whodo - who is doing wha whodo



  • System Administration Commands					     whodo(1M)
    
    
    
    NAME
           whodo - who is doing what
    
    SYNOPSIS
           /usr/sbin/whodo [-h] [-l] [user]
    
    
    DESCRIPTION
           The  whodo command produces formatted and dated output from information
           in the /var/adm/utmpx 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.
    
    OPTIONS
           The following options are supported:
    
           -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.
    
    
    EXAMPLES
           Example 1 Using the whodo Command
    
    
           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
    
    
    
    ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
           If any of the LC_* variables ( LC_CTYPE,	LC_MESSAGES, LC_TIME,  LC_COL-
           LATE, 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
           whodo behaves.
    
           LC_CTYPE	      Determines  how  whodo handles characters. When LC_CTYPE
    		      is set to	a valid	value, whodo can  display  and	handle
    		      text  and	filenames containing valid characters for that
    		      locale.  The  whodo  command  can	 display  and	handle
    		      Extended Unix code (EUC) characters where	any individual
    		      character	can be 1, 2, or	3 bytes	wide. whodo  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 nega-
    		      tive responses. In the "C" locale, the messages are pre-
    		      sented  in  the default form found in the	program	itself
    		      (in most cases, U.S. English).
    
    
           LC_TIME	      Determines how whodo handles date	and time  formats.  In
    		      the  "C"	locale,	date and time handling follow the U.S.
    		      rules.
    
    
    EXIT STATUS
           The following exit values are returned:
    
           0	   Successful completion.
    
    
           non-zero	   An error occurred.
    
    
    FILES
           /etc/passwd	 System	password file
    
    
           /var/adm/utmpx	 User access and administration	information
    
    
           /proc/pid	 Contains PID
    
    
    ATTRIBUTES
           See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
    
    
    
    
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
           |      ATTRIBUTE	TYPE	     |	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   |
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
           |Availability		     |system/core-os		   |
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
    
    SEE ALSO
           ps(1), who(1), attributes(5), environ(5)
    
    
    
    SunOS 5.11			  18 Jun 2003			     whodo(1M)
    

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