12-21-2010
If you strace the gnome into a file, you might find a point more upstream and effective.
Once you find it, you can create an IPC dialog of some sort to ensure the logout is in the DB.
Otherwise, have a server poll for logged in processes and log when they disappear, from the DB end.
Maybe MySQL has a facility when connections are made and broken that can or does log this.
Last edited by DGPickett; 12-21-2010 at 10:35 AM..
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LEARN ABOUT SUSE
gnome-session-save
GNOME-SESSION-SAVE(1) General Commands Manual GNOME-SESSION-SAVE(1)
NAME
gnome-session-save - Saves or ends the current GNOME session
SYNOPSIS
gnome-session-save [--logout] [--force-logout] [--logout-dialog] [--shutdown-dialog] [--gui] [--kill [--silent]]
DESCRIPTION
gnome-session-save can be used from a GNOME session to save a snapshot of the currently running applications. This session will be later
restored at your next GNOME session.
The --gui option will report errors in dialog boxes instead of printing to stderr.
If called with the --logout option, the current GNOME session will be ended, unless logging out has been inhibited by an application. The
--force-logout option can be used to end the session regardless of the inhibition state.
When the --logout-dialog option is given, the standard dialog displaying logout options is displayed. When --shutdown-dialog option is
given, the standard dialog displaying shutdown options is displayed.
The --kill and --silent options are deprecated. The --kill option is equivalent to the --logout-dialog option. If --silent is used with
--kill, then it will behave as if --logout was used.
The session is not saved when gnome-session-save is called with any of the options ending the session.
SEE ALSO
gnome-session(1)
BUGS
If you find bugs in the gnome-session-save program, please report these on http://bugzilla.gnome.org.
GNOME GNOME-SESSION-SAVE(1)