linuxcn 于 2009-05-21 13:52:55发表:
This offers your a better solution:
You can configure any Linux system to automatically log users out after a
period of inactivity. Simply login as the root user and
create a file called /etc/profile.d/autologout.sh, enter::
# vi /etc/profile.d/autologout.sh
Append the following code:
TMOUT=300
readonly TMOUT
export TMOUT
Save and close the file. Set permissions:
# chmod +x /etc/profile.d/autologout.sh
Above script will implement a 5 minute idle time-out for the default /bin/bash
shell. You can also create tcsh version as follows:
# vi /etc/profile.d/autologout.csh
Append the following code:
set -r autologout 5
Save and close the file. Set permissions, enter:
# chmod +x /etc/profile.d/autologout.csh
Dealing with ssh clients
SSH allows administrators to set an idle timeout interval. After this interval
has passed, the idle user will be automatically logged out. Open /etc/ssh/sshd
config file, enter:
# vi /etc/ssh/sshd config
Find ClientAliveInterval and set to 300 (5 minutes) as follows:
ClientAliveInterval 300
ClientAliveCountMax 0
Save and close the file. Restart sshd:
# service sshd restart