And I think the cleanest solution would be to link .login to vtysh , make sure that your system logs out when it finishes this command or you can't use this technique. Steve Bertrand wrote (earlier today): > I think the cleanest solution would be to create a match block for your > user, and apply the forcecommand within that block...
> -- > Olli > On Fr, 2009-03-13 at 21:50 -0400, Steve Bertrand wrote: >> Jonathan Chen wrote: >>> On Sat, Mar 14, 2009 at 02:18:27AM +0100, Polytropon wrote: > >> >> > [..] >> >> If the user's shell is csh (FreeBSD's standard dialog shell), you >> >> could achieve the goal: > >>> > >>> ~/.login >> >> vtysh >> >> logout > >>> > >>> Only problem: I don't know how the shell will act when the user >> >> terminates the vtysh application (^C)... >> > > >> Change the contents of ~/.login to: >> > >> > exec vtysh > >> >> > This overlays the shell with "vtysh". When it exits, the session will >> > be closed. >> >> Thank you. >> >> This appears to be what I want. >> >> I was trying it with the previous setup, but I had to put the user in >> the wheel group. I haven't yet figured where permissions were going astray. >> >> Your procedure will allow me to put the user in the wheel group for now, >> knowing that logout will occur as soon as the program terminates. This >> way, I can safely know it works, and make myself a note for Monday to >> fix the permissions issues ;) >> >> Regards, >> >> Steve ____________________________________________________________ Looking for insurance? Compare and save today. Click here. http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2141/fc/BLSrjpTInoLb38jeH2ZxV89B2QnR6ZNekJuaR3qGCHLhnMekVw3DI3haDtu/ _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"