Manual Pages for UNIX Darwin command on man who
MyWebUniversity

Manual Pages for UNIX Darwin command on man who

WHO(1) BSD General Commands Manual WHO(1)

NAME

wwhhoo - display who is on the system

SYNOPSIS

wwhhoo [-HHmmqqssTTuu] [aamm II] [file]

DESCRIPTION

The wwhhoo utility displays information about currently logged in users. By default, this includes the login name, tty name, date and time of login and remote hostname if not local. The options are as follows:

-HH Write column headings above the output.

-mm Show information about the terminal attached to standard input

only.

-qq ``Quick mode'': List the names and number of logged in users in

columns. All other command line options are ignored.

-ss Show the name, line and time fields only. This is the default.

-TT Indicate whether each user is accepting messages. One of the

following characters is written: + User is accepting messages.

- User is not accepting messages.

? An error occurred.

-uu Show idle time for each user in hours and minutes as hh:mm, `.'

if the user has been idle less that a minute, and ``old'' if the user has been idle more than 24 hours.

aamm II Equivalent to -mm.

By default, wwhhoo gathers information from the file /var/run/utmp. An alternate file may be specified which is usually /var/log/wtmp (or

/var/log/wtmp.[0-6] depending on site policy as wtmp can grow quite large

and daily versions may or may not be kept around after compression by ac(8)). The wtmp file contains a record of every login, logout, crash, shutdown and date change since wtmp was last truncated or created. If /var/log/wtmp is being used as the file, the user name may be empty or

one of the special characters '|', '}' and '~'. Logouts produce an out-

put line without any user name. For more information on the special characters, see utmp(5). ENVIRONMENT The COLUMNS, LANG, LCALL and LCTIME environment variables affect the execution of wwhhoo as described in environ(7). FILES /var/run/utmp /var/log/wtmp

/var/log/wtmp.[0-6]

DIAGNOSTICS The wwhhoo utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.

SEE ALSO

last(1), users(1), w(1), utmp(5) STANDARDS

The wwhhoo utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'').

HISTORY A wwhhoo command appeared in Version 1 AT&T UNIX. BSD May 8, 2002 BSD




Contact us      |      About us      |      Term of use      |       Copyright © 2000-2019 MyWebUniversity.com ™