cdate=`date +"%h%d%H:%M"` fdate=`ls -l $DFILE|awk '{print $6$7$8}'` if [ $cdate = $fdate ] ; then xauth add `cat $DFILE` export DISPLAY=`cat $DFILE | awk '{print $1}'` echo "" > $DFILE fi fi 3) Contents of generic_alias alias su="xauth list | sed -n '1,1 p' > /tmp/ldisp;chmod 666 /tmp/ldisp 2>/dev/null; /usr/bin/su" Once you log in as your userid, you can now ( su - user ) and still be able to bring back X Displays just fine. But i dont think this is normal ! Thanks for your time Steven Steven Bishop Telus Enterprise Solutions Systems Analyst (604) 432-2986 Steven.Bishop at telus.com