Yesterday, after installing 12.10, I had the same problem in our office environment. Besides the above workarounds, I also read something about a problem of using gvfs on a nfs mount.
Today I started a brand new installation of 12.10, and activated the LDAP client ( apt-get install ldap-auth-client + auth-client-config -t nss -p lac_ldap) and mounted our NFS disk, containing our homedirs. (So, I didn't try #39)
In a terminal I logged in with a LDAP-user and removed ~/.gvfs. I created /tmp/[username]/gvfs and made a symbolic link from ~/.gvfs to /tmp/[username]/gvfs. With lightdm, I logged in as this LDAP-user without any problems.
(I assume that it is not related to this problem, but I also add /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-floppy.conf containing "blacklist floppy". After a "update-initramfs -u" these annoying "I/O Buffer dev fd0" kernel messages dissapeared)
Yesterday, after installing 12.10, I had the same problem in our office environment. Besides the above workarounds, I also read something about a problem of using gvfs on a nfs mount.
Today I started a brand new installation of 12.10, and activated the LDAP client ( apt-get install ldap-auth-client + auth-client-config -t nss -p lac_ldap) and mounted our NFS disk, containing our homedirs. (So, I didn't try #39)
In a terminal I logged in with a LDAP-user and removed ~/.gvfs. I created /tmp/[username] /gvfs and made a symbolic link from ~/.gvfs to /tmp/[username] /gvfs. With lightdm, I logged in as this LDAP-user without any problems.
(I assume that it is not related to this problem, but I also add /etc/modprobe. d/blacklist- floppy. conf containing "blacklist floppy". After a "update-initramfs -u" these annoying "I/O Buffer dev fd0" kernel messages dissapeared)