10-28-2003
The user name will be in the environment and you can get it with getenv(). The environment variable will be called either USER or LOGNAME. (Posix requires LOGNAME) Whichever variable your system uses, it is set by the login program. And a decent cron will also set it for cron and "at" jobs. It won't get set if the user invokes your program via a remote service that did not properly log him in. But a clever user can set the env variable himself in that case. Which bring up a problem....a user could also clobber the variable, intentionally or otherwise.
Another approach is the inspect fd's 0, 1, and 2. They may be connected to the user's tty. isatty() can tell you if they are tty's or not. And ttyname() can provide the name of the tty. Once you have that, you can search the utmp file via getutmp() to get the user name as recorded by the login (or similiar) program. Again, not all remote services will set a utmp entry. And this will fail for cron or "at" jobs. This is how "who am i" works. And it is why
who am i < /dev/null 2 > /dev/null | cat
fails.
Another approach is to get the uid of the process with getuid() and then scan the passwd file via getpwnam(). This is how the program whoami works. But if user A signs on and su's to user B and then runs your program, you get user B.
As for the password, you can't get that. And I wonder why you want it.
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LEARN ABOUT LINUX
cuserid
GETLOGIN(3) Linux Programmer's Manual GETLOGIN(3)
NAME
getlogin, getlogin_r, cuserid - get username
SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h>
char *getlogin(void);
int getlogin_r(char *buf, size_t bufsize);
#include <stdio.h>
char *cuserid(char *string);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
getlogin_r(): _REENTRANT || _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 199506L
cuserid(): _XOPEN_SOURCE
DESCRIPTION
getlogin() returns a pointer to a string containing the name of the user logged in on the controlling terminal of the process, or a null
pointer if this information cannot be determined. The string is statically allocated and might be overwritten on subsequent calls to this
function or to cuserid().
getlogin_r() returns this same username in the array buf of size bufsize.
cuserid() returns a pointer to a string containing a username associated with the effective user ID of the process. If string is not a
null pointer, it should be an array that can hold at least L_cuserid characters; the string is returned in this array. Otherwise, a
pointer to a string in a static area is returned. This string is statically allocated and might be overwritten on subsequent calls to this
function or to getlogin().
The macro L_cuserid is an integer constant that indicates how long an array you might need to store a username. L_cuserid is declared in
<stdio.h>.
These functions let your program identify positively the user who is running (cuserid()) or the user who logged in this session (getlo-
gin()). (These can differ when set-user-ID programs are involved.)
For most purposes, it is more useful to use the environment variable LOGNAME to find out who the user is. This is more flexible precisely
because the user can set LOGNAME arbitrarily.
RETURN VALUE
getlogin() returns a pointer to the username when successful, and NULL on failure. getlogin_r() returns 0 when successful, and nonzero on
failure.
ERRORS
POSIX specifies
EMFILE The calling process already has the maximum allowed number of open files.
ENFILE The system already has the maximum allowed number of open files.
ENXIO The calling process has no controlling tty.
ERANGE (getlogin_r) The length of the username, including the terminating null byte, is larger than bufsize.
Linux/glibc also has
ENOENT There was no corresponding entry in the utmp-file.
ENOMEM Insufficient memory to allocate passwd structure.
ENOTTY Standard input didn't refer to a terminal. (See BUGS.)
FILES
/etc/passwd
password database file
/var/run/utmp
(traditionally /etc/utmp; some libc versions used /var/adm/utmp)
CONFORMING TO
getlogin() and getlogin_r() specified in POSIX.1-2001.
System V has a cuserid() function which uses the real user ID rather than the effective user ID. The cuserid() function was included in
the 1988 version of POSIX, but removed from the 1990 version. It was present in SUSv2, but removed in POSIX.1-2001.
OpenBSD has getlogin() and setlogin(), and a username associated with a session, even if it has no controlling tty.
BUGS
Unfortunately, it is often rather easy to fool getlogin(). Sometimes it does not work at all, because some program messed up the utmp
file. Often, it gives only the first 8 characters of the login name. The user currently logged in on the controlling tty of our program
need not be the user who started it. Avoid getlogin() for security-related purposes.
Note that glibc does not follow the POSIX specification and uses stdin instead of /dev/tty. A bug. (Other recent systems, like SunOS 5.8
and HP-UX 11.11 and FreeBSD 4.8 all return the login name also when stdin is redirected.)
Nobody knows precisely what cuserid() does; avoid it in portable programs. Or avoid it altogether: use getpwuid(geteuid()) instead, if
that is what you meant. Do not use cuserid().
SEE ALSO
geteuid(2), getuid(2), utmp(5)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.27 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can
be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
GNU
2008-06-29 GETLOGIN(3)