Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-02-10 Thread chrysn
> Maybe we should first get to the bottom of your issue before jumping to > conclusions and producing incorrect/incomplete documentation. Happily so. Right now I don't really know how to test this better (as in to get usable data that'll get us on), let alone how to test this well (as in without

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-02-10 Thread Michael Biebl
Am 10.02.20 um 16:29 schrieb chrysn: > On Mon, Feb 10, 2020 at 03:04:49PM +0100, Ansgar wrote: >> If I start an xterm via Alt-F2 in gnome, the xterm process runs in a >> cgroup like gnome-launched-xterm-489694.scope. gnome-terminal or an >> xterm started in gnome-terminal run in the

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-02-10 Thread chrysn
On Mon, Feb 10, 2020 at 03:04:49PM +0100, Ansgar wrote: > If I start an xterm via Alt-F2 in gnome, the xterm process runs in a > cgroup like gnome-launched-xterm-489694.scope. gnome-terminal or an > xterm started in gnome-terminal run in the gnome-terminal- > server.service cgroup. I expect

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-02-10 Thread Ansgar
On Mon, 2020-02-10 at 14:37 +0100, chrysn wrote: > On Mon, Feb 10, 2020 at 11:25:29AM +0100, Michael Biebl wrote: > > I assume your GNOME session is managed by systemd --user, i.e. > > gnome-session is modelled around systemd --user. > > > > Might be that is gnome-session that triggers the

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-02-10 Thread chrysn
On Mon, Feb 10, 2020 at 11:25:29AM +0100, Michael Biebl wrote: > I assume your GNOME session is managed by systemd --user, i.e. > gnome-session is modelled around systemd --user. > > Might be that is gnome-session that triggers the cleanup of the > session/processes. > > You could try with a

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-02-10 Thread Michael Biebl
I assume your GNOME session is managed by systemd --user, i.e. gnome-session is modelled around systemd --user. Might be that is gnome-session that triggers the cleanup of the session/processes. You could try with a more minimal desktop session, like openbox, and start tmux in a xterm there and

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-02-10 Thread chrysn
found 946645 244.2-1 stop On Sun, Jan 26, 2020 at 01:29:38AM +0100, Michael Biebl wrote: > This works fine for me, so I can not reproduce the issue with the given > information. > > Do you have libpam-systemd installed and enabled? Yes, libpam-systemd is installed, and the line `session optional

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-01-25 Thread Michael Biebl
Control: tags -1 moreinfo unreproducible On Thu, 12 Dec 2019 19:05:09 +0100 chrysn wrote: > Package: systemd > Version: 244-3 > Severity: normal > File: /usr/share/man/man5/logind.conf.5.gz > > The documentation about KillUserProcesses claims that processes will be > left alive after user

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2020-01-25 Thread Michael Biebl
Am 26.01.20 um 01:29 schrieb Michael Biebl: > This works fine for me, so I can reproduce the issue with the given can *not* reproduce ... signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature

Bug#946645: KillUserProcesses=no disregarded for some cgroups

2019-12-12 Thread chrysn
Package: systemd Version: 244-3 Severity: normal File: /usr/share/man/man5/logind.conf.5.gz The documentation about KillUserProcesses claims that processes will be left alive after user logout when set to "no", and specifically mentions tmux as one application. This is only correct under some