Am Sa, den 13.03.2004 schrieb George Lemos um 16:53: > Few questions pertaining to a fedora fc1 server I just set up to host a game > server. I went to the archive but got a big red "Temporarily Unavailable". > > 1. In windows you can go to services and tell it what user account to run > that service at. If I understand this correctly, in order to do that in > Linux do you install the program files into a particular users home > directory in order for it to run as that user? If this is not how it works > in Linux, how does a person get a server process to operate under another > account other than root? The data for such a process have not necessarily be in user's home, but certainly the user must have full rights to the file especially when it's needed to write things like log files, a pid file or other things typical for daemon processes. To be short: having that in the user's home is not that bad. > 2. I am able to run the game server process when logged in as this > particular user by going to the home directory and typing in the long > command to get it going. I was told I can get it to go on automatically upon > boot-up if I enter a line into /etc/rc.d/rc.local pointing directly to the > program to run. Didn't seem to work. What is the correct way to fire up a > service upon startup of the server? /etc/rc.local runs as root during bootup. If you want to start your game server process this way you need to make use of "su". I would recommend you write an init script to be put in /etc/init.d/. How such a start/stop script has to look out is described in /usr/share/doc/initscripts-7.42.2/sysvinitfiles. Inside this script you too have to make use of "su". The call may look like: su gameuser -c "/home/gameuser/server". Having the init script prepared run chkconfig (with parameters) to add the script to the desired runlevels. > 3. Finally, when entering in a command to start a server process and ending > it with an &, isn't it supposed to stay running? When connecting via putty > and I start this program manually and put an & at the end, then turn off > putty essentially killing the session, the server process I started ended. > Am I interpreting the use of & incorrectly? & sets the process only into background. Logging out such a process will stop. That is normal. You may need to start the process with "nohup". (An other thing for other purposes is to run a command in "screen".) > Thank you for your assistance. > > -George Alexander -- Alexander Dalloz | Enger, Germany | GPG key 1024D/ED695653 1999-07-13 Fedora GNU/Linux Core 1 (Yarrow) on Athlon CPU kernel 2.4.22-1.2174.nptl Sirendipity 18:52:19 up 4 days, 19:11, load average: 0.18, 0.17, 0.13 [ ÎÎÏÎÎ Ï'ÎÏÏÎÎ - gnothi seauton ] my life is a planetarium - and you are the stars