On June 6, 2016 3:53:01 AM CDT, [email protected] wrote:
>
>Hi,
>
>
>For new-ver 230 sysd, should b/lfs ([1,2]) use explicit default of
>'--without-kill-user-processes' &/or 'KillUserProcesses=no' per debian
>bug item below (where there are counter-points too):
>
>====
>https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=825394
>"systemd kill background processes after user logs out"
>==
>"It is now indeed the case that any background processes that were
>still
>running are killed automatically when the user logs out of a session,
>whether it was a desktop session, a VT session, or when you SSHed into
>a
>machine.
>
>Now you can no longer expect a long running background processes to
>continue after logging out. I believe this breaks the expecations of
>many users. For example, you can no longer start a screen or tmux
>session, log out, and expect to come back to it. For this reason, I
>think it is a bad decision on the part of the systemd maintainers to
>enable this feature by default, and it should rather be disabled by
>default in Debian, either by compiling systemd with
>--without-kill-user-processes or by setting KillUserProcesses=no in
>/etc/systemd/logind.conf" .


Let's not change it at compile time. I'm not even sure I agree with it being 
off by default, however, I do like adding it to the config file so that we can 
provide an explanation for the change in behavior, so off it is.

--DJ


-- 
Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.

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