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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to see actual username who logged in as root with sudo Post 302580596 by ramanaraoeee on Friday 9th of December 2011 02:21:35 AM
Old 12-09-2011
How to see actual username who logged in as root with sudo

Hi,

Thanks for looking at this.

I would like to know who is actually logged in as sudo root ?
ex: i have many users given sudo rights as root, and all of they are making changes as root and it is difficult for me to know who did what ,a s it shows as rot only.

Is there any way to find or any environment variable shows actual user information ?



thanks
KRR
 

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mtailrc(5)							   User Manuals 							mtailrc(5)

NAME
mtailrc - Configuration file for monkeytail DESCRIPTION
A monkeytail configuration uses Apache-style syntax to declare "groups" of files to be tailed. Best explained with an example: <group testgroup> prefix 'server2: ' sudo yes <file> filename /var/log/apache2/access.log prefix 'server1: ' host server1.example.com </file> <file> filename /var/log/apache2/access.log host server2.example.com sudo no </file> </group> OPTIONS
All options can be either put inside a group or file block. Options inside a file block override those in the group block. filename filename filename defines the filename for this block. host remote-host (optional) host defines that this block's file is to be tailed on a remote server. sudo yes|no|1|0 sudo is a boolean specifying whether this file should be tailed as root. This option is supported for both local and remote files (in both cases you will potentially be prompted for your password). prefix "string: " prefix allows you to specify a short string that will be prepended to every line that is displayed for that given file. FILES
~/.mtailrc - user specific monkeytail config SEE ALSO
mtail(1), tail(1) AUTHOR
Martyn Smith <martyn@dollyfish.net.nz> mtail May 2008 mtailrc(5)
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