mirror of https://github.com/mkerrisk/man-pages
302 lines
9.9 KiB
Groff
302 lines
9.9 KiB
Groff
.\" Copyright (c) 1993 Michael Haardt (michael@cantor.informatik.rwth-aachen.de), Fri Apr 2 11:32:09 MET DST 1993
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.\"
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.\" This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or
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.\" modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
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.\" published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
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.\" the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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.\"
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.\" The GNU General Public License's references to "object code"
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.\" and "executables" are to be interpreted as the output of any
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.\" document formatting or typesetting system, including
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.\" intermediate and printed output.
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.\"
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.\" This manual is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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.\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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.\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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.\" GNU General Public License for more details.
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.\"
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.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
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.\" License along with this manual; if not, write to the Free
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.\" Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111,
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.\" USA.
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.\"
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.\" Modified 1993-07-25 by Rik Faith (faith@cs.unc.edu)
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.\" Modified 1995-02-26 by Michael Haardt
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.\" Modified 1996-07-20 by Michael Haardt
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.\" Modified 1997-07-02 by Nicolás Lichtmaier <nick@debian.org>
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.\" Modified 2004-10-31 by aeb, following Gwenole Beauchesne
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.TH UTMP 5 2007-11-25 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
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.SH NAME
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utmp, wtmp \- login records
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B #include <utmp.h>
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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The
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.I utmp
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file allows one to discover information about who is currently using the
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system.
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There may be more users currently using the system, because not
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all programs use utmp logging.
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.PP
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.B Warning:
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.I utmp
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must not be writable, because many system programs (foolishly)
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depend on its integrity.
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You risk faked system logfiles and
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modifications of system files if you leave
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.I utmp
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writable to any user.
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.PP
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The file is a sequence of entries with the following structure declared
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in the include file (note that this is only one of several definitions
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around; details depend on the version of libc):
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.in +4n
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.nf
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.sp
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#define UT_UNKNOWN 0
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#define RUN_LVL 1
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#define BOOT_TIME 2
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#define NEW_TIME 3
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#define OLD_TIME 4
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#define INIT_PROCESS 5
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#define LOGIN_PROCESS 6
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#define USER_PROCESS 7
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#define DEAD_PROCESS 8
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#define ACCOUNTING 9
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#define UT_LINESIZE 12
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#define UT_NAMESIZE 32
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#define UT_HOSTSIZE 256
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struct exit_status {
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short int e_termination; /* process termination status */
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short int e_exit; /* process exit status */
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};
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struct utmp {
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short ut_type; /* type of login */
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pid_t ut_pid; /* PID of login process */
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char ut_line[UT_LINESIZE]; /* device name of tty \- "/dev/" */
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char ut_id[4]; /* init id or abbrev. ttyname */
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char ut_user[UT_NAMESIZE]; /* user name */
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char ut_host[UT_HOSTSIZE]; /* hostname for remote login */
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struct exit_status ut_exit; /* The exit status of a process
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marked as DEAD_PROCESS */
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/* The ut_session and ut_tv fields must be the same size when
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compiled 32- and 64-bit. This allows data files and shared
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memory to be shared between 32- and 64-bit applications */
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#if __WORDSIZE == 64 && defined __WORDSIZE_COMPAT32
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int32_t ut_session; /* Session ID, used for windowing */
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struct {
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int32_t tv_sec; /* Seconds */
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int32_t tv_usec; /* Microseconds */
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} ut_tv; /* Time entry was made */
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#else
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long int ut_session; /* Session ID, used for windowing */
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struct timeval ut_tv; /* Time entry was made */
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#endif
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int32_t ut_addr_v6[4]; /* IP address of remote host */
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char __unused[20]; /* Reserved for future use */
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};
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/* Backwards compatibility hacks. */
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#define ut_name ut_user
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#ifndef _NO_UT_TIME
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#define ut_time ut_tv.tv_sec
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#endif
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#define ut_xtime ut_tv.tv_sec
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#define ut_addr ut_addr_v6[0]
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.sp
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.fi
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.in
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This structure gives the name of the special file associated with the
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user's terminal, the user's login name, and the time of login in the form
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of
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.BR time (2).
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String fields are terminated by \fB'\e0'\fP if they are shorter than the size
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of the field.
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.PP
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The first entries ever created result from
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.BR init (8)
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processing
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.BR inittab (5).
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Before an entry is processed, though,
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.BR init (8)
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cleans up utmp by setting \fIut_type\fP to \fBDEAD_PROCESS\fP, clearing
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\fIut_user\fP, \fIut_host\fP, and \fIut_time\fP with null bytes for each
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record which \fIut_type\fP is not \fBDEAD_PROCESS\fP or \fBRUN_LVL\fP
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and where no process with PID \fIut_pid\fP exists.
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If no empty record
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with the needed \fIut_id\fP can be found, init creates a new one.
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It sets \fIut_id\fP from the inittab, \fIut_pid\fP and \fIut_time\fP to the
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current values, and \fIut_type\fP to \fBINIT_PROCESS\fP.
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.PP
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.BR mingetty (8)
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(or
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.BR agetty (8))
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locates the entry by the PID, changes \fIut_type\fP to
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\fBLOGIN_PROCESS\fP, changes \fIut_time\fP, sets \fIut_line\fP, and waits
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for connection to be established.
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.BR login (1),
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after a user has been
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authenticated, changes \fIut_type\fP to \fBUSER_PROCESS\fP, changes
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\fIut_time\fP, and sets \fIut_host\fP and \fIut_addr\fP.
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Depending on
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.BR mingetty (8)
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(or
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.BR agetty (8))
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and
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.BR login (1),
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records may be located by
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\fIut_line\fP instead of the preferable \fIut_pid\fP.
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.PP
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When
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.BR init (8)
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finds that a process has exited, it locates its utmp
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entry by \fIut_pid\fP, sets \fIut_type\fP to \fBDEAD_PROCESS\fP, and
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clears \fIut_user\fP, \fIut_host\fP and \fIut_time\fP with null bytes.
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.PP
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.BR xterm (1)
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and other terminal emulators directly create a
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\fBUSER_PROCESS\fP record and generate the \fIut_id\fP by using the last
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two letters of \fI/dev/ttyp\fP\fI%c\fP or by using \fIp\fP\fI%d\fP for
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\fI/dev/pts/\fP\fI%d\fP.
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If they find a \fBDEAD_PROCESS\fP for this ID,
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they recycle it, otherwise they create a new entry.
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If they can, they
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will mark it as \fBDEAD_PROCESS\fP on exiting and it is advised that
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they null \fIut_line\fP, \fIut_time\fP, \fIut_user\fP, and \fIut_host\fP
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as well.
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.PP
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.BR telnetd (8)
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sets up a \fBLOGIN_PROCESS\fP entry and leaves the rest to
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.BR login (1)
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as usual.
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After the telnet session ends,
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.BR telnetd (8)
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cleans up utmp in the described way.
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.PP
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The \fIwtmp\fP file records all logins and logouts.
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Its format is exactly like \fIutmp\fP except that a null user name
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indicates a logout
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on the associated terminal.
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Furthermore, the terminal name \fB~\fP
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with user name \fBshutdown\fP or \fBreboot\fP indicates a system
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shutdown or reboot and the pair of terminal names \fB|\fP/\fB}\fP
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logs the old/new system time when
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.BR date (1)
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changes it.
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\fIwtmp\fP is maintained by
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.BR login (1),
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.BR init (8),
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and some versions of
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.BR mingetty (8)
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(or
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.BR agetty (8)).
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Neither of these programs creates the file, so if it is
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removed, record-keeping is turned off.
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.PP
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Note that on \fIbiarch\fP platforms, that is, systems which can run both
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32-bit and 64-bit applications (x86-64, ppc64, s390x, etc.),
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\fIut_tv\fP is the same size in 32-bit mode as in 64-bit mode.
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The same goes for \fIut_session\fP and \fIut_time\fP if they are present.
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This allows data files and shared memory to be shared between
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32-bit and 64-bit applications.
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Since \fIut_tv\fP may not be the same as \fIstruct timeval\fP,
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then instead of the call:
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.in +4n
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.nf
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.sp
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gettimeofday((struct timeval *) &ut.ut_tv, NULL);
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.fi
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.in
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the following method of setting this field is recommended:
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.in +4n
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.nf
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.sp
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struct utmp ut;
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struct timeval tv;
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gettimeofday(&tv, NULL);
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ut.ut_tv.tv_sec = tv.tv_sec;
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ut.ut_tv.tv_usec = tv.tv_usec;
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.fi
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.in
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.SH FILES
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/var/run/utmp
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.br
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/var/log/wtmp
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.SH "CONFORMING TO"
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Linux utmp entries conform neither to v7/BSD nor to System V; they are a
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mix of the two. v7/BSD has fewer fields; most importantly it lacks
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\fIut_type\fP, which causes native v7/BSD-like programs to display (for
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example) dead or login entries.
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Further, there is no configuration file
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which allocates slots to sessions.
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BSD does so because it lacks \fIut_id\fP fields.
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In Linux (as in System V), the \fIut_id\fP field of a
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record will never change once it has been set, which reserves that slot
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without needing a configuration file.
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Clearing \fIut_id\fP may result
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in race conditions leading to corrupted utmp entries and potential
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security holes.
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Clearing the above mentioned fields by filling them
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with null bytes is not required by System V semantics, but it allows to run
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many programs which assume BSD semantics and which do not modify utmp.
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Linux uses the BSD conventions for line contents, as documented above.
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.PP
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System V only uses the type field to mark them and logs informative messages
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such as \fB"new time"\fP in the line field.
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\fBUT_UNKNOWN\fP seems
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to be a Linux invention.
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System V has no \fIut_host\fP or \fIut_addr_v6\fP fields.
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.PP
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Unlike various other
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systems, where utmp logging can be disabled by removing the file, utmp
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must always exist on Linux.
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If you want to disable
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.BR who (1)
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then do not make utmp world readable.
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.PP
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Note that the \fIutmp\fP struct from libc5 has changed in libc6.
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Because of this,
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binaries using the old libc5 struct will corrupt
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.IR /var/run/utmp " and/or " /var/log/wtmp .
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.SH NOTES
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The file format is machine-dependent, so it is recommended that it be
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processed only on the machine architecture where it was created.
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.PP
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Note that on platforms which can run both 32-bit and 64-bit applications
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(x86-64, ppc64, s390x, etc.), the sizes of the fields of a \fIutmp\fP struct
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must be the same in 32-bit mode as in 64-bit mode.
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This is achieved by changing the type of
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.I ut_session
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to
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.IR int32_t ,
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and that of
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.I ut_tv
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to a struct with two
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.I int32_t
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fields
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.I tv_sec
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and
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.IR tv_usec .
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(Thus, in order to fill it, first get the
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time into a real \fIstruct timeval\fP,
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then copy the two fields to
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.IR ut_tv .)
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.SH BUGS
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This man page is based on the libc5 one, things may work differently now.
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.SH "SEE ALSO"
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.BR ac (1),
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.BR date (1),
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.BR last (1),
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.BR login (1),
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.BR who (1),
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.BR getutent (3),
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.BR updwtmp (3),
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.BR init (8)
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