Date: Sun, 17 Mar 1996 00:11:14 +0800 (GMT+0800) From: "Miguel A.L. Paraz" <map@iphil.net> To: jgreco@brasil.moneng.mei.com (Joe Greco) Cc: freebsd-isp@freebsd.org Subject: Re: csh hanging around after disconnect Message-ID: <199603161611.AAA07898@marikit.iphil.net> In-Reply-To: <199603161548.JAA24225@brasil.moneng.mei.com> from "Joe Greco" at Mar 16, 96 09:48:32 am
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I wrote:
> > How is this done? Is this a separate daemon, or an option to compile
> > in these daemons?
Joe Greco wrote:
> It's something that doesn't exist but would be implemented by adding a
> little code to all the networking daemons. Particularly the daemons without
> timeouts..
Looks like a bigger task than it should be. Perhaps this should
be more configurable... or compilable with a #define, ISP -
"define -DISP if you're running the daemons on an ISP machine."
The effect is the machine runs out of ptys. I would want to
install that, but this is a client machine that runs remotely,
and I don't want to take chances unless I'm on-site.
> > Another way - can we looked through the logged in users at regular
> > intervals and find out who's disconnected? You could compare this
> > against the list of logged in users ('show sessions'), but
> > we'd have to differentiate from users who are telnetted in from
> > somewhere else...
> No, that gets to be very difficult very quickly.
Yes... is there any other way?
On another client box, a Linux machine that did the PPP by itself,
I made a script that kills all user processes when the user logs out.
Drastic... but stray user processes were screwing up the
accounting.
--
miguel a.l. paraz <map@iphil.net> iphil communications, makati, philippines
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