Here's a look at the output of a last command: reboot system boot Sun Jun 14 15:58 p*** [EMAIL PROTECTED]@ [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sun Jun 14 15:21 - down (00:34) dtam ttyp0 :0.0 Sun Jun 14 14:55 - down (01:00) p*** O**** [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sun Jun 14 14:48 - down (01:07) dtam ttyp0 :0.0 Sun Jun 14 14:48 - 14:55 (00:06) p*** [EMAIL PROTECTED]@ [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sun Jun 14 14:44 - down (01:11) p*** [EMAIL PROTECTED]@ [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sun Jun 14 14:44 - 14:44 (00:00) dtam ttyp1 :0.0 Sun Jun 14 14:39 - down (01:16) dtam ttyp0 :0.0 Sun Jun 14 14:39 - 14:48 (00:09) dtam tty11 Sun Jun 14 14:38 - down (01:17)
Looks great, except the garbled lines. The junk seems to get sent to wtmp when exiting an xterm in X. This didn't happen while I was running bo previously (with older packages, obviously). I don't see any processes being left behind, though the log claims that I'm still logged in to that tty (only to be killed by a reboot). Here's the line in my wharf file to start up xterm: *Wharf xterm Monitor.xpm Exec "-" xterm -geometry 80x24 -sl 256 -sb -ls -T "[EMAIL PROTECTED] --long`" +cm +dc -j +nul -s -sb & If I remove the -ls (new xterm is a login shell), this "solves" the problem, since non-login shells are not logged to wtmp. But this is not what I want... I do want the xterm shells logged. Some installed Debian package info that might be relevant: afterstep 1.4.5.3-1 syslogd 1.3-26 xbase 3.3.2.1-1 xcontrib 3.3.1-2 Any insight appreciated. Thanks, Derek -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]