Ferdorians, This is my first message to this groups, I don't really know if this would be the best group for my question. I am experiencing this problem for some time now, I hope you can help. The main problem is that my machine is causing CPU excessive usage when a SSH session is closed. It does not happen when openining, neither during the session, but when it is closed. I have tried to collect some evidence, here they are: - This is what I telled the machine for this test: $ ps -e -o pcpu,cputime,pid,args > before $ ssh localhost thiagob@localhost's password: id: cannot find name for group ID 74594 $ ps -e -o pcpu,cputime,pid,args > during $ exit $ ps -e -o pcpu,cputime,pid,args > after - Prior to the execution of the SSH client, everything is perfect with the processes running on the machine. I won't attach the process monitor report here because it is very long and doesn't add much information. There is almost no CPU activity prior to executing the client. - After opening an SSH terminal, the CPU isn't busy. Here is the process status I got with the terminal opened: $ grep ssh during 0.0 00:00:00 1898 /usr/sbin/sshd 0.0 00:00:00 2605 /usr/bin/ssh-agent startkde 0.4 00:00:00 4470 ssh localhost 0.0 00:00:00 4471 sshd: thiagob [priv] 0.0 00:00:00 4479 sshd: thiagob@pts/8 << This is the one that gets hungry - After executing the `exit` command, the CPU become annoingly busy: $ grep ssh after 0.0 00:00:00 1898 /usr/sbin/sshd 0.0 00:00:00 2605 /usr/bin/ssh-agent startkde 0.0 00:00:00 4471 sshd: thiagob [priv] 98.0 00:00:05 4479 sshd: thiagob@notty ^^ - These are the versions for the software: $ ssh -V OpenSSH_3.6.1p2, SSH protocols 1.5/2.0, OpenSSL 0x0090701f $ uname -a Linux serpro-1422052.rce.serpro 2.6.5-1.358 #1 Sat May 8 09:04:50 EDT 2004 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux $ bash --version GNU bash, version 2.05b.0(1)-release (i386-redhat-linux-gnu) Copyright (C) 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Some weird facts: - The same behavior is observer in two other machines when I open an SSH session from my machine - My logout scripts are empty on all machines, they contain at most a command to clena the term I hope anyone can help. Cheers, Thiago Arrais -- Fedora-desktop-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-desktop-list