Museum

Home

Lab Overview

Retrotechnology Articles

Online Manuals

⇒ getutline(3) — DG/UX 4.00

Media Vault

Software Library

Restoration Projects

Artifacts Sought



                                                                 getut(3)



        _________________________________________________________________
        getutent, getutid, getutline, pututline, setutent,     Subroutine
        endutent, utmpname
        access utmp file entry
        _________________________________________________________________


        SYNTAX

        #include <utmp.h>

        struct utmp *getutent ()

        struct utmp *getutid (id)
        struct utmp *id;

        struct utmp *getutline (line)
        struct utmp *line;

        void pututline (utmp)
        struct utmp *utmp;

        void setutent ()

        void endutent ()

        void utmpname (file)
        char *file;


        DESCRIPTION

        Getutent, getutid and getutline each return a pointer to a
        structure of the following type:

             struct utmp {
                    char       ut_user[8];        /* User login name */
                    char       ut_id[4];          /* /etc/inittab id
                                                   * (usually line #) */
                    char       ut_line[12];       /* device name (console,
                                                   * lnxx) */
                    short      ut_pid;            /* process id */
                    short      ut_type;           /* type of entry */
                    struct     exit_status {
                        short      e_termination; /* Process termination status */
                        short      e_exit;        /* Process exit status */
                    } ut_exit;                    /* The exit status of a process
                                                   * marked as DEAD_PROCESS. */
                    time_t     ut_time;           /* time entry was made */
             };




        DG/UX 4.00                                                 Page 1
               Licensed material--property of copyright holder(s)





                                                                 getut(3)



        Getutent reads in the next entry from a utmp-like file.  If the
        file is not already open, it opens it.  If it reaches the end of
        the file, it fails.

        Getutid searches forward from the current point in the utmp file
        until it finds an entry with a ut_type matching id->ut_type if
        the type specified is RUN_LVL, BOOT_TIME, OLD_TIME or NEW_TIME.
        If the type specified in id is INIT_PROCESS, LOGIN_PROCESS,
        USER_PROCESS, or DEAD_PROCESS, then getutid will return a pointer
        to the first entry whose type is one of these four and whose
        ut_id field matches id->ut_id.  If the end of file is reached
        without a match, it fails.

        Getutline searches forward from the current point in the utmp
        file until it finds an entry of the type LOGIN_PROCESS or
        USER_PROCESS that also has a ut_line string matching the
        line->ut_line string.  If the end of file is reached without a
        match, it fails.

        Pututline writes out the supplied utmp structure into the utmp
        file.  It uses getutid to search forward for the proper place in
        the file if it is not already there.  It is expected that the
        user of pututline will have searched for the proper entry using
        one of the getut routines.  If so, pututline will not search.  If
        pututline does not find a matching slot for the new entry, it
        will add a new entry to the end of the file.

        Setutent resets the input stream to the beginning of the file.
        This should be done before each search for a new entry if you
        want to examine the entire file.

        Endutent closes the currently open file.

        Utmpname lets you change the name of the file examined to
        something other than /etc/utmp.  This other file will usually be
        /etc/wtmp.  Bad filenames go undetected  until the first attempt
        to reference the file.  Utmpname does not open the file.  It just
        closes the old file if it is open and saves the new filename.


        FILES

        /etc/utmp
        /etc/wtmp


        SEE ALSO

        ttyslot(3C), utmp(4).





        DG/UX 4.00                                                 Page 2
               Licensed material--property of copyright holder(s)





                                                                 getut(3)



        DIAGNOSTICS

        A NULL pointer is returned upon failure to read (bad permissions,
        end of file, failure to write).


        COMMENTS

        The most current entry is saved in a static structure.  Multiple
        accesses require that it be copied before further accesses are
        made.  Each call to either getutid or getutline sees the routine
        examine the static structure before performing more I/O.  If the
        contents of the static structure match what it is searching for,
        it looks no further.

        Therefore, to use getutline to search for multiple occurrences,
        you must zero out the static structure after each success, or
        getutline will just return the same pointer over and over again.

        There is one exception to the rule about removing the structure
        before further reads are done.  The implicit read done by
        pututline (if it finds that it is not already at the correct
        place in the file) will not hurt the contents of the static
        structure returned by the getutent, getutid or getutline
        routines, if you have just modified those contents and passed the
        pointer back to pututline.

        These routines use buffered standard I/O for input, but pututline
        uses an unbuffered non-standard write to avoid race conditions
        between processes trying to modify the utmp and wtmp files.
























        DG/UX 4.00                                                 Page 3
               Licensed material--property of copyright holder(s)



Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026