whodo(1M) manual page
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whodo - who is doing what
/usr/sbin/whodo [ -h ] [ -l ] [ user
]
SUNWcsu
whodo produces formatted and dated output
from information in the /var/adm/utmp, /tmp/ps_data, and /proc/pid files.
The display is headed by the date, time, and machine name. For each user
logged in, device name, user-ID
and login time is shown, followed by a list
of active processes associated with the user-ID
. The list includes the
device name, process-ID
, CPU
minutes and seconds used, and process name.
If user is specified, output is restricted to all sessions pertaining to
that user.
- -h
- Suppress the heading.
- -l
- Produce a long form of output.
The fields displayed are: the user’s login name, the name of the tty the
user is on, the time of day the user logged in (in hours:minutes), the
idle time -- that is, the time since the user last typed anything (in hours:minutes),
the CPU
time used by all processes and their children on that terminal
(in minutes:seconds), the CPU
time used by the currently active processes
(in minutes:seconds), and the name and arguments of the current process.
The command:
example% whodo
produces a display like this:
Tue Mar 12 15:48:03 1985
bailey
tty09 mcn 8:51
tty09 28158 0:29 sh
tty52 bdr 15:23
tty52 21688 0:05 sh
tty52 22788 0:01 whodo
tty52 22017 0:03 vi
tty52 22549 0:01 sh
xt162 lee 10:20
tty08 6748 0:01 layers
xt162 6751 0:01 sh
xt163 6761 0:05 sh
tty08 6536 0:05 sh
If any of the LC_*
variables ( LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES, LC_TIME,
LC_COLLATE, LC_NUMERIC,
and LC_MONETARY
) (see environ(5)
) are not set
in the environment, the operational behavior of tar(1)
for each corresponding
locale category is determined by the value of the LANG
environment variable.
If LC_ALL
is set, its contents are used to override both the LANG
and
the other LC_*
variables. If none of the above variables is set in the
environment, the "C" (U.S. style) locale determines how tar behaves.
- LC_CTYPE
- Determines how tar handles characters. When LC_CTYPE
is set to a valid
value, tar can display and handle text and filenames containing valid characters
for that locale. tar can display and handle Extended Unix code (EUC) characters
where any individual character can be 1, 2, or 3 bytes wide. tar can also
handle EUC characters of 1, 2, or more column widths. In the "C" locale,
only characters from ISO 8859-1 are valid.
- LC_MESSAGES
- Determines how diagnostic and informative messages are presented.
This includes the language and style of the messages, and the correct form
of affirmative and negative responses. In the "C" locale, the messages
are presented in the default form found in the program itself (in most
cases, U.S. English).
- LC_TIME
- Determines how tar handles date and time formats. In the "C"
locale, date and time handling follow the U.S. rules.
- /etc/passwd
- /tmp/ps_data
- /var/adm/utmp
- /proc/pid
-
ps(1)
, tar(1)
, who(1)
, environ(5)
If
the PROC
driver is not installed or configured or if /proc is not mounted,
a message to that effect is issued and whodo will fail.
The exit status
is zero on success, non-zero on failure.
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