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

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