Scroll to navigation

SESSREG(1) General Commands Manual SESSREG(1)

NAME

sessreg - manage utmp (5)/wtmp (5) entries for non-init clients

SYNOPSIS

sessreg [-w wtmp (5)-file] [-u utmp (5)-file] [-L lastlog-file] [-l line-name] [-h host-name] [-s slot-number] [-x Xservers-file] [-t ttys-file] [-V] [-a] [-d] user-name

DESCRIPTION

Sessreg is a simple program for managing utmp (5)/wtmp (5) and lastlog entries for xdm sessions.

System V has a better interface to utmp than BSD; it dynamically allocates entries in the file, instead of writing them at fixed positions indexed by position in /etc/ttys.

To manage BSD-style utmp files, sessreg has two strategies. In conjunction with xdm, the -x option counts the number of lines in /etc/ttys and then adds to that the number of the line in the Xservers file which specifies the display. The display name must be specified as the "line-name" using the -l option. This sum is used as the "slot-number" in the utmp file that this entry will be written at. In the more general case, the -s option specifies the slot-number directly. If for some strange reason your system uses a file other than /etc/ttys to manage init, the -t option can direct sessreg to look elsewhere for a count of terminal sessions.

Conversely, System V managers will not ever need to use these options (-x, -s and -t). To make the program easier to document and explain, sessreg accepts the BSD-specific flags in the System V environment and ignores them.

BSD and Linux also have a host-name field in the utmp file which doesn't exist in System V. This option is also ignored by the System V version of sessreg.

This version of sessreg is built using the modern POSIX pututxline(3c) interfaces, which no longer require the slot-number, ttys-file, or Xservers-file mappings. For compatibility with older versions and other operating systems, the -s, -t, and -x flags are accepted, but ignored.

USAGE

In Xstartup, place a call like:


sessreg -a -l $DISPLAY -x /etc/X11/xdm/Xservers $USER

and in Xreset:


sessreg -d -l $DISPLAY -x /etc/X11/xdm/Xservers $USER

OPTIONS

This specifies an alternate wtmp (5) file, instead of /var/log/wtmp. The special name "none" disables writing records to the wtmp (5) file.
This specifies an alternate utmp (5) file, instead of /var/run/utmp. The special name "none" disables writing records to the utmp (5) file.
This specifies an alternate lastlog file, instead of /var/log/lastlog, if the platform supports lastlog files. The special name "none" disables writing records to the lastlog file.
This describes the "line" name of the entry. For terminal sessions, this is the final pathname segment of the terminal device filename (e.g. ttyd0). For X sessions, it should probably be the local display name given to the users session (e.g. :0). If none is specified, the terminal name will be determined with ttyname(3) and stripped of leading components.
This is set to indicate that the session was initiated from a remote host. In typical xdm usage, this options is not used.
Each potential session has a unique slot number in BSD systems, most are identified by the position of the line-name in the /etc/ttysfile. This option overrides the default position determined with ttyslot(3). This option is inappropriate for use with xdm, the -x option is more useful. This option is accepted for compatibility, but does nothing in this version of sessreg.
As X sessions are one-per-display, and each display is entered in this file, this options sets the slot-number to be the number of lines in the ttys-file plus the index into this file that the line-name is found. This option is accepted for compatibility, but does nothing in this version of sessreg.
This specifies an alternate file which the -x option will use to count the number of terminal sessions on a host. This option is accepted for compatibility, but does nothing in this version of sessreg.
This option causes the command to print its version and exit.
This session should be added to utmp/wtmp.
This session should be deleted from utmp/wtmp. One of -a/-d must be specified.

SEE ALSO

xdm(1), utmp(5), wtmp(5)

AUTHOR

Keith Packard, MIT X Consortium

sessreg 1.1.0 X Version 11