Rob,

I get that error when I just logon to the console normally.  I haven't had
any time to look into it, though.  A search through groups.google.com turned
up a suggestion to do a "ps -axf" to see what your process structure looks
like.  Mine looks like this:
  888 ?        S      0:00 login -- root
13767 ?        S      0:00  \_ -bash
13818 ?        R      0:00      \_ ps axf

Still, when I do a "w" command, the session is displayed.

Mark Post

-----Original Message-----
From: Rob van der Heij [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2002 12:44 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Managing Linux guests under z/VM


> > In what aspect is that more sane than '/bin/sh --login'  ?
>
> It creates a PAM session so there is a security identity and the fact the
> console was logged in as root is in the logfiles.

That's good, indeed. How do I ever learn all this...
I see that this logon through the console still does not show
up in 'who' and I suspect that is related to this message?
  bash: no job control in this shell

Rob

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