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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Newb here....Someone spying on me? Post 302096440 by andre2000 on Wednesday 15th of November 2006 04:57:38 PM
Old 11-15-2006
Question Newb here....Someone spying on me?

Hey all. I'm brand spankin' new here to the board. I'm also a novice at Unix. I've been using it for about 1 year now but I haven't really expanded my abilities since I learned the basics. I am in school and I mainly just use Unix to submit stuff to assignment directories and use it to compile my programs.

Some weeks ago I logged in remotely (SSH) and after every command I typed it came with some comments, like if I did
% cd somedirectory
there would be a comment afterwards like
% changed directory to somedirectory

if I would do
% tcsh
it would say
% Now running stupid shell tcsh

Ok, I totally understand that there is a whole Unix feud out there amongst Unix users...people make fun of each other for using emacs or worst yet pico or whatever... and also for running certain shells like tcsh. Whatever, tcsh is all I really know and I wish I could learn other things but at the moment it gets the job done. So the comments started I thought it was odd but the last comment convinced me I was being spyed on and some how whomever it was doing that was sending me these messages.

Can anyone care to explain to this newb how someone would go about doing that? And how can I safeguard against being watched like that!?!
 

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PMPOST(1)						      General Commands Manual							 PMPOST(1)

NAME
pmpost - append messages to the Performance Co-Pilot notice board SYNOPSIS
$PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmpost message DESCRIPTION
pmpost will append the text message to the end of the Performance Co-Pilot (PCP) notice board file ($PCP_LOG_DIR/NOTICES) in an atomic man- ner that guards against corruption of the notice board file by concurrent invocations of pmpost. The PCP notice board is intended to be a persistent store and clearing house for important messages relating to the operation of the PCP and the notification of performance alerts from pmie(1) when other notification options are either unavailable or unsuitable. Before being written, messages are prefixed by the current time, and when the current day is different to the last time the notice board file was written, pmpost will prepend the message with the full date. If the notice board file does not exist, pmpost will create it. pmpost would usually run from long-running PCP daemons executing under the (typically unprivileged) $PCP_USER and $PCP_GROUP accounts. The file should be owned by root, and group writable by the $PCP_GROUP group. FILES
$PCP_LOG_DIR/NOTICES the PCP notice board file PCP ENVIRONMENT
The file /etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for PCP_ variables. UNIX SEE ALSO
logger(1). WINDOWS SEE ALSO
pcp-eventlog(1). SEE ALSO
pmie(1), pcp.conf(5) and pcp.env(5). Performance Co-Pilot PCP PMPOST(1)
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