Put the Linux machines under AUDITORs control.

If you want something more immediate, you can code a process in PROP (or any of 
the other console managers).  (i.e. look for "LINUX70 LOGGED OFF" and execute a 
XAUTOLOG)



Tom Duerbusch
THD Consulting

>>> Scott Rohling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 10/29/2008 8:37 PM >>>
Right -- SIGNAL I know about..  but you can only SIGNAL SHUTDOWN ..

How about a SIGNAL SHUTDOWN -R     ;-)

Thanks - Scott

On Wed, Oct 29, 2008 at 6:50 PM, Nick Laflamme <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On Oct 29, 2008, at 7:17 PM, Scott Rohling wrote:
>
>  Is there a 'native' way to have your guest brought down and autologged?  I
>> suppose I'm looking for a CP command which instead of allowing the guest to
>> say..  IPL - actually signals it off
>>
>
> If this were "You Bet Your Life," you'd win the prize, for "SIGNAL" is the
> command you're looking for. It only works if the guest registers with CP to
> receive signals, but it would suit your purposes.
>
> Romney White once published an example of CMS code that lets you load a CMS
> nucleus extension to catch a signal. Linux has supported it for years. And,
> of course, there's the CP command, SIGNAL, to manually initiate a SIGNAL to
> a specific guest.
>
> Nothing tells the guest to re-start itself, so perhaps we'd want a second
> signal besides, "SHUTDOWN" to differentiate between "die," and "die and come
> back."
>
> But, you're in the right neighborhood.
>

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