V Wed, 22 Jun 2011 12:09:34 +0200 Dieter Plaetinck <dieter@xxxxxxxxxxxx> napsáno: > yuck. > if you just want to manage daemons running as your own user, su and > sudo shouldn't even be involved. > > On Wed, 22 Jun 2011 11:05:35 +0100 > Owain Sutton <mail@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > How about using /etc/rc.d/ scripts with 'su user' to start the > > program as the relevant user (as per the rtorrent wiki suggestion, > > https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Rtorrent#rtorrent_Daemon_with_screen), > > and then sudo permissions to run 'sudo /etc/rc.d/foo start/stop' > > in .xinitrc and .bash_logout? > > > > On 15:15, Mon 20 Jun 2011, XeCycle wrote: > > > Date: Mon, 20 Jun 2011 15:15:14 +0800 > > > From: XeCycle <xecycle@xxxxxxxxx> > > > Subject: [arch-general] Anything to manage user daemons? > > > To: General Discussion about Arch Linux > > > <arch-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Reply-To: General Discussion about > > > Arch Linux <arch-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> List-Id: General > > > Discussion about Arch Linux <arch-general.archlinux.org> > > > > > > Hello. I need to start several programs after login and > > > after startx. Now I write these directly in my .bash_profile > > > and .xinitrc; but I'm not satisfied with this. They cannot > > > be easily stopped after logout. To do that I think I'd > > > record their PID and kill them in .bash_logout, also need to > > > take care when they're manually stopped, and all these > > > related problems. > > > > > > So I think a set of scripts like the daemon managing from > > > initscripts will be nice. But I can't write /etc/rc.d > > > daemons, as they must be executed by a normal user. > > > > > > Has anyone written such a tool? > > > > > > Thank you. > > > > > > -- > > > Carl Lei (XeCycle) > > > Department of Physics, Shanghai Jiao Tong University > > > OpenPGP public key: 7795E591 > > > Fingerprint: 1FB6 7F1F D45D F681 C845 27F7 8D71 8EC4 7795 E591 > > > Facebook: Carl Lei > > > Twitter: XeCycle > > > Blog: http://xecycle.blogspot.com > > > Mon, 20 Jun 2011 15:04:17 +0800 > > > > I think screen - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Screen