These functions and the corresponding data structures are declared in the header file utmp.h.
The exit_status
data structure is used to hold information about
the exit status of processes marked as DEAD_PROCESS
in the user
accounting database.
short int e_termination
The exit status of the process.
short int e_exit
The exit status of the process.
The utmp
data structure is used to hold information about entries
in the user accounting database. On GNU systems it has the following
members:
short int ut_type
Specifies the type of login; one of EMPTY
, RUN_LVL
,
BOOT_TIME
, OLD_TIME
, NEW_TIME
, INIT_PROCESS
,
LOGIN_PROCESS
, USER_PROCESS
, DEAD_PROCESS
or
ACCOUNTING
.
pid_t ut_pid
The process ID number of the login process.
char ut_line[]
The device name of the tty (without /dev/).
char ut_id[]
The inittab ID of the process.
char ut_user[]
The user’s login name.
char ut_host[]
The name of the host from which the user logged in.
struct exit_status ut_exit
The exit status of a process marked as DEAD_PROCESS
.
long ut_session
The Session ID, used for windowing.
struct timeval ut_tv
Time the entry was made. For entries of type OLD_TIME
this is
the time when the system clock changed, and for entries of type
NEW_TIME
this is the time the system clock was set to.
int32_t ut_addr_v6[4]
The Internet address of a remote host.
The ut_type
, ut_pid
, ut_id
, ut_tv
, and
ut_host
fields are not available on all systems. Portable
applications therefore should be prepared for these situations. To help
doing this the utmp.h header provides macros
_HAVE_UT_TYPE
, _HAVE_UT_PID
, _HAVE_UT_ID
,
_HAVE_UT_TV
, and _HAVE_UT_HOST
if the respective field is
available. The programmer can handle the situations by using
#ifdef
in the program code.
The following macros are defined for use as values for the
ut_type
member of the utmp
structure. The values are
integer constants.
EMPTY
This macro is used to indicate that the entry contains no valid user accounting information.
RUN_LVL
This macro is used to identify the systems runlevel.
BOOT_TIME
This macro is used to identify the time of system boot.
OLD_TIME
This macro is used to identify the time when the system clock changed.
NEW_TIME
This macro is used to identify the time after the system changed.
INIT_PROCESS
This macro is used to identify a process spawned by the init process.
LOGIN_PROCESS
This macro is used to identify the session leader of a logged in user.
USER_PROCESS
This macro is used to identify a user process.
DEAD_PROCESS
This macro is used to identify a terminated process.
ACCOUNTING
???
The size of the ut_line
, ut_id
, ut_user
and
ut_host
arrays can be found using the sizeof
operator.
Many older systems have, instead of an ut_tv
member, an
ut_time
member, usually of type time_t
, for representing
the time associated with the entry. Therefore, for backwards
compatibility only, utmp.h defines ut_time
as an alias for
ut_tv.tv_sec
.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:utent | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function opens the user accounting database to begin scanning it.
You can then call getutent
, getutid
or getutline
to
read entries and pututline
to write entries.
If the database is already open, it resets the input to the beginning of the database.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe init race:utent race:utentbuf sig:ALRM timer | AS-Unsafe heap lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The getutent
function reads the next entry from the user
accounting database. It returns a pointer to the entry, which is
statically allocated and may be overwritten by subsequent calls to
getutent
. You must copy the contents of the structure if you
wish to save the information or you can use the getutent_r
function which stores the data in a user-provided buffer.
A null pointer is returned in case no further entry is available.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:utent | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function closes the user accounting database.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe init race:utent sig:ALRM timer | AS-Unsafe lock heap | AC-Unsafe lock mem fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function searches forward from the current point in the database
for an entry that matches id. If the ut_type
member of the
id structure is one of RUN_LVL
, BOOT_TIME
,
OLD_TIME
or NEW_TIME
the entries match if the
ut_type
members are identical. If the ut_type
member of
the id structure is INIT_PROCESS
, LOGIN_PROCESS
,
USER_PROCESS
or DEAD_PROCESS
, the entries match if the
ut_type
member of the entry read from the database is one of
these four, and the ut_id
members match. However if the
ut_id
member of either the id structure or the entry read
from the database is empty it checks if the ut_line
members match
instead. If a matching entry is found, getutid
returns a pointer
to the entry, which is statically allocated, and may be overwritten by a
subsequent call to getutent
, getutid
or getutline
.
You must copy the contents of the structure if you wish to save the
information.
A null pointer is returned in case the end of the database is reached without a match.
The getutid
function may cache the last read entry. Therefore,
if you are using getutid
to search for multiple occurrences, it
is necessary to zero out the static data after each call. Otherwise
getutid
could just return a pointer to the same entry over and
over again.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe init race:utent sig:ALRM timer | AS-Unsafe heap lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function searches forward from the current point in the database
until it finds an entry whose ut_type
value is
LOGIN_PROCESS
or USER_PROCESS
, and whose ut_line
member matches the ut_line
member of the line structure.
If it finds such an entry, it returns a pointer to the entry which is
statically allocated, and may be overwritten by a subsequent call to
getutent
, getutid
or getutline
. You must copy the
contents of the structure if you wish to save the information.
A null pointer is returned in case the end of the database is reached without a match.
The getutline
function may cache the last read entry. Therefore
if you are using getutline
to search for multiple occurrences, it
is necessary to zero out the static data after each call. Otherwise
getutline
could just return a pointer to the same entry over and
over again.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:utent sig:ALRM timer | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The pututline
function inserts the entry *utmp
at
the appropriate place in the user accounting database. If it finds that
it is not already at the correct place in the database, it uses
getutid
to search for the position to insert the entry, however
this will not modify the static structure returned by getutent
,
getutid
and getutline
. If this search fails, the entry
is appended to the database.
The pututline
function returns a pointer to a copy of the entry
inserted in the user accounting database, or a null pointer if the entry
could not be added. The following errno
error conditions are
defined for this function:
EPERM
The process does not have the appropriate privileges; you cannot modify the user accounting database.
All the get*
functions mentioned before store the information
they return in a static buffer. This can be a problem in multi-threaded
programs since the data returned for the request is overwritten by the
return value data in another thread. Therefore the GNU C Library
provides as extensions three more functions which return the data in a
user-provided buffer.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:utent sig:ALRM timer | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The getutent_r
is equivalent to the getutent
function. It
returns the next entry from the database. But instead of storing the
information in a static buffer it stores it in the buffer pointed to by
the parameter buffer.
If the call was successful, the function returns 0
and the
pointer variable pointed to by the parameter result contains a
pointer to the buffer which contains the result (this is most probably
the same value as buffer). If something went wrong during the
execution of getutent_r
the function returns -1
.
This function is a GNU extension.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:utent sig:ALRM timer | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function retrieves just like getutid
the next entry matching
the information stored in id. But the result is stored in the
buffer pointed to by the parameter buffer.
If successful the function returns 0
and the pointer variable
pointed to by the parameter result contains a pointer to the
buffer with the result (probably the same as result. If not
successful the function return -1
.
This function is a GNU extension.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:utent sig:ALRM timer | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function retrieves just like getutline
the next entry
matching the information stored in line. But the result is stored
in the buffer pointed to by the parameter buffer.
If successful the function returns 0
and the pointer variable
pointed to by the parameter result contains a pointer to the
buffer with the result (probably the same as result. If not
successful the function return -1
.
This function is a GNU extension.
In addition to the user accounting database, most systems keep a number of similar databases. For example most systems keep a log file with all previous logins (usually in /etc/wtmp or /var/log/wtmp).
For specifying which database to examine, the following function should be used.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:utent | AS-Unsafe lock heap | AC-Unsafe lock mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The utmpname
function changes the name of the database to be
examined to file, and closes any previously opened database. By
default getutent
, getutid
, getutline
and
pututline
read from and write to the user accounting database.
The following macros are defined for use as the file argument:
This macro is used to specify the user accounting database.
This macro is used to specify the user accounting log file.
The utmpname
function returns a value of 0
if the new name
was successfully stored, and a value of -1
to indicate an error.
Note that utmpname
does not try to open the database, and that
therefore the return value does not say anything about whether the
database can be successfully opened.
Specially for maintaining log-like databases the GNU C Library provides the following function:
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe sig:ALRM timer | AS-Unsafe | AC-Unsafe fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The updwtmp
function appends the entry *utmp to the
database specified by wtmp_file. For possible values for the
wtmp_file argument see the utmpname
function.
Portability Note: Although many operating systems provide a
subset of these functions, they are not standardized. There are often
subtle differences in the return types, and there are considerable
differences between the various definitions of struct utmp
. When
programming for the GNU C Library, it is probably best to stick
with the functions described in this section. If however, you want your
program to be portable, consider using the XPG functions described in
XPG User Accounting Database Functions, or take a look at the BSD compatible functions in
Logging In and Out.