X-Git-Url: https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/ucgi/~ianmdlvl/git?a=blobdiff_plain;f=man%2Fsystemd-loginctl.xml;fp=man%2Fsystemd-loginctl.xml;h=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000;hb=169c4f65131fbc7bcb51e7d5487a715cdcd0e0eb;hp=6a282769a37429a4f493a3a4db4b5715a0ab01ed;hpb=c64c338e31f6e96f20560a426dce3cda0a0cc3ab;p=elogind.git diff --git a/man/systemd-loginctl.xml b/man/systemd-loginctl.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 6a282769a..000000000 --- a/man/systemd-loginctl.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,457 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - - - - systemd-loginctl - systemd - - - - Developer - Lennart - Poettering - lennart@poettering.net - - - - - - systemd-loginctl - 1 - - - - systemd-loginctl - Control the systemd login manager - - - - - systemd-loginctl OPTIONS COMMAND NAME - - - - - Description - - systemd-loginctl may be used to - introspect and control the state of the - systemd1 - login manager. - - - - Options - - The following options are understood: - - - - - - - Prints a short help - text and exits. - - - - - - Prints a short version - string and exits. - - - - - - - When showing - session/user/ properties, limit - display to certain properties as - specified as argument. If not - specified all set properties are - shown. The argument should be a - property name, such as - Sessions. If - specified more than once all - properties with the specified names - are shown. - - - - - - - When showing - unit/job/manager properties, show all - properties regardless whether they are - set or not. - - - - - - - Do not pipe output into a - pager. - - - - - - When used with - kill-session, - choose which processes to kill. Must - be one of , or - to select whether - to kill only the leader process of the - session or all processes of the - session. If omitted defaults to - . - - - - - - - When used with - kill-session or - kill-user, choose - which signal to send to selected - processes. Must be one of the well - known signal specifiers such as - SIGTERM, SIGINT or SIGSTOP. If omitted - defaults to - . - - - - - - - Execute operation - remotely. Specify a hostname, or - username and hostname separated by @, - to connect to. This will use SSH to - talk to the remote login manager - instance. - - - - - - - Acquire privileges via - PolicyKit before executing the - operation. - - - - The following commands are understood: - - - - list-sessions - - List current sessions. - - - - session-status [ID...] - - Show terse runtime - status information about one or more - sessions. This function is intended to - generate human-readable output. If you - are looking for computer-parsable - output, use - show-session - instead. - - - - show-session [ID...] - - Show properties of one - or more sessions or the manager - itself. If no argument is specified - properties of the manager will be - shown. If a session ID is specified - properties of the session is shown. By - default, empty properties are - suppressed. Use - to show those too. To select specific - properties to show use - . This - command is intended to be used - whenever computer-parsable output is - required. Use - session-status if - you are looking for formatted - human-readable - output. - - - - activate [ID...] - - Activate one or more - sessions. This brings one or more - sessions into the foreground, if - another session is currently in the - foreground on the respective - seat. - - - - lock-session [ID...] - unlock-session [ID...] - - Activates/deactivates - the screen lock on one or more - sessions, if the session supports it. - - - - terminate-session [ID...] - - Terminates a - session. This kills all processes of - the session and deallocates all - resources attached to the - session. - - - - kill-session [ID...] - - Send a signal to one - or more processes of the session. Use - to select - which process to kill. Use - to select - the signal to send. - - - - list-users - - List currently logged - in users. - - - - user-status [USER...] - - Show terse runtime - status information about one or more - logged in users. This function is - intended to generate human-readable - output. If you are looking for - computer-parsable output, use - show-user - instead. Users may be specified by - their usernames or numeric user - IDs. - - - - show-user [USER...] - - Show properties of one - or more users or the manager - itself. If no argument is specified - properties of the manager will be - shown. If a user is specified - properties of the user is shown. By - default, empty properties are - suppressed. Use - to show those too. To select specific - properties to show use - . This - command is intended to be used - whenever computer-parsable output is - required. Use - user-status if - you are looking for formatted - human-readable - output. - - - - enable-linger [USER...] - disable-linger [USER...] - - Enable/disable user - lingering for one or more users. If - enabled for a specific user a user - manager is spawned for him/her at - boot, and kept around after - logouts. This allows users who aren't - logged in to run long-running - services. - - - - terminate-user [USER...] - - Terminates all - sessions of a user. This kills all - processes of all sessions of the user - and deallocates all runtime resources - attached to the - user. - - - - kill-user [USER...] - - Send a signal to all - processes of a user. Use - to select - the signal to send. - - - - list-seats - - List currently - available seats on the local - system. - - - - seat-status [NAME...] - - Show terse runtime - status information about one or more - seats. This function is - intended to generate human-readable - output. If you are looking for - computer-parsable output, use - show-seat - instead. - - - - show-seat [NAME...] - - Show properties of one - or more seats or the manager - itself. If no argument is specified - properties of the manager will be - shown. If a seat is specified - properties of the seat are shown. By - default, empty properties are - suppressed. Use - to show those too. To select specific - properties to show use - . This - command is intended to be used - whenever computer-parsable output is - required. Use - seat-status if you - are looking for formatted - human-readable - output. - - - - attach [NAME] [DEVICE...] - - Attach one or more - devices to a seat. The devices should - be specified via device paths in the - /sys file - system. To create a new seat attach at - least one graphics card to a - previously unused seat names. seat - names may consist only of a-z, A-Z, - 0-9, "-" and "_" and must be prefixed - with "seat". To drop assignment of a - device to a specific seat just - reassign it to a different seat, or - use - flush-devices. - - - - flush-devices - - Removes all device - assignments previously created with - attach. After this - call only automatically generated - seats will remain and all seat - hardware is assigned to - them. - - - - terminate-seat [NAME...] - - Terminates all - sessions on a seat. This kills all - processes of all sessions on a seat and - deallocates all runtime resources - attached to them. - - - - - - - Exit status - - On success 0 is returned, a non-zero failure - code otherwise. - - - - Environment - - - - $SYSTEMD_PAGER - Pager to use when - is not given; - overrides $PAGER. Setting - this to an empty string or the value - cat is equivalent to passing - . - - - - - - See Also - - systemd1, - systemctl1, - systemd-logind.conf5 - - - -