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Full Discussion: access user history as root
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting access user history as root Post 302328317 by otheus on Wednesday 24th of June 2009 04:36:52 AM
Old 06-24-2009
Quote:
Is there a way I can still access his most recent history?
Yogesh provides a really cool answer. But it works only after the user's next login or shell session. What if you want to do this in real time? You'd have to examine the user's shell's memory to see what commands have been run. It'd be a bit cryptic, but it can be done. Use gcore (provided with gdb) to dump the core. Make sure you have lots of free disk space in your current dir and then run gcore <pid>. After this, you can hunt and search with:
Code:
strings core.11342 | less # pid is an example

Start searching for the last line recorded in the user's history file; lines after that could be the ones you are looking for.
 

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gcore(1)							   User Commands							  gcore(1)

NAME
gcore - get core images of running processes SYNOPSIS
gcore [-pgF] [-o filename] [-c content] process-id... DESCRIPTION
The gcore utility creates a core image of each specified process. By default, the name of the core image file for the process whose process ID is process-id will be core.process-id. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -c content Produces core image files with the specified content. The content description uses the same tokens as in coreadm(1M). The -c option does not apply to cores produced due to the -p or -g flags. -F Force. Grabs the target process even if another process has control. -g Produces core image files in the global core file repository with the global content as configured by coreadm(1M). The com- mand will fail if the user does not have permissions to the global core file repository. -o filename Substitutes filename in place of core as the first part of the name of the core image files. filename can contain the same tokens to be expanded as the paths in coreadm(1M). -p Produces a core image file in the process-specific location with the process-specific content for each process as config- ured by coreadm(1M). The command will fail if the user does not have permissions to the per-process core file repository. OPERANDS
The following operand is supported: process-id process ID EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 On success. non-zero On failure, such as non-existent process ID. FILES
core.process-id core images ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWtoo | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |See below. | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ Command Syntax is Evolving. Output Format(s) are Unstable. SEE ALSO
kill(1), coreadm(1M), setrlimit(2), core(4), proc(4), attributes(5) NOTES
gcore is unaffected by the setrlimit(2) system call using the RLIMIT_CORE value. SunOS 5.10 11 Feb 2004 gcore(1)
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