Display information about the current status of the system. With no options, list the names of users currently logged in to the system. An optional system file
(default is /var/adm/utmp
) can be supplied to give additional information. who
is usually invoked without options, but useful options include am i
and -u
. For more examples, see cut
, line
, paste
, tee
, and wc
.
-a
Use the -b
, -d
, -l
, -p
, -r
, -t
, -T
, and -u
options.
-b
Report information about the last reboot.
-d
Report expired processes.
-H
Print headings.
-l
Report inactive terminal lines.
-m
Report only about the current terminal. Solaris only.
-n
x
Display x
users per line (works only with -q
).
-p
Report previously spawned processes.
-q
"Quick." Display only the usernames.
-r
Report the run level.
-s
List the name, line, and time fields (the default behavior).
-t
Report the last change of the system clock (via date
).
-T
Report whether terminals are writable (+
), not writable (-
), or unknown (?
).
-u
Report terminal usage (idle time). A dot (.) means less than one minute idle; old
means more than 24 hours idle.
am i
Print the username of the invoking user. (Similar to results from id
.)
This sample output was produced at 8 a.m. on April 17:
$ who -uH
NAME LINE TIME IDLE PID COMMENTS
martha ttyp3 Apr 16 08:14 16:25 2240
george ttyp0 Apr 17 07:33 . 15182
Since martha
has been idle since yesterday afternoon (16 hours), it appears that Martha isn't at work yet. She simply left herself logged in. George's terminal is currently in use. (He likes to beat the traffic.)