09-14-2004
To be honest, I can't remember anything about the poster, Computek, if their posts were deleted, etc. Normally, if a poster breaks posting rules repeatedly or blatently, I will change their UID to "read only"........ and for the UID,
Computek, they seem to be "member".....
The thread that was provided as reference does not seem to have anything to indicate a problem, so it might have been a thread which was deleted?
Sorry, I can't remember if I was involved in any action regarding this user.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
hi
i'm new here and my first problem ( and not the last) that i acquired a network laser printer epson epl 6200n and i can't print on it with unix sco5.
is there a driver that allow this?
thanx (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: zapping
1 Replies
2. Linux
i install fedora core 4 but it fail to detect my sound card. my sound card is sigmatel. how can i solve this problem? can i install other sound driver? thx (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: wsc
9 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I am looking for gxt130p driver for aix 4.2.1. Where IŽll can find it? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Mrsstar
1 Replies
4. AIX
Hello all,
I am trying to figure out what command I can use in AIX in order to find out the driver level for a Fibre Channel adapter. Generically I am able to use "lscfg" to get the details but I am unable to read the output correctly.
Can you help?
Many thanks,
-- output --
lscfg... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: monotone
2 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
:confused: I want to install epson LQ1150 printer on a unix system ,epson doesnt have a unixdriver provided with it,which comptible driver would support the printer with unix (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: athais
0 Replies
6. Solaris
I've been researching minimizeing Solaris 8 and found that on the web page http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/content/packagelist/s8u7PkgList/p2.html the package SUNWglmr
is listed as "rasctrl environment monitoring driver for i2c, (Root) (32-bit)" while in the document "Solaris 8 minimize-updt1.pdf"... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: roygoodwin
1 Replies
7. AIX
On a particular LPAR, I was running AIX 5.3 TL 3. On Monday I did an update of the LPAR to 5.3 TL 9 SP2. The install was smooth, but then I ran into a problem.
The MPIO driver does not work with LSI's StoreAge (SVM4). I did some looking, and looks like
5.3 TL3 = IBM.MPIO 5.3.0.30
5.3... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: clking
0 Replies
8. Red Hat
hi every one,please i need a link to download Broadcom WLAN 802.11 b/g driver for RHEL 5.1.
thank you (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Redhat_9ja
0 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Help, suspect hacked via serial or electric! any ideas on error "Pid:1, comm:swapper Tainted:G W 2.6.35-22 generic #33 -unbutu device = "(null)" or unknown-blocklist(8.1) please append a correct "root"boot option Available partitions 0b00 1048575 sr0 driver:sr 0800 488386584 sda driver:sd. Thanks... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kryclear
3 Replies
10. Hardware
In general terms what are the differences platform driver,codec driver and Machine driver? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rupeshkp728
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
user-session-keyring
USER-SESSION-KEYRING(7) Linux Programmer's Manual USER-SESSION-KEYRING(7)
NAME
user-session-keyring - per-user default session keyring
DESCRIPTION
The user session keyring is a keyring used to anchor keys on behalf of a user. Each UID the kernel deals with has its own user session
keyring that is shared by all processes with that UID. The user session keyring has a name (description) of the form _uid_ses.<UID> where
<UID> is the user ID of the corresponding user.
The user session keyring is associated with the record that the kernel maintains for the UID. It comes into existence upon the first
attempt to access either the user session keyring, the user-keyring(7), or the session-keyring(7). The keyring remains pinned in existence
so long as there are processes running with that real UID or files opened by those processes remain open. (The keyring can also be pinned
indefinitely by linking it into another keyring.)
The user session keyring is created on demand when a thread requests it or when a thread asks for its session-keyring(7) and that keyring
doesn't exist. In the latter case, a user session keyring will be created and, if the session keyring wasn't to be created, the user ses-
sion keyring will be set as the process's actual session keyring.
The user session keyring is searched by request_key(2) if the actual session keyring does not exist and is ignored otherwise.
A special serial number value, KEY_SPEC_USER_SESSION_KEYRING, is defined that can be used in lieu of the actual serial number of the call-
ing process's user session keyring.
From the keyctl(1) utility, '@us' can be used instead of a numeric key ID in much the same way.
User session keyrings are independent of clone(2), fork(2), vfork(2), execve(2), and _exit(2) excepting that the keyring is destroyed when
the UID record is destroyed when the last process pinning it exits.
If a user session keyring does not exist when it is accessed, it will be created.
Rather than relying on the user session keyring, it is strongly recommended--especially if the process is running as root--that a session-
keyring(7) be set explicitly, for example by pam_keyinit(8).
NOTES
The user session keyring was added to support situations where a process doesn't have a session keyring, perhaps because it was created via
a pathway that didn't involve PAM (e.g., perhaps it was a daemon started by inetd(8)). In such a scenario, the user session keyring acts
as a substitute for the session-keyring(7).
SEE ALSO
keyctl(1), keyctl(3), keyrings(7), persistent-keyring(7), process-keyring(7), session-keyring(7), thread-keyring(7), user-keyring(7)
Linux 2017-03-13 USER-SESSION-KEYRING(7)