getutent, getutid, getutline, pututline, setutent, endutent, utmpname — access utmp file entries
#include <utmp.h>
struct utmp *getutent( |
void) ; |
struct utmp *getutid( |
struct utmp * | ut) ; |
struct utmp *getutline( |
struct utmp * | ut) ; |
struct utmp *pututline( |
struct utmp * | ut) ; |
void
setutent( |
void) ; |
void
endutent( |
void) ; |
void
utmpname( |
const char * | file) ; |
utmpname
() sets the name of
the utmp-format file for the other utmp functions to access.
If utmpname
() is not used to
set the filename before the other functions are used, they
assume _PATH_UTMP
, as defined
in <
paths.h
>
setutent
() rewinds the file
pointer to the beginning of the utmp file. It is generally a
good idea to call it before any of the other functions.
endutent
() closes the utmp
file. It should be called when the user code is done
accessing the file with the other functions.
getutent
() reads a line from
the current file position in the utmp file. It returns a
pointer to a structure containing the fields of the line.
getutid
() searches forward
from the current file position in the utmp file based upon
ut
. If ut−>ut_type
is one
of RUN_LVL
, BOOT_TIME
, NEW_TIME
, or OLD_TIME
, getutid
() will find the first entry whose
ut_type
field matches ut−>ut_type
. If
ut−>ut_type
is one
of INIT_PROCESS
, LOGIN_PROCESS
, USER_PROCESS
, or DEAD_PROCESS
, getutid
() will find the first entry whose
ut_id
field matches ut−>ut_id
.
getutline
() searches forward
from the current file position in the utmp file. It scans
entries whose ut_type
is
USER_PROCESS
or LOGIN_PROCESS
and returns the first one
whose ut_line
field matches
ut−>ut_line
.
pututline
() writes the
utmp structure ut
into the utmp file. It uses
getutid
() to search for the
proper place in the file to insert the new entry. If it
cannot find an appropriate slot for ut
, pututline
() will append the new entry to
the end of the file.
getutent
(), getutid
(), getutline
() and pututline
() return a pointer to a
struct utmp on
success, and NULL on failure. This struct utmp is allocated in static
storage, and may be overwritten by subsequent calls.
/var/run/utmp database of currently logged-in users
/var/log/wtmp database of past user logins
XPG2, SVr4.
In XPG2 and SVID 2 the function pututline
() is documented to return void,
and that is what it does on many systems (AIX, HP-UX, Linux
libc5). HP-UX introduces a new function _pututline
() with the prototype given above
for pututline
() (also found in
Linux libc5).
All these functions are obsolete now on non-Linux systems. POSIX.1-2001, following SUSv1, does not have any of these functions, but instead uses
#include <utmpx.h> struct utmpx *getutxent(void); struct utmpx *getutxid(const struct utmpx *); struct utmpx *getutxline(const struct utmpx *); struct utmpx *pututxline(const struct utmpx *); void setutxent(void); void endutxent(void);
The utmpx structure is a
superset of the utmp
structure, with additional fields, and larger versions of the
existing fields. The corresponding files are often
/var/*/utmpx
and /var/*/wtmpx
.
Linux glibc on the other hand does not use utmpx since its utmp structure is already large enough.
The functions getutxent
etc.
are aliases for getutent
etc.
The above functions are not thread-safe. Glibc adds reentrant versions
#define _GNU_SOURCE /* or _SVID_SOURCE or _BSD_SOURCE */ #include <utmp.h>int getutent_r
(struct utmp *ubuf
,struct utmp **ubufp
);int getutid_r
(struct utmp *ut
,struct utmp *ubuf
,struct utmp **ubufp
);int getutline_r
(struct utmp *ut
,struct utmp *ubuf
,struct utmp **ubufp
);
These functions are GNU extensions, analogs of the
functions of the same name without the _r suffix. The
ubuf
parameter
gives these functions a place to store their result. On
success they return 0, and a pointer to the result is
written in *ubufp
.
On error these functions return −1.
The following example adds and removes a utmp record, assuming it is run from within a pseudo terminal. For usage in a real application, you should check the return values of getpwuid(3) and ttyname(3).
#include <string.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <pwd.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <utmp.h> int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { struct utmp entry; system("echo before adding entry:;who"); entry.ut_type = USER_PROCESS; entry.ut_pid = getpid(); strcpy(entry.ut_line, ttyname(STDIN_FILENO) + strlen("/dev/")); /* only correct for ptys named /dev/tty[pqr][0−9a−z] */ strcpy(entry.ut_id, ttyname(STDIN_FILENO) + strlen("/dev/tty")); time(&entry.ut_time); strcpy(entry.ut_user, getpwuid(getuid())−>pw_name); memset(entry.ut_host, 0, UT_HOSTSIZE); entry.ut_addr = 0; setutent(); pututline(&entry); system("echo after adding entry:;who"); entry.ut_type = DEAD_PROCESS; memset(entry.ut_line, 0, UT_LINESIZE); entry.ut_time = 0; memset(entry.ut_user, 0, UT_NAMESIZE); setutent(); pututline(&entry); system("echo after removing entry:;who"); endutent(); exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); }
This page is part of release 2.79 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 1995 Mark D. Roth (rothuiuc.edu) 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. References consulted: Linux libc source code Solaris manpages Modified Thu Jul 25 14:43:46 MET DST 1996 by Michael Haardt <michaelcantor.informatik.rwth-aachen.de> |