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Full Discussion: File Permissions change date
Operating Systems Solaris File Permissions change date Post 70049 by kpatel on Monday 25th of April 2005 01:04:21 PM
Old 04-25-2005
Yes, it did work, I did not notice it carefully the first time when I ran 'ls -lc'.

Thanks again.
 

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lastcomm(1)						      General Commands Manual						       lastcomm(1)

NAME
lastcomm - show last commands executed in reverse order SYNOPSIS
[commandname] ... [username] ... [terminalname] ... DESCRIPTION
gives information on previously executed commands. If no arguments are specified, prints information about all the commands recorded in the accounting file, during the current accounting file's lifetime. If called with arguments, only accounting entries with a matching com- mand name, user name, or terminal name are printed. For example, to produce a listing of all executions of commands named by user on ter- minal use: For each process entry, the following are printed. o Name of the user who ran the process. o Flags, as accumulated by the accounting facilities in the system. o Command name under which the process was called. o Amount of cpu time used by the process (in seconds). o What time the process started. Flags are encoded as follows: Command was executed by a user who has appropriate privileges. Command ran after a fork, but without a following exec. Command terminated with the generation of a file. Command was terminated with the signal SIGTERM. AUTHOR
was developed by the University of California, Berkeley. FILES
current file for per-process accounting SEE ALSO
last(1), acct(4), acctsh(1M), core(4). lastcomm(1)
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