> > I'd prefer to go back to the same virtual terminal I was on. Is there > > a way to query the system for what tty is active? > > "/usr/bin/tty >/tmp/ttysuspend" into my script. > > /usr/bin/fgconsole > /tmp/ttysuspend
Great, so I go and write an executable file in /etc/apm/event.d/01x_bugfix containing: #!/bin/sh if [ "$1" = "suspend" ] ; then /usr/bin/fgconsole > /tmp/ttysuspend chvt 1 fi if [ "$1,$2" = "resume,suspend" ] ; then if [ -f /tmp/ttysuspend ] ; then chvt `cat /tmp/ttysuspend` fi fi This strikes me as a security risk, as anyone can create a file named /tmp/ttysuspend. If it can be guaranteed that there won't be a "resume suspend" event without an immediately preceding "suspend" event, I suppose it should be fine, but there should still be a better way to tackle this thing. I considered `rm -f /tmp/ttysuspend` just before the call to fgconsole, to ensure that the file will be recreated with correct ownership, so that hopefully noone can modify its contents between the suspend and the resume event. I'm still wondering about the possibilities of a resume event without a suspend event... (buggy hardware?) Probably not an issue, but I feel this should rather go in a file that is permanent, and belongs to whoever usually calls /etc/apm/apmd_proxy - probably root, as the apmd on my machine was run by root. Where would the correct place be? I'd think /var/... I don't know the proper usage of the subdirectories in /var, but judging by names, I'd think /var/state/apmd/, or some such directory. Any ideas? I think this kind of thing could be included in the apmd package, as an install-time option, since this X/apm problem is a common one. Hugo van der Merwe