hpux man page for who

Query: who

OS: hpux

Section: 1

Format: Original Unix Latex Style Formatted with HTML and a Horizontal Scroll Bar

who(1)							      General Commands Manual							    who(1)

NAME
who - who is on the system
SYNOPSIS
[file]
DESCRIPTION
The command can list the user's name, terminal line, login time, elapsed time since input activity occurred on the line, the user's host name, and the process-ID of the command interpreter (shell) for each current system user. It examines the database to obtain the informa- tion. If file is given, that file is examined, file should be a like file. The command with the or option identifies the invoking user. Except for the default option, the general format for output entries is: name [state] line time activity pid [comment] [exit] With options, can list logins, logoffs, reboots, and changes to the system clock, as well as other processes spawned by the process. Options Output only information about the current terminal. This option is equivalent to the and options described above. Lists only those users who are currently logged in. name is the user's login name. line is the name of the line as found in the directory The time field indicates when the user logged in. activity is the number of hours and minutes since input activity last occurred on that particular line. A dot indi- cates that the terminal has seen activity in the last minute and is therefore ``current''. If more than twenty-four hours have elapsed or the line has not been used since boot time, the entry is marked This field is useful when try- ing to determine whether a person is working at the terminal or not. The pid is the process-ID of the user's login process. The comment is the comment field associated with this line as found in (see inittab(4)). This can contain information about where the terminal is located, the telephone number of the dataset, type of terminal if hard-wired, etc. If no such information is found, then prints, as the comment, the user's host name as it was stored in the database or named file. Note that the user's host name is printed instead of comments from the file if the option is used in conjunction with the option. Same as the option, except that the state of the terminal line is printed. state describes whether someone else can write to that terminal. A appears if the terminal is writable by anyone; a appears if it is not. can write to all lines hav- ing a or a in the state field. If a bad line is encountered, a is printed. (UNIX Standard only, see standards(5).) Only the following fields are displayed: name state line time Lists only those lines on which the system is waiting for someone to login. The name field is in such cases. Other fields are the same as for user entries except that the state field does not exist. Prints column headings above the regular output. A quick displaying only the names and the number of users currently logged in. When this option is used, all other options are ignored. Lists any other process which is currently active and has been previously spawned by init. The name field is the name of the program executed by as found in The state, line, and activity fields have no meaning. The comment field shows the id field of the line from that spawned this process. See inittab(4). This option displays all processes that have expired and have not been respawned by The exit field appears for dead processes and contains the termina- tion and exit values of the dead process (as returned by -- see wait(2)). This can be useful in determining why a process terminated. Indicates the time and date of the last reboot. Indicates the current run-level of the process. The last three fields contain the current state of the number of times that state has been previously entered, and the previous state. These fields are updated each time changes to a different run state. Indicates the last change to the system clock (via the command) by See su(1). Processes database or the named file with all options turned on. Default. Lists only the name, line, and time fields. When the file is specified, (the option can be used to examine the file) this option indicates when the accounting system was turned on or off using the or commands (see acctsh(1M)). The name field is a dot The line field is or a reason that was given as an option to the command. The time is the time that the on/off activity occurred. Displays the user's host name. If the user is logged in on a tty, displays the string returned from (see gethostname(2)). If the user is not logged in on a tty and the host name stored in the database or named like file has not been truncated when stored (meaning that the entire host name was stored with no loss of information), it is displayed as it was stored. Otherwise, the (IPv4) or (IPv6) function is called with the internet address of the host (see gethostent(3N)). The host name returned by (IPv4) or (IPv6) is displayed unless it returns an error, in which case the truncated host name is dis- played. Gets the information from file. (UNIX Standard only, see standards(5). The option can not be used with or options. If option is used with the idle time is added to the end of the format.)
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
For information about the UNIX Standard environment, see standards(5). Environment Variables determines the locale to use for the locale categories when both and the corresponding environment variable (beginning with do not specify a locale. If is not set or is set to the empty string, a default of "C" (see lang(5)) is used. determines the locale for interpretation of sequences of bytes of text data as characters (e.g., single- verses multibyte characters in arguments and input files). determines the format and contents of date and time strings. determines the language in which messages are displayed. If any internationalization variable contains an invalid setting, behaves as if all internationalization variables are set to "C". See environ(5). International Code Set Support Single- and multi-byte character code sets are supported.
EXAMPLES
Check who is logged in on the system: Check whether or not you can write to the terminal that another user is using: and look for a plus after the user ID.
AUTHOR
was developed by AT&T and HP.
FILES
SEE ALSO
date(1), login(1), mesg(1), su(1), init(1M), utmpd(1M), gethostname(2), wait(2), gethostent(3N), getutsent(3C), getbwent(3C), inittab(4), utmp(4), standards(5).
STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
who(1)
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