Dear Gurus
I am running AIX with several users that are using the system, i would like to monitor the commands that are run by these users. Is there a log system that records the commands that are executed by the users???
Any kind of help will be appreciated.
Regards
Masquerder (6 Replies)
I am working on a SUN T2000 machine with Solaris 10 running on it. When I checked the system this morning, I found it to be turned off. The lastreboot command showed that the system had been shut down the previous night.
I want to find out how the system was shut down. I have run hardware health... (2 Replies)
Hi ,
I have a Data cleansing process which creates different log file for each step , when the process runs it creates following log files in below order:
p1_tranfrmr_log.txt
p1_tranfrmr_stats.txt
p2_globrtr_log.txt
p2_globrtr_stats.txt
p3_cusparse_log.txt
p3_cusparse_stats.txt
'
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This isn't a RedHat specific question. The software in question might be used for any Linux distribution. Would it be advisable or inadvisable for my application, to be downloaded by many people I don't know, to write to the following logs in /var/log?
maillog or mail.log
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Appreciate help for the below issue.
Im using below code.....I dont want to attach the logs when I ran the perl twice...I just want to take backup with today date and generate new logs...What I need to do for the below scirpt..............
1)if logs exist it should move the logs with extention... (1 Reply)
Can someone help me with the code wherein there is a file f1.txt with different column and 34 column have expiry date and I need to get that and compare with system date and if expiry date is <system date remove those rows and other rows should be moved to new file f2.txt .
I don't want to delete... (2 Replies)
I m working on shell scripting and I m stuck where in my .txt file there is column as expiry date and I need to compare that date with system date and need to remove all the rows where expiry date is less than system date and create a new .txt with update. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Stuti
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
who
WHO(1) BSD General Commands Manual WHO(1)NAME
who -- display who is on the system
SYNOPSIS
who [-abHmqsTu] [am I] [file]
DESCRIPTION
The who 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:
-a Equivalent to -bTu, with the exception that output is not restricted to the time and date of the last system reboot.
-b Write the time and date of the last system reboot.
-H Write column headings above the output.
-m Show information about the terminal attached to standard input only.
-q ``Quick mode'': List the names and number of logged in users in columns. All other command line options are ignored.
-s Show the name, line and time fields only. This is the default.
-T 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.
-u Show idle time for each user in hours and minutes as hh:mm, '.' if the user has been idle less than a minute, and ``old'' if the user
has been idle more than 24 hours.
am I Equivalent to -m.
By default, who gathers information from the file /var/run/utx.active. An alternate file may be specified which is usually /var/log/utx.log
(or /var/log/utx.log.[0-6] depending on site policy as utx.log can grow quite large and daily versions may or may not be kept around after
compression by ac(8)). The utx.log file contains a record of every login, logout, crash, shutdown and date change since utx.log was last
truncated or created.
If /var/log/utx.log is being used as the file, the user name may be empty or one of the special characters '|', '}' and '~'. Logouts produce
an output line without any user name. For more information on the special characters, see getutxent(3).
ENVIRONMENT
The COLUMNS, LANG, LC_ALL and LC_TIME environment variables affect the execution of who as described in environ(7).
FILES
/var/run/utx.active
/var/log/utx.log
/var/log/utx.log.[0-6]
EXIT STATUS
The who utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO last(1), users(1), w(1), getutxent(3)STANDARDS
The who utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'').
HISTORY
A who command appeared in Version 1 AT&T UNIX.
BSD February 11, 2012 BSD