>it would be unusual indeed for a Tomcat install to store its log files within its configuration directory
Right you are! No more absent minded phone posting for me. Michael, Is this something you would mind sharing if you're successful? I, and I'm sure others would find this useful. On Thursday, December 14, 2017, Mike Jumper <[email protected]> wrote: > On Thu, Dec 14, 2017 at 8:32 AM, Erik Berndt > <[email protected]> wrote: >> Michael, >> >> Check the catalina.out log under the /etc/tomcatX directory. That should >> list the relevant user names and connects/disconnects. >> > > Probably /var/log/tomcat or /var/log/tomcatX. It would be unusual > indeed for a Tomcat install to store its log files within its > configuration directory. It's also possible that things may be logged > to /var/log/messages or journalctl. > > If you're using a database with Guacamole, an easier way to generate > such a report might be to just issue queries against the > guacamole_connection_history table. It stores exactly the information > you're looking for: > > http://guacamole.apache.org/doc/gug/jdbc-auth.html#jdbc-auth-schema-connection-history > > - Mike > -- Erik Berndt / Systems Administrator 5551 Wellington Rd, Gainesville, VA 20155 703.631.0004 x520 (Phone) / 703.257.1725 (Fax) http://www.superiorpaving.net Need to open an IT support ticket? http://FixIT.superiorpaving.net/portal or [email protected]
