I needed to run the who command, and was surprised to discover that my user was logged in three times. It was something like the following: al@athene:~$ who al pts/1 2009-02-27 07:19 (:0.0) al pts/0 2009-02-27 07:19 (:0.0) al pts/3 2009-02-27 07:19 (:0.0) Though the dates on one of the entries was different. Like an idiot I failed to copy the thing when it was showing. I then shutdown and rebooted, and it now comes up with one login as expected. Why would this happen? Peter
On Fri, Feb 27, 2009 at 07:25:07AM +0000, Peter Alcibiades wrote:
I needed to run the who command, and was surprised to discover that my user was logged in three times. It was something like the following:
al@athene:~$ who al pts/1 2009-02-27 07:19 (:0.0) al pts/0 2009-02-27 07:19 (:0.0) al pts/3 2009-02-27 07:19 (:0.0)
Though the dates on one of the entries was different. Like an idiot I failed to copy the thing when it was showing.
I then shutdown and rebooted, and it now comes up with one login as expected. Why would this happen?
You'll see one login listed per terminal you have open. J. -- /-\ | Barndoors. Barndoors. Barndoors. |@/ Debian GNU/Linux Developer | Profile. Profile. VARILITE! \- |
participants (2)
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Jonathan McDowell -
Peter Alcibiades