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Full Discussion: "who am i" in AIX
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users "who am i" in AIX Post 302868503 by bakunin on Monday 28th of October 2013 05:36:08 AM
Old 10-28-2013
The difference is the login session: in one case it originated from a terminal ("pts/<n>" is a terminal), in the other case it is from a network line. Only the latter carries an IP address because only here the login process (this is what ultimately feeds "who am i"s output) is aware that there is a network connection involved.

In the other case there might be a network connection involved too, but only to acquire a (virtual) terminal and then use this to log in.

If you need the IP address you are coming from inspect the established network connections, because regardless of the method there must be an established TCP connection behind every session.

Code:
# netstat -an | grep ESTABLISHED

I hope this helps.

bakunin

/PS:

This will not work if you use some "man-in-the-middle" to connect: some "putty" over Citrix or similarly working products will show you the IP of the Citrix server, not your own.

Last edited by bakunin; 10-28-2013 at 06:42 AM..
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IP(3)							     Library Functions Manual							     IP(3)

NAME
ip - TCP, UDP, IL network protocols over IP SYNOPSIS
bind -a #Itcp /net bind -a #Iudp /net bind -a #Iil /net /net/tcp/clone /net/tcp/n /net/tcp/n/data /net/tcp/n/ctl /net/tcp/n/local /net/tcp/n/remote /net/tcp/n/status /net/tcp/n/listen ... DESCRIPTION
The IP device provides the interface for several protocols that run over IP on an Ethernet. TCP and UDP provide the standard Internet pro- tocols for reliable stream and unreliable datagram communication. IL provides a reliable datagram service for communication between Plan 9 machines. IL is the protocol of choice for most Plan 9 services. Each of the protocols is served by the IP device, which represents each connection by a set of device files. The top level directory of each protocol contains a clone file and subdirectories numbered from zero to the number of connections configured for this protocol. Opening the clone file reserves a connection. The file descriptor returned from the open(2) will point to the control file, ctl, of the newly allocated connection. Reading the ctl file returns a text string representing the number of the connection. Connections may be used either to listen for incoming calls or to initiate calls to other machines. A connection is controlled by writing text strings to the associated ctl file. After a connection has been established data may be read from and written to the data file. For the datagram services, IL and UDP, a read of less than the length of a datagram will cause the entire datagram to be consumed. Each write to the data file will send a single datagram on the network. The TCP protocol provides a stream connection that does not preserve read/write boundaries. Prior to sending data, remote and local addresses must be set for the connection. For outgoing calls the local port number will be allo- cated randomly if none is set. Addresses are set by writing control messages to the ctl file of the connection. The connection is not established until the data file is opened. For IL and TCP the process will block until the remote host has acknowledged the connection. UDP opens always succeed. The following control messages are supported: connect ipaddress!port[!r] Set the remote IP address and port number for the connection. If the r flag is supplied and no local address has been specified the system will allocate a restricted port number (less than 1024) for the connection to allow communication with Unix machines' login and exec services. disconnect (UDP only) Clear the remote address of a UDP connection. announce X X is a decimal port number or Set the local port number to X and accept calls to X. If X is accept calls for any port that no process has explicitly announced. The local IP address cannot be set. Announce fails if the connection is already announced or connnected. bind X X is a decimal port number or Set the local port number to X. This exists to support library emulation of BSD sockets and is not otherwise used. backlog n (IL and TCP only) Set the maximum number of pending requests for a given service to n. By default n is set to five. If more than n connections are pending, further requests for a service will be rejected. Port numbers must be in the range 1 to 32767. If a local port has not been announced prior to a connect a local port number will be allo- cated automatically. Local ports are allocated from 5000 up. Several files report the status of a connection. The remote and local files contain the IP address and port number for the remote and local side of the connection. The status file contains protocol-dependent information to help debug network connections. A process may accept incoming connections by calling open on the listen file. The open will block until a new connection request arrives. Then open will return an open file descriptor which points to the control file of the newly accepted connection. This procedure will accept all calls for the given protocol. SEE ALSO
listen(8), dial(2), ndb(6) SOURCE
/sys/src/9/port/devip.c /sys/src/9/port/stil.c /sys/src/9/port/stip.c /sys/src/9/port/tcp*.c IP(3)
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