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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Will userids make a difference in performance? Post 14263 by augustinep on Tuesday 29th of January 2002 04:40:39 PM
Old 01-29-2002
Will userids make a difference in performance?

I have nearly 10 users who login into the HP server (D series, HP UX 10.20) with the same UNIX user name, "liveuser", and they start the UNIX based transactions. If I create separate UNIX user-ids for all the 10, will the system performance improve?
 

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getlogin(2)							System Calls Manual						       getlogin(2)

NAME
getlogin, getlogin_r, setlogin - Gets and sets login name SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> char *getlogin(void); int getlogin_r( char *name, size_t len); int setlogin( char *name); The following function does not conform to current standards and is supported only for backward compatibility: int getlogin_r(char *name, int len); STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows: getlogin(), getlogin_r(): XSH5.0 Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags. PARAMETERS
Points to the login name. Specifies the length of the buffer pointed to by name. DESCRIPTION
The getlogin() function returns the login name of the user associated with the current session. The name is normally associated with a login shell at the time a session is created, and is inherited by all processes descended from the login shell. (This is true even if some of those processes assume another user ID, for example when the su command is used.) The setlogin() function sets the login name of the user associated with the current session to name. This call is restricted to the supe- ruser, and is normally used only when a new session is being created on behalf of the named user (for example, at login time, or when a remote shell is invoked). The getlogin_r() function is the reentrant version of getlogin(). Upon successful completion, the login name is stored in name. RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, the getlogin() function returns a pointer to a null-terminated string in a static buffer or a null pointer if the user's login name cannot be found. If getlogin() fails, a null pointer is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error. Upon successful completion, the setlogin() function returns a value of 0 (zero). If setlogin() fails, then a value of -1 is returned and an error code is placed in errno. Upon successful completion, the getlogin_r() function returns a value of 0 (zero). Otherwise, an error number is returned. [Tru64 UNIX] Upon successful completion, the obsolete version of the getlogin_r() function returns a value of 0 (zero). Otherwise, -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
If the getlogin(), getlogin_r(), or setlogin() function fails, errno may be set to one of the following values: [Tru64 UNIX] The name parameter gave an invalid address. [Tru64 UNIX] The name parameter pointed to a string that was too long. [Tru64 UNIX] Login names are limited to 64 characters, as specified by MAXLOGNAME (which is defined in sys/user.h). However, this name limit must be enabled in the kernel at boot time by explicitly setting the generic subsystem's login_name_max attribute to 64. For backward compatibility reasons, 12 is the default value of the login_name_max attribute. An additional value for a setlogin() failure is the following: [Tru64 UNIX] The caller tried to set the login name and was not the supe- ruser. RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: su(1) Functions: setsid(2) Standards: standards(5) delim off getlogin(2)
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