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utmp, wtmp — login records
#include <utmp.h>
The utmp
file
allows one to discover information about who is currently
using the system. There may be more users currently using the
system, because not all programs use utmp logging.
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The file is a sequence of utmp
structures, declared as
follows in <
utmp.h
>
(note that this is only one of several definitions around;
details depend on the version of libc):
/* Values for ut_type field, below */ #define EMPTY 0 /* Record does not contain valid info (formerly known as UT_UNKNOWN on Linux) */ #define RUN_LVL 1 /* Change in system run-level (see init(8)) */ #define BOOT_TIME 2 /* Time of system boot (inut_tv
) */ #define NEW_TIME 3 /* Time after system clock change (inut_tv
) */ #define OLD_TIME 4 /* Time before system clock change (inut_tv
) */ #define INIT_PROCESS 5 /* Process spawned by init(8) */ #define LOGIN_PROCESS 6 /* Session leader process for user login */ #define USER_PROCESS 7 /* Normal process */ #define DEAD_PROCESS 8 /* Terminated process */ #define ACCOUNTING 9 /* Not implemented */ #define UT_LINESIZE 32 #define UT_NAMESIZE 32 #define UT_HOSTSIZE 256 struct exit_status { /* Type for ut_exit, below */ short int e_termination; /* Process termination status */ short int e_exit; /* Process exit status */ }; struct utmp { short ut_type; /* Type of record */ pid_t ut_pid; /* PID of login process */ char ut_line[UT_LINESIZE]; /* Device name of tty − "/dev/" */ char ut_id[4]; /* Terminal name suffix, or inittab(5) ID */ char ut_user[UT_NAMESIZE]; /* Username */ char ut_host[UT_HOSTSIZE]; /* Hostname for remote login, or kernel version for run-level messages */ struct exit_status ut_exit; /* Exit status of a process marked as DEAD_PROCESS; not used by Linux init(8) */ /* The ut_session and ut_tv fields must be the same size when compiled 32- and 64-bit. This allows data files and shared memory to be shared between 32- and 64-bit applications. */ #if __WORDSIZE == 64 && defined __WORDSIZE_COMPAT32 int32_t ut_session; /* Session ID ( getsid(2)), used for windowing */ struct { int32_t tv_sec; /* Seconds */ int32_t tv_usec; /* Microseconds */ } ut_tv; /* Time entry was made */ #else long ut_session; /* Session ID */ struct timeval ut_tv; /* Time entry was made */ #endif int32_t ut_addr_v6[4]; /* Internet address of remote host; IPv4 address uses just ut_addr_v6[0] */ char __unused[20]; /* Reserved for future use */ }; /* Backward compatibility hacks */ #define ut_name ut_user #ifndef _NO_UT_TIME #define ut_time ut_tv.tv_sec #endif #define ut_xtime ut_tv.tv_sec #define ut_addr ut_addr_v6[0]
This structure gives the name of the special file associated with the user's terminal, the user's login name, and the time of login in the form of time(2). String fields are terminated by a null byte ('\0') if they are shorter than the size of the field.
The first entries ever created result from init(8) processing inittab(5). Before an entry is
processed, though, init(8) cleans up utmp by
setting ut_type
to
DEAD_PROCESS
, clearing
ut_user
, ut_host
, and ut_time
with null bytes for
each record which ut_type
is not DEAD_PROCESS
or RUN_LVL
and where no process with PID
ut_pid
exists. If
no empty record with the needed ut_id
can be found,
init(8) creates a new one. It
sets ut_id
from the
inittab, ut_pid
and
ut_time
to the
current values, and ut_type
to INIT_PROCESS
.
mingetty(8) (or agetty(8)) locates the
entry by the PID, changes ut_type
to LOGIN_PROCESS
, changes ut_time
, sets ut_line
, and waits for
connection to be established. login(1), after a user has
been authenticated, changes ut_type
to USER_PROCESS
, changes ut_time
, and sets ut_host
and ut_addr
. Depending on
mingetty(8) (or agetty(8)) and login(1), records may be
located by ut_line
instead of the preferable ut_pid
.
When init(8) finds that a process
has exited, it locates its utmp entry by ut_pid
, sets ut_type
to DEAD_PROCESS
, and clears ut_user
, ut_host
and ut_time
with null bytes.
xterm(1) and other terminal
emulators directly create a USER_PROCESS
record and generate the
ut_id
by using the
string that suffix part of the terminal name (the characters
following /dev/[pt]ty
). If they
find a DEAD_PROCESS
for this
ID, they recycle it, otherwise they create a new entry. If
they can, they will mark it as DEAD_PROCESS
on exiting and it is advised
that they null ut_line
, ut_time
, ut_user
, and ut_host
as well.
telnetd(8) sets up a
LOGIN_PROCESS
entry and leaves
the rest to login(1) as usual. After
the telnet session ends, telnetd(8) cleans up utmp in
the described way.
The wtmp
file
records all logins and logouts. Its format is exactly like
utmp
except that a
null username indicates a logout on the associated terminal.
Furthermore, the terminal name ~
with username shutdown or reboot indicates a system
shutdown or reboot and the pair of terminal names
|
/}
logs the old/new system time when date(1) changes it.
wtmp
is maintained
by login(1), init(8), and some versions of
getty(8) (e.g., mingetty(8) or agetty(8)). None of these
programs creates the file, so if it is removed,
record-keeping is turned off.
POSIX.1 does not specify a utmp
structure, but rather
one named utmpx
,
with specifications for the fields ut_type
, ut_pid
, ut_line
, ut_id
, ut_user
, and ut_tv
. POSIX.1 does not
specify the lengths of the ut_line
and ut_user
fields.
Linux defines the utmpx
structure to be the
same as the utmp
structure.
Linux utmp entries conform neither to v7/BSD nor to System V; they are a mix of the two.
v7/BSD has fewer fields; most importantly it lacks
ut_type
, which
causes native v7/BSD-like programs to display (for example)
dead or login entries. Further, there is no configuration
file which allocates slots to sessions. BSD does so because
it lacks ut_id
fields.
In Linux (as in System V), the ut_id
field of a record
will never change once it has been set, which reserves that
slot without needing a configuration file. Clearing
ut_id
may result
in race conditions leading to corrupted utmp entries and
potential security holes. Clearing the abovementioned
fields by filling them with null bytes is not required by
System V semantics, but makes it possible to run many
programs which assume BSD semantics and which do not modify
utmp. Linux uses the BSD conventions for line contents, as
documented above.
System V has no ut_host
or ut_addr_v6
fields.
Unlike various other systems, where utmp logging can be disabled by removing the file, utmp must always exist on Linux. If you want to disable who(1) then do not make utmp world readable.
The file format is machine-dependent, so it is recommended that it be processed only on the machine architecture where it was created.
Note that on biarch
platforms, that is,
systems which can run both 32-bit and 64-bit applications
(x86-64, ppc64, s390x, etc.), ut_tv
is the same size in
32-bit mode as in 64-bit mode. The same goes for ut_session
and ut_time
if they are present.
This allows data files and shared memory to be shared between
32-bit and 64-bit applications. This is achieved by changing
the type of ut_session
to int32_t
, and that of
ut_tv
to a struct
with two int32_t
fields tv_sec
and
tv_usec
. Since
ut_tv
may not be
the same as struct
timeval, then instead of the call:
gettimeofday((struct timeval *) &ut.ut_tv, NULL);
the following method of setting this field is recommended:
struct utmp ut; struct timeval tv; gettimeofday(&tv, NULL); ut.ut_tv.tv_sec = tv.tv_sec; ut.ut_tv.tv_usec = tv.tv_usec;
Note that the utmp
struct from libc5 has
changed in libc6. Because of this, binaries using the old
libc5 struct will corrupt /var/run/utmp
and/or /var/log/wtmp
.
ac(1), date(1), last(1), login(1), utmpdump(1), who(1), getutent(3), getutmp(3), login(3), logout(3), logwtmp(3), updwtmp(3), init(8)
This page is part of release 3.52 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/.
Copyright (c) 1993 Michael Haardt (michaelcantor.informatik.rwth-aachen.de), Fri Apr 2 11:32:09 MET DST 1993 %%%LICENSE_START(GPLv2+_DOC_FULL) This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The GNU General Public License's references to "object code" and "executables" are to be interpreted as the output of any document formatting or typesetting system, including intermediate and printed output. This manual is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this manual; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. %%%LICENSE_END Modified 1993-07-25 by Rik Faith (faithcs.unc.edu) Modified 1995-02-26 by Michael Haardt Modified 1996-07-20 by Michael Haardt Modified 1997-07-02 by Nicolás Lichtmaier <nickdebian.org> Modified 2004-10-31 by aeb, following Gwenole Beauchesne |