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Top Forums Programming How to find inactive time of a process? Post 302484748 by Corona688 on Monday 3rd of January 2011 04:46:25 AM
Old 01-03-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by shreeda
Afaik, TMOUT is possible for shell logins. But I need to consider the sessions like some Command Line Interface applications also
What is that?
 

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LAST(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   LAST(1)

NAME
last -- indicate last logins of users and ttys SYNOPSIS
last [-n] [-h host] [-t tty] [user ...] DESCRIPTION
Last will list the sessions of specified users, ttys, and hosts, in reverse time order. Each line of output contains the user name, the tty from which the session was conducted, any hostname, the start and stop times for the session, and the duration of the session. If the ses- sion is still continuing or was cut short by a crash or shutdown, last will so indicate. -n Limits the report to n lines. -h host Host names may be names or internet numbers. -t tty Specify the tty. Tty names may be given fully or abbreviated, for example, ``last -t 03'' is equivalent to ``last -t tty03''. If multiple arguments are given, the information which applies to any of the arguments is printed, e.g., ``last root -t console'' would list all of ``root's'' sessions as well as all sessions on the console terminal. If no users, hostnames or terminals are specified, last prints a record of all logins and logouts. The pseudo-user reboot logs in at reboots of the system, thus ``last reboot'' will give an indication of mean time between reboot. If last is interrupted, it indicates to what date the search has progressed. If interrupted with a quit signal last indicates how far the search has progressed and then continues. SEE ALSO
lastcomm(1), utmpx(5), ac(8) HISTORY
Last appeared in 3.0BSD. 4th Berkeley Distribution June 6, 1993 4th Berkeley Distribution
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