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Full Discussion: User History and commnad log
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers User History and commnad log Post 302165966 by otheus on Sunday 10th of February 2008 06:35:44 AM
Old 02-10-2008
Use "last" to see who's logged in

The command you want is "last". It uses the information from wtmp, which after 30 days gets moved to /var/adm/wtmpx.1 or something like that.

Use last by itself to get the standard report. Remote logins will have the IP address in the 3rd column. (Locally spawned sessions, ie, Xterms or virtual terminals will not have an IP address.) Use -f filename to use the older wtmpx file.

As the previous poster hinted at, hackers may be able to cover their tracks, so this only helps with authorized access. To cross-reference, you can also look at the logs from /var/adm/messages*. To enable more verbosity in log messages, you should tweak entries in both /etc/pam.conf, /etc/syslogd.conf, and /etc/ssh/sshd.conf.
 

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lsmsad(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 lsmsad(8)

NAME
lsmsad - Starts the Storage Administrator (SA) daemon SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/lsmsad DESCRIPTION
The SA daemon, lsmsad, is a process required by lsmsa, the SA graphical user interface (GUI). The daemon issues commands and obtains system information on behalf of SA. The SA daemon runs on a Tru64 UNIX system on which LSM is initialized and running. The SA client runs on any machine that supports the Java Runtime Environment. The SA daemon is automatically started at boot time. Under normal conditions, the daemon does not need to be run manually. If SA does not start during the boot process, enter: /sbin/init.d/lsmsa stop To restart SA, enter: /sbin/init.d/lsmsa start Only one SA daemon can be running on a system at a given time. If a second SA daemon attempts to start, it will fail. RESTRICTIONS
You must be root user to run lsmsad. FILES
The script that starts lsmsad at boot time. The command log file that tracks SA tasks. The access log file that tracks login to SA. The server log file that tracks server startup information and server errors. The log maintenance shell script that saves and compresses log files. SEE ALSO
lsmsa(8), volintro(8) lsmsad(8)
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