Re: Login Logs

1997-03-13 Thread Graeme Stewart
"St. Johns Computer Center" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > How do you view the log of the past logins? > > > > St. Johns Computer Center > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > `last' should do the trick. `last ' for a specific user. Graeme -- | Graeme A Stewart, pgp public key finger [EMAIL PROTECTED]

RE: Login Logs

1997-03-13 Thread Peter Iannarelli
Use the last command. For example last -100 will give you the last 100 logins. -- St. Johns Computer Center wrote How do you view the log of the past logins? St. Johns Computer Center [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Login Logs

1997-03-13 Thread St. Johns Computer Center
How do you view the log of the past logins? St. Johns Computer Center [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: New login logs everybody

1997-01-11 Thread Guy Maor
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Mathieu GUILLAUME) writes: > Hi. It seems the latest login package now puts every login process in > /var/log/auth.log, instead of the former root logins, su and login > failures. Is there any way to revert to the former behavior without > having to revert to the former package

New login logs everybody

1997-01-10 Thread Mathieu GUILLAUME
Hi. It seems the latest login package now puts every login process in /var/log/auth.log, instead of the former root logins, su and login failures. Is there any way to revert to the former behavior without having to revert to the former package ? If so , which one ?