Name
utmp, wtmp — login records
DESCRIPTION
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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Warning |
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utmp
must not be writable, because many system programs
(foolishly) depend on its integrity. You risk faked
system logfiles and modifications of system files if
you leave utmp writable to any
user.
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The file is a sequence of entries with the following
structure declared in the include file (note that this is
only one of several definitions around; details depend on the
version of libc):
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 '\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
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.
getty(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(8), after a user has been
authenticated, changes ut_type to USER_PROCESS, changes ut_time, and sets ut_host and ut_addr. Depending on
getty(8) and login(8), 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
last two letters of /dev/ttyp%c or by using p%d for /dev/pts/%d. 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(8) 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 user name indicates a logout on the associated terminal.
Furthermore, the terminal name ~ with user name 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(1), and some versions of
getty(8). Neither of these
programs creates the file, so if it is removed,
record-keeping is turned off.
Note that on biarch platforms, i.e.
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. Since ut_tv may not be the same as
struct timeval, then
instead of the call:
the following method of setting this field is
recommended:
FILES
/var/run/utmp
/var/log/wtmp
CONFORMING TO
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 above mentioned fields by
filling them with null bytes is not required by System V
semantics, but it allows 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 only uses the type field to mark them and logs
informative messages such as e.g. "new time" in the line field.
UT_UNKNOWN seems to be a Linux
invention. 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.
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.
NOTES
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 platforms which can run both 32-bit and
64-bit applications (x86-64, ppc64, s390x, etc.), the sizes
of the fields of a struct utmp must be the same in 32-bit
mode as in 64-bit mode. 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. (Thus, in order to
fill it, first get the time into a real struct timeval, then copy the two
fields to ut_tv.)
BUGS
This man page is based on the libc5 one, things may work
differently now.
SEE ALSO
ac(1), date(1), last(1), login(1), who(1), getutent(3), updwtmp(3), init(8)
Copyright (c) 1993 Michael Haardt (michael@cantor.informatik.rwth-aachen.de), Fri Apr 2 11:32:09 MET DST 1993
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, write to the Free
Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111,
USA.
Modified 1993-07-25 by Rik Faith (faith@cs.unc.edu)
Modified 1995-02-26 by Michael Haardt
Modified 1996-07-20 by Michael Haardt
Modified 1997-07-02 by Nicolás Lichtmaier <nick@debian.org>
Modified 2004-10-31 by aeb, following Gwenole Beauchesne
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