Hi,
1. "How can I determine what the user responds, is there errorlevels or anything like that?"
You can check for the exit status of the xmessage command
2. "What is the reason for doing ' > /dev/null 2>&1'"
It redirects any standard out and standard error to oblivion
Let's say you have a vnc session on port 5902. You want a script that checks if there's a session and display a message to the user. And you want to know if the user read the message. Here's what you could do. (you'll have to adapt and add a loop in there if you have several vnc sessions)
Edit the linux user's ~/.vnc/xstartup and add an "xhost +" in it. Otherwise you will not be able to display the message.
Use a script similar to this one: (of course, you will adapt and enhance)
#!/usr/bin/env bash
netstat -tape | grep ESTABLISHED | grep Xvnc | awk '{print $4}' | awk -F ":" '{print $2}' > log-ports
for user in `cat log-ports` do case $user in 5902) export DISPLAY=:2.0; xmessage -buttons "I understand":10 -center -timeout 60 -file testmsg > /dev/null 2>&1 [ $? -eq 10 ] \ && echo "$user acknowledged!" \ || echo "No answer from $user!" ;; esac
done
The user connected to 5902 will get a windowed message with a "I understand" button. If he clicks on it, you'll know. If he doesn't, it'll time out after 60 seconds and return an exit status of 0 (zero): you'll know too .
Hope it helps, Olivier
2008/1/31, Henning Larsen hennlar@start.no:
Thanks for the good answer.
On Thu, 2008-01-31 at 15:05 +0100, Olivier Robert wrote:
Hi,
I would check for established VNC connections this way:
netstat -tape | grep ESTABLISHED | grep Xvnc
As for warning connected users. If you see there is an established vnc session on port 5902, you could simply do:
export DISPLAY=:2.0; xmessage -center -timeout 60 -file shutdown.txt
/dev/null 2>&1
How can I determine what the user responds, is there errorlevels or anything like that? Hundred years ago I was making a lot of advanced BAT-files in msdos, but have not done much of those things in Linux yet. I could or maybe should find out reading man-pages, but have already asked. :)
What is the reason for doing ' > /dev/null 2>&1'
You could create a list of established connections, translate it to active displays (5902 -> 2.0 | 5903 -> 3.0 ...) and send out a message.
Hope it helps Olivier
It helps a lot, Thanks
Henning Larsen
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