Dear Luis,
I did not know that tryton logs such a lot of things. At
var/log/tryton/trytond.log.2021-10-05 for example it seems to me that
even every view on the data is logged.
Great!
Thank you very much!
All the best,
Edgar
Am 06.10.2021 um 11:14 schrieb Luis Falcon:
Dear Edgar
On 10/6/21 09:58, Edgar_H wrote:
Good morning, dear Luis!
Thank you very much for this information!
Is there also a permanent table which logs the successful logins?
This would be important because of data rights and tracking of access
to health data.
No, but we can log it at operating system level raising the verbosity
/ log level of the Tryton kernel.
In fact, the best way to log both successful and unsuccessful logins
would be at OS level, ( or with temp tables that do not generate
redologs).
All the best
Luis
Thank you very much!
All the best
Edgar
Am 06.10.2021 um 09:39 schrieb Luis Falcon:
Good morning, dear Edgar!
It is a temporary table that records login attempts from users, and
serves to create a progressive delay anytime the user enters the
wrong password. In the newer versions, Tryton has also implemented
logging the IP address.
You can find the code at res/user.py
All the best
Luis
On 10/4/21 19:30, Edgar_H wrote:
Dear Luis,
dear all,
I have been asked how GNU Health records user logins.
With pgAdmin I found the table res_user_login_attempt, but there is
no data stored. Fields are id, create_date, write_date, create_uid,
write_uid, login, ip_address, ip_network.
Has the recording into this table to be activated somehow? I did
not find it in the documentation.
Thank you very much!
All the best
Edgar