Hi, Heath & Alexander--

Hm...

Okay, I got X11 installed, and xterm running. I typed in the xterm -l
command and another xterm window opened.

However, the man is massive, and when I went to look for logging, it didn't
seem (or I couldn't find) how to name the file, or open it once the logging
has occurred...

All My Best,
Jeffrey


on 6/26/03 2:03 PM, Heath Chrystall at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

>> Have you tried turning logging on in xterm?
> (some xterms don't support this however)
> just write xterm -l (L) at the prompt
> there is also an option to name the log output file
> for more info type
> man xterm
> then in man type
> /log to look for log (pressing n finds the next entry)
> 
> Hope this helps
>> Message: 2
>> Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2003 17:36:01 -0700
>> From: Jeffrey Ellis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> Subject: [Fink-users] UNIX Log?
>> 
>> Hi, All--
>> 
>> Is there a way to log all the commands sent to the Terminal during a
>> session? For example, applications which send UNIX commands to copy or
>> remove items from your HD. I'd like to know exactly what commands were
>> sent
>> by the app and to which files. Is there a way to turn on a log
>> function or
>> otherwise trap the commands being sent? (Would turning on Journaling in
>> 10.2.6 do it??)
>> 
>> All My Best,
>> Jeffrey
> 



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