Re: Screen inside Jails + su

2008-04-09 Thread Erik Osterholm
On Wed, Apr 09, 2008 at 03:05:03AM +0200, Wael Nasreddine wrote: This One Time, at Band Camp, Erik Osterholm [EMAIL PROTECTED] said, On Tue, Apr 08, 2008 at 07:52:17PM -0500: On Wed, Apr 09, 2008 at 12:00:05AM +0200, Wael Nasreddine wrote: The common way for a user to run a program at

Re: Screen inside Jails + su

2008-04-09 Thread Wael Nasreddine
This One Time, at Band Camp, Erik Osterholm [EMAIL PROTECTED] said, On Wed, Apr 09, 2008 at 01:42:16PM -0500: Sure. At your shell prompt, type: man 5 crontab You'll find the man page for the crontab file, which includes multiple examples of cron entries. All of those use the time

Screen inside Jails + su

2008-04-08 Thread Wael Nasreddine
Hello, I have a FreeBSD server which is Jails based, I have created a special jail to run 3 rTorrent process for 3 users, I made all the permissions and added the users, then I launched manually (for testing purpose) these screen sessions for the 3 users using the below method: - jexec onto the

Re: Screen inside Jails + su

2008-04-08 Thread Erik Osterholm
On Wed, Apr 09, 2008 at 12:00:05AM +0200, Wael Nasreddine wrote: Hello, I have a FreeBSD server which is Jails based, I have created a special jail to run 3 rTorrent process for 3 users, I made all the permissions and added the users, then I launched manually (for testing purpose) these

Re: Screen inside Jails + su

2008-04-08 Thread Wael Nasreddine
This One Time, at Band Camp, Erik Osterholm [EMAIL PROTECTED] said, On Tue, Apr 08, 2008 at 07:52:17PM -0500: On Wed, Apr 09, 2008 at 12:00:05AM +0200, Wael Nasreddine wrote: The common way for a user to run a program at startup is to use cron with the special @reboot directive instead of