I have a (graphical) login session running on an office computer, and I'd like to log it out to save on a few computer resources.
I can ssh to the office box, but when I try gnome-session-quit
I get this:
$ gnome-session-quit --logout --no-prompt
** (gnome-session-quit:18500): WARNING **: Command line `dbus-launch --autolaunch=fca99a51622d1930b068883b00000005 --binary-syntax --close-stderr' exited with non-zero exit status 1: Autolaunch error: X11 initialization failed.\n
** (gnome-session-quit:18500): WARNING **: Unable to start: Cannot open display:
Makes sense as my $DISPLAY
is empty (as it's a headless ssh session). When I run w
, I see that the gnome-session
is running on tty7
. Is there a way I can pretend to be tty7
and initiate a logout? Is there a better way to do this?
After logging in with
ssh
, run:This will force a logout on the remote machine just as if you had logged out from the menu (but without prompting). You may need to run
gnome-session-quit
with--force-logout
if there's an application with, for example, unsaved work, that would otherwise prevent a clean logout.If you use a very old version (<2011) of GNOME, then you need to
... because
gnome-session-save
was renamed tognome-session-quit
in 2011.Source