Yes, but when it first came out it defaulted to killing processes. This was
on a university server, so I imagine ac stable distro. As I told you, I
know someone who was bitten hard by this.

Il ven 24 apr 2020, 14:07 Rich Freeman <ri...@gentoo.org> ha scritto:

> On Fri, Apr 24, 2020 at 6:31 AM Neil Bothwick <n...@digimed.co.uk> wrote:
> >
> > On Fri, 24 Apr 2020 10:41:24 +0200, Michele Alzetta wrote:
> >
> > > ... I just hope the remote system isn't running systemd, if so, you
> > > have to do some additional tweaking before screen or tmux work. I know
> > > someone who was bitten hard by this. Apparently systemd by default
> > > closes all running processes of a user on logout.
> >
> > I've never seen this and I regularly update systemd computers using tmux.
>
> It is a configurable option.  I can't imagine that many distros enable
> it by default since it is likely to be shocking to anybody who
> actually knows how to use screen, and pointless for anybody who does
> not.  :)
>
> To enable it set KillUserProcesses=yes in /etc/systemd/logind.conf
>
> If you do use it there are ways to make exceptions for particular
> processes.
>
> I can certainly see how it is a useful feature to have available in
> specific contexts, but obviously most people will want to have it
> turned off.
>
> --
> Rich
>
>

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