In this post, we look at commands that Linux server admins can use to view user activity Credit: electravk / Getty Images If you’re managing a Linux server, it’s good to be ready with a number of commands that you can use to check user activity – when your users are logging in and how often, what groups they belong to, how much disk space they’re consuming, what command they’re running, how much disk space they’re occupying, if they’re reading their mail and more. In this post, we’ll look at a number of commands that can help you understand who your user are and how they work. finger One handy command for getting a user profile is finger. It allows you to see who is logged in or focus on a single user to view their last login, where they logged in from, how long they’ve been idle (how long since they ran a command), etc. In this command, we are looking at the user nemo. $ finger nemo Login: nemo Name: Nemo Demo Directory: /home/nemo Shell: /bin/bash On since Fri Jun 19 12:58 (EDT) on pts/1 from 192.168.0.6 7 minutes 47 seconds idle New mail received Wed Jun 17 18:31 2020 (EDT) Unread since Sat Jun 13 18:03 2020 (EDT) No Plan. We can see nemo’s full name, home directory and shell. We can also see nemo’s most recent login and email activity. Office, office phone and home phone numbers are only included if they are defined in the /etc/passwd file in the full name field. For example: nemo:x:1001:1001:Nemo Demo,11,540-222-2222,540-333-3333:/home/nemo:/bin/bash). The output above also indicates that nemo doesn’t have a “plan”, but this just means that he hasn’t created a .plan file and put some text into it; this is not at all unusual. Without arguments, finger will display a list of current logins in the format shown below. You can see when they logged in, the IP address they logged in from, the pseudo terminal in use (e.g., pts/1) and how long they’ve been idle. $ finger Login Name Tty Idle Login Time Office Office Phone nemo Nemo Demo pts/1 1:24 Jun 19 12:58 (192.168.0.6) shs Sandra Henry-Stocker pts/0 Jun 19 12:57 (192.168.0.60 w The w command also provides a nicely formatted list of currently active users including idle time and what command they most recently ran. It also displays in the top line how long the system has been up and provides load averages that indicate how busy the system is. In this case (0.00 for last 1, 5 and 15 minutes), the system is largely idle. $ w 14:23:19 up 1 day, 20:24, 2 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 USER TTY FROM LOGIN@ IDLE JCPU PCPU WHAT shs pts/0 192.168.0.6 12:57 0.00s 0.14s 0.01s w nemo pts/1 192.168.0.6 12:58 1:24m 0.03s 0.03s -bash id With the id command, you can view a user’s numeric ID and group ID along with what groups the user is a member of. This information is pulled from the /etc/passwd and /etc/group files. With no arguments, id reports the information for your account. $ id uid=1000(shs) gid=1000(shs) groups=1000(shs),4(adm),11(admin),24(cdrom),27(sudo),30(dip),46(plugdev),118(lpadmin),128(sambashare),500(devops) $ id nemo uid=1001(nemo) gid=1001(nemo) groups=1001(nemo),16(fish) auth.log You can yank information from the /var/log/auth.log file with commands like grep. To show the most recent login activity using auth.log data, you can run a command like this one: $ grep "New session" /var/log/auth.log | awk '{print $1,$2,$3,$11}' | tail -5 Jun 17 17:22:38 shs. Jun 17 17:58:43 gdm. Jun 17 18:09:58 shs. Jun 19 12:57:36 shs. Jun 19 12:58:44 nemo. last The last command is probably the best for looking at recent logins for all users or one individual. Just remember that last shows the most recent activity first since this is the information that most admins are most interested in. $ last | head -5 nemo pts/1 192.168.0.6 Fri Jun 19 12:58 still logged in shs pts/0 192.168.0.6 Fri Jun 19 12:57 still logged in shs pts/0 192.168.0.6 Wed Jun 17 18:10 - 18:42 (00:32) reboot system boot 5.4.0-37-generic Wed Jun 17 17:58 still running shs pts/2 192.168.0.6 Wed Jun 17 17:22 - 17:57 (00:34) $ last nemo | head -5 nemo pts/1 192.168.0.6 Fri Jun 19 12:58 - 16:21 (03:22) nemo pts/2 192.168.0.6 Sat Jun 13 17:49 - 19:05 (01:16) nemo pts/1 192.168.0.6 Thu Jun 4 17:33 - 17:44 (00:10) nemo pts/1 192.168.0.19 Mon May 11 19:04 - 19:57 (00:52) nemo pts/1 192.168.0.19 Tue May 5 12:46 - 17:49 (05:02) du The du command will report how much space each user’s home directory is using if run against each directory in /home like this: $ sudo du -sk /home/* 289 /home/dorothy 116 /home/dory 88 /home/eel 28 /home/gino 28 /home/jadep 12764 /home/nemo 732 /home/shark 418046 /home/shs 108 /home/tadpole By default, the sizes are reported in units of 1024 bytes. ps and history For currently logged in users, you can always use commands like ps -ef | grep ^nemo to see what commands and processes a user is currently running. To view commands previously run, you can try looking into users’ history files (e.g., .bash_history), but note that users can set up their accounts so that certain commands are not captured in their history files, and they also can edit these files if they so choose. counting logins If you would like to view how many times each of your users has logged in since the /var/log/wtmp file last rolled over, you can use a command like this one: $ for USER in `ls /home` > do > cnt=`last $USER | grep ^$USER | wc -l` # count logins > echo $USER: $cnt # show login count > done The output will look something like this: dorothy: 0 dory: 0 eel: 8 gino: 0 jadep: 102 nemo: 39 shark: 50 shs: 105 tadpole: 0 If you want more detail, you can put a more complex script together that can add some additional information like login details and formatting. #!/bin/bash sepline="====================" for USER in `ls /home` do len=`echo $USER | awk '{print length($0)}'` # get length of username echo $USER sep="${sepline:1:$len}" # set separator echo $sep # print separator cnt=`last $USER | grep ^$USER | wc -l` # count logins echo logins: $cnt # show login count last $USER | grep ^$USER | head -5 # show most recent logins echo done The script above is limiting the data shown to the most recent five logins, but you can easily change that if you like. Here’s how the data for one user would be formatted: shs === logins: 105 shs pts/0 192.168.0.6 Fri Jun 19 12:57 still logged in shs pts/0 192.168.0.6 Wed Jun 17 18:10 - 18:42 (00:32) shs pts/2 192.168.0.6 Wed Jun 17 17:22 - 17:57 (00:34) shs pts/0 192.168.0.25 Wed Jun 17 17:20 - 17:57 (00:36) shs pts/1 192.168.0.6 Wed Jun 17 15:19 - 17:57 (02:38) checking for sudo attempts If you’d like to see if any of your users are trying to use sudo when they are not set up to have this privilege, you can run a command like this: $ grep "NOT in sudoers" /var/log/auth.log | awk '{print $6}' nemo If you’ve ever tried to use sudo in a situation where you aren’t authorized to elevate your privileges and had the system threaten you with “username is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported,” you might enjoy knowing that this log entry is the essence of that report. Unless the admin makes an effort to look for sudo transgressions, they will go unnoticed. 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