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1<chapter xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" 2 xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" 3 xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" 4 version="5.0" 5 xml:id="sec-user-sessions"> 6 7<title>User Sessions</title> 8 9<para>Systemd keeps track of all users who are logged into the system 10(e.g. on a virtual console or remotely via SSH). The command 11<command>loginctl</command> allows querying and manipulating user 12sessions. For instance, to list all user sessions: 13 14<screen> 15$ loginctl 16 SESSION UID USER SEAT 17 c1 500 eelco seat0 18 c3 0 root seat0 19 c4 500 alice 20</screen> 21 22This shows that two users are logged in locally, while another is 23logged in remotely. (“Seats” are essentially the combinations of 24displays and input devices attached to the system; usually, there is 25only one seat.) To get information about a session: 26 27<screen> 28$ loginctl session-status c3 29c3 - root (0) 30 Since: Tue, 2013-01-08 01:17:56 CET; 4min 42s ago 31 Leader: 2536 (login) 32 Seat: seat0; vc3 33 TTY: /dev/tty3 34 Service: login; type tty; class user 35 State: online 36 CGroup: name=systemd:/user/root/c3 37 ├─ 2536 /nix/store/10mn4xip9n7y9bxqwnsx7xwx2v2g34xn-shadow-4.1.5.1/bin/login -- 38 ├─10339 -bash 39 └─10355 w3m nixos.org 40</screen> 41 42This shows that the user is logged in on virtual console 3. It also 43lists the processes belonging to this session. Since systemd keeps 44track of this, you can terminate a session in a way that ensures that 45all the session’s processes are gone: 46 47<screen> 48# loginctl terminate-session c3 49</screen> 50 51</para> 52 53</chapter>