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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Need to track what Commands run in a login session Post 303022508 by hb00 on Sunday 2nd of September 2018 06:00:18 AM
Old 09-02-2018
thanks Scrutinizer for sharing the link. Yes I knew about this Solaris feature but I was more interested to implement in Script form as if got successful then I can go for implementation in Linux as well. Further this tool generate log of logs and it might bring impact on performance and bit complex to fetch the require details My only requirement is that I need what commands user has run in his session.

Thanks RudiC for sharing this idea, could you please explain how can I implement it in term of code at global level further current session commands with time should go to in a file saved with username-with logout time.

Thanks Scrutinizer & RudiC for your idea again and I would appreciate it further if you help in this further creating the script.
 

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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)
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