Museum

Home

Lab Overview

Retrotechnology Articles

Online Manuals

⇒ utmp(4) — HP-UX 5.50

Media Vault

Software Library

Restoration Projects

Artifacts Sought

Related Articles

acctcon(1M)

fwtmp(1M)

last(1)

login(1)

who(1)

write(1)

getut(3C)

UTMP(4)  —  HP-UX

NAME

utmp, wtmp, btmp − utmp, wtmp, btmp entry format

SYNOPSIS

#include <sys/types.h>
#include <utmp.h>

DESCRIPTION

These files, which hold user and accounting information for such commands as last(1), who(1), write(1), and login(1), have the following structure as defined by <utmp.h>:

#define UTMP_FILE "/etc/utmp"
#define WTMP_FILE "/etc/wtmp"
#define BTMP_FILE "/etc/btmp"
#define ut_name ut_user

structutmp {

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 ∗/

};
/∗  Definitions for ut_type  ∗/

#define EMPTY 0
#define RUN_LVL 1
#define BOOT_TIME 2
#define OLD_TIME 3
#define NEW_TIME 4
#define INIT_PROCESS 5 /∗ Process spawned by "init" ∗/
#define LOGIN_PROCESS 6 /∗ A "getty" process waiting for login ∗/
#define USER_PROCESS 7 /∗ A user process ∗/
#define DEAD_PROCESS 8
#define ACCOUNTING 9
#define UTMAXTYPE ACCOUNTING /∗ Largest legal value of ut_type ∗/

/∗  Special strings or formats used in the "ut_line" field when  ∗/
/∗  accounting for something other than a process  ∗/
/∗  No string for the ut_line field can be more than 11 chars +  ∗/
/∗  a NULL in length  ∗/

#define RUNLVL_MSG "run−level %c"
#define BOOT_MSG "system boot"
#define OTIME_MSG "old time"
#define NTIME_MSG "new time"

 

File btmp contains bad login entries for each invalid logon attempt. 

Note that wtmp and btmp tend to grow without bound, and should be checked regularly.  Information that is no longer useful should be removed periodically to prevent it from becoming too large. 

FILES

/etc/utmp
/etc/wtmp
/etc/btmp

AUTHOR

Btmp was developed by the Hewlett-Packard Company, and the University of California, Berkeley California, Computer Science Division, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. 

SEE ALSO

acctcon(1M), fwtmp(1M), last(1), login(1), who(1), write(1), getut(3C). 

Hewlett-Packard Company  —  Version B.1,  May 11, 2021

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