[ Bottom of Page | Previous Page | Next Page | Contents | Index | Library Home | Legal | Search ]

Commands Reference, Volume 2

f Command

Purpose

Shows user information. This command is the same as the finger command.

Syntax

{ f | finger } [ [ -b] [ -h] [ -l] [ -p] ] | [ -i] [ -q] [ -s] [ -w] ]

[ -f] [ -m] [ User | User @Host @Host ]

Description

The /usr/bin/f command displays information about the users currently logged in to a host. The format of the output varies with the options for the information presented.

Default Format

The default format includes the following items:

For each user on the host, the default information list also includes, if known, the following items:

Longer Format

A longer format is used by the f command whenever a list of user's names is given. (Account names as well as first and last names of users are accepted.) This format is multiline, and includes all the information described above along with the following:

The f command may also be used to look up users on a remote system. The format is to specify the user as User@Host. If you omit the user name, the f command provides the standard format listing on the remote system.

Create the .plan and .project files using your favorite text editor and place the files in your $HOME directory. The f command uses the toascii subroutine to convert characters outside the normal ASCII character range when displaying the contents of the .plan and .project files. The f command displays a M- before each converted character.

When you specify users with the User parameter, you can specify either the user's first name, last name, or account name. When you specify users, the f command, at the specified host, returns information about those users only in long format.

For other information about the f command, see "Installation and Configuration for TCP/IP" in AIX 5L Version 5.2 System Management Guide: Communications and Networks.

Flags

-b Gives a brief, long-form listing.
-f Suppresses printing of header line on output (the first line that defines the fields that are being displayed).
-h Suppresses printing of .project files on long and brief long formats.
-i Gives a quick listing with idle times.
-l Gives a long-form listing.
-m Assumes that the User parameter specifies a user ID (used for discretionary access control), not a user login name.
-p Suppresses printing of .plan files on long-form and brief long-form formats.
-q Gives a quick listing.
-s Gives a short format list.
-w Gives a narrow, short-format list.

Parameters

@Host Specifies all logged-in users on the remote host.
User Specifies a local user ID (used for discretionary access control) or local user login name, as specified in the /etc/passwd file.
User@Host Specifies a user ID on the remote host, displayed in long format.

Examples

  1. To get information about all users logged in to host alcatraz, enter:

    f @alcatraz

    Information similar to the following is displayed:

    [alcatraz.austin.ibm.com]
    Login     Name        TTY Idle         When      Site Info
    brown    Bob Brown   console   2d   Mar 15 13:19
    smith    Susan Smith    pts0  11:   Mar 15 13:01
    jones    Joe Jones      tty0    3   Mar 15 13:01

    User brown is logged in at the console, user smith is logged in from pseudo teletype line pts0, and user jones is logged in from tty0.

  2. To get information about user brown at alcatraz, enter:

    f brown@alcatraz

    Information similar to the following is displayed:

    Login name: brown
    Directory: /home/brown    Shell: /home/bin/xinit -L -n Startup
    On since May 8 07:13:49 on console
    No Plan.
  3. To get information about user brown at a local host in short form, enter:

    f -q brown

    Information similar to the following is displayed:

    Login           TTY              When
    brown           pts/6            Mon Dec 17 10:58

Files

/usr/bin/f Contains the f command.
/etc/utmp Contains list of users currently logged in.
/etc/passwd Defines user accounts, names, and home directories.
/etc/security/passwd Defines user passwords.
/var/adm/lastlog Contains last login times.
$HOME/.plan Optional file that contains a one-line description of a user's plan.
$HOME/.project Optional file that contains a user's project assignment.

Related Information

The hostname command, rwho command, finger command.

The fingerd daemon.

Displaying Information about Logged-In Users in AIX 5L Version 5.2 System User's Guide: Communications and Networks.

Network Overview in AIX 5L Version 5.2 System User's Guide: Communications and Networks.

[ Top of Page | Previous Page | Next Page | Contents | Index | Library Home | Legal | Search ]