However, I don't think I explicitly chosed this package during my
initial installation and the recent update. I had no idea what the
autolog does before yesterday.
regards
xiaonan
On Mon, 27 Jul 1998, Troy wrote:
> It is in Extra/Admin, so it shouldn't be installed automatically.
>
> If it is
It is in Extra/Admin, so it shouldn't be installed automatically.
If it is, the package name is autolog.
later,
troy
Troy Hanson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.dakota.net/~troy
George Bonser wrote:
>
> On Mon, 27 Jul 1998, Xiaonan Ma wrote:
>
> >
> > That's it. Now it has stopped killing. Thank
That's it. Now it has stopped killing. Thanks for all your help.
regards
xiaonan
On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, Troy wrote:
> /etc/autolog.conf:
> # Enter a regular expression for the username, group and tty line.
> # All three expressions must be matched before the rest of the line
> will
> # be applied
/etc/autolog.conf:
# Enter a regular expression for the username, group and tty line.
# All three expressions must be matched before the rest of the line
will
# be applied to any process. If the process has been idle (or
connected)
# more than "idle" minutes, autolog will attempt to kill the
proce
I am using tcsh, and I put "unset autologout" in to /etc/csh.login.
However, my session got killed again just a while ago. Is what I did
for the autologout variable correct? One thing I noticed is that
autologout will log the session out in almost exactly the number of
minutes set by autologout,
*-George Bonser (26 Jul)
| On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, Xiaonan Ma wrote:
|
| > I tried both /proc//cmdline and "ps axw", still can't find idled.
| > Is it possible that some other process is doing it? Looks like it checks
| > every 10 minutes since it logged out at time 13:30, 02:00 ...
| >
| > regards
orge Bonser [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 26. juli 1998 22:53
> To: Eric
> Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: logged out automatically because of excess idle time
>
>
> On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, Eric wrote:
>
> > I don't think that using ps would show y
On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, George Bonser wrote:
> On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, Eric wrote:
>
> > I don't think that using ps would show you if idled is running or not. At
> > least, on my hamm system, I can't find a way to use ps to show me _all_
> > processes (including daemons). I always found this odd,
On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, Eric wrote:
: I don't think that using ps would show you if idled is running or not. At
: least, on my hamm system, I can't find a way to use ps to show me _all_
: processes (including daemons). I always found this odd, since a
: home-grown Linux system that I always use doe
Ah, yes, just figured that out...silly me, those processes don't have
controlling terminals, so ya need 'x' in there. Thanks.
_ _
| |(_)
| _| | |
| |___ | |
|__/ |
|__/
On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, George Bonser wrote:
> On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, Eric wrote:
>
> > I don't think that
I don't think that using ps would show you if idled is running or not. At
least, on my hamm system, I can't find a way to use ps to show me _all_
processes (including daemons). I always found this odd, since a
home-grown Linux system that I always use does show every process when
using 'ps aw' (e
On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, George Bonser wrote:
> On Sun, 26 Jul 1998, Xiaonan Ma wrote:
>
> >
> > After updated the system, now when I logged in and started X,
> > the system always automatically logged me out saying "no keyboard
> > touch for 63 minutes ...", even though I did work under X (look
After updated the system, now when I logged in and started X,
the system always automatically logged me out saying "no keyboard
touch for 63 minutes ...", even though I did work under X (looks like
it only checked the tty which I logged in on). I checked
/var/spool/cron/crontab but didn't find th
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