I have put TMOUT=1800;export TMOUT in the /etc/profile, put it does not work, by the way the root default shell is sh. but I wana every one including root to terminate the session after setting idle for 1800 seconds. thank for the help. (1 Reply)
Hi,
Can someone help me how I can disable telnet timeout? I'm connecting remotely to some machines and after some time my telnet connection was closed. How can I disable this so that I'm always connected to those machines? Thanks! (2 Replies)
Hello,
I've searched this forum for telnet idle timeout problem. I tried to set timeout parameters in /etc/profile
readonly TMOUT=10
export TMOUT
This doesn't work for Redhat kernel 2.4.35.4. It's really frustrating.
Can anybody tell me what else I could try?
Thanks a lot!
jing (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jing han
0 Replies
6. Forum Support Area for Unregistered Users & Account Problems
Hello,
I have a busybox with tinylogin. How can I log user out when I found the telnet session is idle for 10 seconds?
I set
TMOUT=10
export TMOUT
in /etc/profile
I found it doesn't work for me.
Can anybody help me?
Thanks a lot!
jing (1 Reply)
Somewhat long story:
I have a simple Perl CGI script that uses Expect to Telnet to a device and grab some data, and then spits it back to Perl for display on the Webpage.
This works for many devices I've tried, but one device just fails, it keeps rejecting the password on this device, only... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a Sun Ultra 5 desktop with Solaris 8. When I telnet/rlogin into any other host, the connection closes after few hours of inactivity.
I also have another Windows box which I use rarely. But when I telnet/rlogin into the same hosts using putty, the connection stays for days without any... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I need help, I have the following which save in the result file ping and telnet:port test.
Basically the script works but I should implement a check on ping and telnet command so that ping has 5 seconds threshold and telnet (more important) 10 seconds. Over that threshold ping and... (0 Replies)
I have telnet configured in /etc/inetd.conf as below:
telnet stream tcp6 nowait root /usr/lbin/telnetd telnetd -b /etc/issue -n20
When i restart the service telnetd shows with only the -b option:
ps -ef|grep telnetd|grep -v grep
root 24397 1 0 10:42:35 pts/ta 0:00... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Tommyk
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
xrlogin
XRLOGIN(1) General Commands Manual XRLOGIN(1)NAME
xrlogin - start an xterm that uses ssh (or optionally rlogin or telnet) to connect to a remote host
SYNOPSIS
xrlogin [-l username] [-rlogin|-telnet] [xterm options] remote-host
DESCRIPTION
Xrlogin opens an xterm window and runs ssh, rlogin or telnet to login to a remote host.
Xrlogin automatically passes the -name argument to xterm with a value of "xterm-hostname" where hostname is the name of the remote host.
This allows the user to specify resources in their server's resource manager which are specific to xterms from a given host. For example,
this feature can be used to make all xterm windows to a given remote host be the same color or use a specific font or start up in a spe-
cific place on the screen. Xrsh(1) passes the same string so they are compatible in this regard.
Xrlogin specifies that the default title for the new xterm will be "hostname" where hostname is the name of the remote host. This and the
-name argument above can be overridden with xterm-options on the command line.
One could also use xrlogin's sister command xrsh(1) to open a window to a remote host. In the case of xrsh, the xterm would run on the
remote host and use X as the connection protocol while xrlogin would run the xterm on the local host and use rlogin or telnet as the con-
nection protocol. See xrsh(1) for a discussion of the merits of each scheme.
OPTIONS -l username
When not using -telnet, use username as the id to login to the remote host.
-rlogin
Use the rlogin protocol to open the connection. In general rlogin is preferred because it can be configured to not prompt the user
for a password. Rlogin also automatically propagates window size change signals (SIGWINCH) to the remote host so that applications
running there will learn of a new window size.
-telnet
Use the -telnet protocol to open the connection. Use of telnet provided mostly for hosts that don't support rlogin.
COMMON PROBLEMS
Make sure that the local host is specified in the .rhosts file on the remote host or in the remote hosts /etc/hosts.equiv file. See
rlogin(1) for more information.
EXAMPLES
xrlogin -bg red yoda
Start a local red xterm which connects to the remote host yoda using rlogin.
xrlogin -telnet c70
Open a local xterm which connects to the remote host c70 using telnet.
SEE ALSO xrsh(1), rlogin(1), telnet(1)AUTHOR
James J. Dempsey <jjd@jjd.com> and Stephen Gildea <gildea@intouchsys.com>.
X Version 11 Release 6 XRLOGIN(1)