8.20. Program: lastonWhen you log in to a Unix system, it tells you when you last logged in. That information is stored in a binary file called lastlog. Each user has their own record; UID 8 is at record 8, UID 239 at record 239, and so on. To find out when a given user last logged in, convert their login name to a number, seek to their record in that file, read, and unpack. Doing so with shell tools is very hard, but it's very easy with the laston program. Here's an example: % laston gnat
The program in Example 8.9 is much newer than the Example 8.9: laston#!/usr/bin/perl
# laston - find out when given user last logged on
use User::pwent;
use IO::Seekable qw(SEEK_SET);
open (LASTLOG, "/var/log/lastlog") or die "can't open /usr/adm/lastlog: $!";
$typedef = 'L A12 A16'; # linux fmt; sunos is "L A8 A16"
$sizeof = length(pack($typedef, ()));
for $user (@ARGV) {
$U = ($user =~ /^\d+$/) ? getpwuid($user) : getpwnam($user);
unless ($U) { warn "no such uid $user\n"; next; }
seek(LASTLOG, $U->uid * $sizeof, SEEK_SET) or die "seek failed: $!";
read(LASTLOG, $buffer, $sizeof) == $sizeof or next;
($time, $line, $host) = unpack($typedef, $buffer);
printf "%-8s UID %5d %s%s%s\n", $U->name, $U->uid,
$time ? ("at " . localtime($time)) : "never logged in",
$line && " on $line",
$host && " from $host";
} |