depot/nixos/doc/manual/administration/user-sessions.chapter.md
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User Sessions

Systemd keeps track of all users who are logged into the system (e.g. on a virtual console or remotely via SSH). The command loginctl allows querying and manipulating user sessions. For instance, to list all user sessions:

$ loginctl
   SESSION        UID USER             SEAT
        c1        500 eelco            seat0
        c3          0 root             seat0
        c4        500 alice

This shows that two users are logged in locally, while another is logged in remotely. ("Seats" are essentially the combinations of displays and input devices attached to the system; usually, there is only one seat.) To get information about a session:

$ loginctl session-status c3
c3 - root (0)
           Since: Tue, 2013-01-08 01:17:56 CET; 4min 42s ago
          Leader: 2536 (login)
            Seat: seat0; vc3
             TTY: /dev/tty3
         Service: login; type tty; class user
           State: online
          CGroup: name=systemd:/user/root/c3
                  ├─ 2536 /nix/store/10mn4xip9n7y9bxqwnsx7xwx2v2g34xn-shadow-4.1.5.1/bin/login --
                  ├─10339 -bash
                  └─10355 w3m nixos.org

This shows that the user is logged in on virtual console 3. It also lists the processes belonging to this session. Since systemd keeps track of this, you can terminate a session in a way that ensures that all the session's processes are gone:

# loginctl terminate-session c3