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Full Discussion: Solaris History
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Solaris History Post 303011141 by drysdalk on Saturday 13th of January 2018 07:31:18 PM
Old 01-13-2018
Hi,

Basically, yes.

However, there is one more thing that may be worth checking. If your Solaris system has accounting enabled, then you might be able to run lastcomm to see the commands executed by users on the system. If this is enabled (and it's not enabled by default), then it will only show you very basic information - just the name of the command and none of the arguments, along with who ran it and when. But it's better than nothing, and could be worth a try before you give up. Note that if it's not enabled then enabling it now won't give you any historical data - it will only log commands from the point of activation onwards.

But really, as previously noted, for proper history logging all users who you want logged will have to use another shell, such as Bash.
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LASTCOMM(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					       LASTCOMM(1)

NAME
lastcomm -- show last commands executed in reverse order SYNOPSIS
lastcomm [-w] [-f file] [command ...] [user ...] [terminal ...] DESCRIPTION
lastcomm gives information on previously executed commands. With no arguments, lastcomm prints information about all the commands recorded during the current accounting file's lifetime. Option: -f file Read from file rather than the default accounting file. -w Use as many columns as needed to print the output instead of limiting it to 80. If called with arguments, only accounting entries with a matching command name, user name, or terminal name are printed. So, for example: lastcomm a.out root ttyd0 would produce a listing of all the executions of commands named a.out by user root on the terminal ttyd0. For each process entry, the following are printed. o The name of the user who ran the process. o Flags, as accumulated by the accounting facilities in the system. o The command name under which the process was called. o The amount of cpu time used by the process (in seconds). o The time the process started. o The elapsed time of the process. The flags are encoded as follows: ``S'' indicates the command was executed by the super-user, ``F'' indicates the command ran after a fork, but without a following exec(3), ``C'' indicates the command was run in PDP-11 compatibility mode (VAX only), ``D'' indicates the command terminated with the generation of a core file, and ``X'' indicates the command was terminated with a signal. The ``S'' and ``C'' flags are no longer recorded by the system, but will be reported by lastcomm when reading from an accounting file gener- ated by an older version of the system. FILES
/var/account/acct Default accounting file. SEE ALSO
last(1), sigaction(2), acct(5), core(5) HISTORY
The lastcomm command appeared in 3.0BSD. BSD
January 31, 2012 BSD
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