[Casper] Flushing User Caches
Ernst, Craig S.
ERNSTCS at uwec.edu
Thu Jan 22 05:18:52 PST 2009
For Casper...I just check the box in the management preferences and it just works...
Craig E
On 1/22/09 7:14 AM, "Criss Myers" <cmyers at uclan.ac.uk> wrote:
not sure about for Casper but for normal login hooks to work you need to activate login hook for the root loginwindow.plist
Criss Myers
Senior Customer Support Analyst (Mac Services)
Apple Certified Technical Coordinator v10.5
LIS Business Support Team
Library 301
University of Central Lancashire
Preston PR1 2HE
Ex 5054
01772 895054
>>> On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 12:31 PM, in message <ec2e75ff0901220431v16ef1bdfi1dddb70e39e3ad68 at mail.gmail.com>, Miles Leacy <miles.leacy at themacadmin.com> wrote:
I believe for $3 and login policies in general to work, you need to check "Create Login/Logout Hooks", "Log IP/Username with Login/Logout Hooks" and "Check for Policies with Login/Logout Hooks" in Management Preferences, which is found in the Management tab.
----------
Miles A. Leacy IV
? Certified System Administrator 10.4
? Certified Technical Coordinator 10.5
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On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 7:13 AM, Criss Myers
<CMyers at uclan.ac.uk>
wrote:
Hi,
Could you not just redirect the cache folder to the local HD on login and then delete at logout,
i use WGM to redirect the Cache and fonts folder on login from a network Home folder, to /tmp/ they then get deleted at logout,
A login hook could do the same,
Criss
Criss Myers
Senior Customer Support Analyst (Mac Services)
Apple Certified Technical Coordinator v10.5
LIS Business Support Team
Library 301
University of Central Lancashire
Preston PR1 2HE
Ex 5054
01772 895054
>>> On Thu, Jan 22, 2009 at 4:31 AM, in message <fc.000f4ccf02026db3000f4ccf020234f6.2026dea at phrd.ab.ca>, "Gene Anderson" <ganderson at phrd.ab.ca> wrote:
Miles Leacy <miles.leacy at themacadmin.com> writes:
>When you run a script via a Casper policy, $3 = the user's shortname. This is why I structure my commands to target /Users/$3/
>
>This may be a matter of preference, but I would skip the $file variable and the for loop in this case. We're operating on known values. To me, at least, it seems unnecessary to declare $file and then set up a for/if structure when we can just operate on each item and save lines.
>
>The script below accomplishes the goal with just a few lines and is set up to be run as part of a Casper policy triggered by login.
Okay, I must be missing something here because I can't get this to work. Script is:
rm -Rf /Users/$3/Library/Caches/*
being executed on Tiger clients. Policy is set to execute on all Tiger workstations, trigger on login and frequency ongoing. The policy reports no errors. Should this command work from the Terminal? How does the $3 value in the script get assigned? If I manually execute the script from the Terminal the full path comes back as "/Users//Library/Caches". Does Casper somehow fill in the value for the script?
Gene Anderson
Systems Analyst, ACTC, MCP
Pembina Hills Regional Division No.7
Phone: (780) 674-8535 ext 6860
email: ganderson at phrd.ab.ca
"Passwords are like bubble gum, strongest when fresh, should never be
used by groups and create a sticky mess when left laying around"
-anon
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