Bill Jonas wrote: > Hi all, > > I was wondering if anybody might point me in the right direction here. > I know that for limiting concurrent logins on a *single* machine, > you can set "maxlogins" in /etc/security/limits.conf. > > However, this is only good for that single system. Suppose you have > three machines (foo, bar, and baz), and you wish to restrict the number > of total logins across all three servers. For example, you wish to > specify that a user may only log in once, total, on this set of systems. > > I've searched Google with very little luck. Most of the results are > either about limits.conf, limiting concurrent logins on a Windows > domain (yes, even with search terms of 'linux limit concurrent network > logins' and the like), or are otherwise irrelevant. > > Can anyone provide any clues, point me in the right direction, or at > least let me know I'll have to hack something together with finger, > rwho, and/or a custom PAM module? :) > > Thanks! > What if, you created a watchdog script that ran on a central machine, that every X seconds would ssh to all 3 machines and check for their login. and if it sees them login to one of the machines it locks their account and kills any existing logins on the other two? :-) --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss