Upon my further thoughts, to make it simple, I would like to setup like irrespective of anything, my current login session (bash process) should be killed after 12 hours (No matter of what my shell is running).
For example:
How can I achieve the above without using cron or atjobs or without leaving any record/file/log on the Server. Basically the above kill should be scheduled to run after 12 hours while letting me work on the shell until then.
Hello;
I have Solaris 2.6 installed on many Sun AXI Ultra Sparc IIi systems. I want to set the Lock Screen global timeout for all users to 15 minutes. I read the Solaris CDE guide which instructed me to create a /etc/dt/config/C/sys.resources file and changed the timout to 15 minutes in... (1 Reply)
I am executing test.sh script. But this script takes lot of time and in the meantime the shell timeouts without completing the script.
Is there any command which will continue processing the script.
Thanks (3 Replies)
We recently moved servers to a new data center, and now we're experiencing user sessions timing out after non-activity. We didnt experience this before, or know of any timeout settings that may have been changed.
Any things I can check out on the server? (3 Replies)
SSHing into a machine can take a few seconds, but after I'm in, the commands return quickly. I was wondering if the timeout setting can be changed once I'm logged into the machine. Does anyone know if this can be set on the fly? The problem here is, if I have to set timeout = 10, it'll take 10... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I had add the following line into .profile and .bash_profile for the timeout session to avoid putty close automatically :
timeout=10800
However, i still keep encounter session time out every after 60 seconds.
Can anyone please help advice.
Many Thanks! (2 Replies)
Hi All
I need to set timeout of login session of a user if a user is idle for some time.
I know the TMOUT setting but it work with only BASH & KORN shell only as I need to set for Bourne shell also. I am trying to put "ClientAliveInterval 300" in sshd_config & restart or refreshing the... (1 Reply)
Friends,
Could anyone let me know - how to set the timeout value for ssh session to HMC? My HMC version is -- V7R7.4.0. I'm sure the version doesn't have anything to do with it.
Thanks,
-- Souvik (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: thisissouvik
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
sulog
sulog(4) File Formats sulog(4)NAME
sulog - su command log file
SYNOPSIS
/var/adm/sulog
DESCRIPTION
The sulog file is a record of all attempts by users on the system to execute the su(1M) command. Each time su(1M) is executed, an entry
is added to the sulog file.
Each entry in the sulog file is a single line of the form:
SU date time
result port user-newuser
where
date The month and date su(1M) was executed. date is displayed in the form mm/dd where mm is the month number and dd is the
day number in the month.
time The time su(1M) was executed. time is displayed in the form HH/MM where HH is the hour number (24 hour system) and MM
is the minute number.
result The result of the su(1M) command. A ` + ' sign is displayed in this field if the su attempt was successful; otherwise a
` - ' sign is displayed.
port The name of the terminal device from which su(1M) was executed.
user The user id of the user executing the su(1M) command.
newuser The user id being switched to with su(1M).
EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample sulog file.
Here is a sample sulog file:
SU 02/25 09:29 + console root-sys
SU 02/25 09:32 + pts/3 user1-root
SU 03/02 08:03 + pts/5 user1-root
SU 03/03 08:19 + pts/5 user1-root
SU 03/09 14:24 - pts/5 guest3-root
SU 03/09 14:24 - pts/5 guest3-root
SU 03/14 08:31 + pts/4 user1-root
FILES
/var/adm/sulog su log file
/etc/default/su contains the default location of sulog
SEE ALSO su(1M)SunOS 5.10 6 Jun 1994 sulog(4)