Hi.

I have a huge problem, and I'm hoping someone can help me.   I have setup a pool of Linux machines where users can login, and access a Linux environment that resets after each logout.  All the users have their own individual logins to Guacamole (through AD). However, these users don't have an account on the Linux systems in the pool.  Instead, Guacamole logs into the XRDP session on each system as a generic "user" account (XRDP).  After the user logs out, the environment is reset to a base image.  Sessions that are idle for an hour are automatically terminated and reset to base state.  One user left a session open and closed their web browser.  To my surprise, when a completely different Guacamole user logged in, and clicked on the pool, they got that *same session*!  I expected that different Guacamole users would never share the same session.  However, it seems I was wrong and Guacamole is likely asking XRDP who is logged into the system, and since the user is the "same" as the user logged in, they can access the session.     This is a HUGE problem for me.  How can I address?  Since I can't generated Linux accounts for all the users in question, I could destroy the session if the user is disconnected, but I *Really* don't want to do this as this means that if the user experiences temporary network issues, they lose all their work. :(

 Jason.


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