1DUMP_UTMP(8) System Manager's Manual DUMP_UTMP(8)
2
3
4
6 dump-utmp - print a utmp file in human-readable format
7
8
10 dump-utmp [-hrR] [-n <recs>] <files>
11 [--num <recs>] [--raw] [--reverse] [--help]
12
13
15 The following options are supported:
16
17 -h, --help
18 Print a help message and the default location of the process
19 accounting file and exit.
20
21 -r, --reverse
22 Print the output in reverse order.
23
24 -R, --raw
25 The records will be printed without any parsing.
26
27 -n, --num NUMRECS
28 Display only the first NUMRECS number of records.
29
30
32 accton (8), lastcomm (1), utmp (5)
33
34
35
36DUMP-UTMP(8) GNU Accounting Utilities DUMP-UTMP(8)
37
38
39
41 dump-utmp - print an utmp file in human-readable format.
42
43
45 dump-acct [-r|--reverse] [-R|--raw] [-n|--num recs] [-h|--help] [
46 files]
47
48
50 dump-acct filename prints a list of all logins. This list is usually
51 written in /var/log/wtmp.
52
53 All fields are separated by vertical line. Fields are: user name, tty,
54 type, id, pid, hostaddr, host, time.
55
56
58 -h, --help
59 Prints the usage string and default locations of system files to
60 standard output and exits.
61
62 -n, --num recs
63 Number of lines to print.
64
65 -r, --reverse
66 Start printing from last records.
67
68 -R, --raw
69 Print raw records, not human-readable.
70
71
73 wtmp The system wide login record file. See wtmp(5) for further
74 details.
75
76
78 login(1), wtmp(5), init(8), sa(8).
79
80
82 The GNU accounting utilities were written by Noel Cragg
83 <noel@gnu.ai.mit.edu>.
84
85 This manual page was written by Ognyan Kulev <ogi@fmi.uni-sofia.bg> and
86 updated by Daniel Baumann <daniel@debian.org> for the Debian project
87 (but may be used by others).
88
89
90
916.5.1 2006-04-22 DUMP-UTMP(8)