The free, independent, Buntu magazine

Home  

 


  Create an account

Search


[x]  
 
 [x]
Categories Menu
· All Categories
· Commands
· Distro News
· General
· Link of the Week
· Linux Jobs
· Security
· Software
· Tips

 
Navigation
 
User Info
Welcome, Anonymous

Username:
Password:

(Register)

Membership:
Latest: hkemplnk
New Today: 1
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 342

People Online:
Visitors: 6
Members: 0
Total: 6

 
hacker Beware
You have been warned!
We have caught 1933 shameful hackers.

NukeSentinel(tm) 2.5.14

 
Hot Downloads
 
  
Commands: w - Lists who is online
Posted on Saturday, December 18 @ 08:40:43 CST by maysvill

Commands You Should Know How to Use Anonymous writes "The w command is similar to the who command and it lists all users that are currently logged in on a Linux computer or server, it shows the source of the login, and any processes currently being run by that user.

An example follows:

.

The man page is listed here:

NAME
w - Show who is logged on and what they are doing.

SYNOPSIS
w - [husfV] [user]

DESCRIPTION
w displays information about the users currently on the machine, and their processes. The header shows, in this order, the current time, how long the system has been running, how many users are currently logged on, and the system load averages for the past 1, 5, and 15 minutes.

The following entries are displayed for each user: login name, the tty name, the remote host, login time, idle time,
JCPU, PCPU, and the command line of their current process.

The JCPU time is the time used by all processes attached to the tty. It does not include past background jobs, but
does include currently running background jobs.

The PCPU time is the time used by the current process, named in the "what" field.



COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
-h Don't print the header.

-u Ignores the username while figuring out the current process and cpu times. To demonstrate this, do a "su" and do
a "w" and a "w -u".

-s Use the short format. Don't print the login time, JCPU or PCPU times.

-f Toggle printing the from (remote hostname) field. The default as released is for the from field to not be
printed, although your system administrator or distribution maintainer may have compiled a version in which the
from field is shown by default.

-V Display version information.

user Show information about the specified user only.


FILES
/var/run/utmp
information about who is currently logged on

/proc process information



SEE ALSO
free(1), ps(1), top(1), uptime(1), utmp(5), who(1)


AUTHORS
w was re-written almost entirely by Charles Blake, based on the version by Larry Greenfield and Michael K. Johnson .

Please send bug reports to "

 
Related Websites

Related Links
 
Article Rating
Average Score: 5
Votes: 1


Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad


 
Options
 
Associated Topics

Commands You Should Know How to UseLinux Computer & Network SecurityTips & Tricks

The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

 
All content Copyright 2000 - 2008, Maysville Linux Users Group unless otherwise credited.
All Rights Reserved!
The opinions expressed by visitors to this web site are their own and not necessarily the opinions of the MLUG!


Web site powered by PHP-Nuke Web site powered by PHP-Nuke-NIP-76.0

You can syndicate our news using the file backend.php or ultramode.txt