W
Section: Linux User's Manual (1)
Updated: 5 October 2009
NAME
w - Show who is logged on and what they are doing.
SYNOPSIS
w
[-husfVo]
[user]
DESCRIPTION
w
displays information about the users currently on the machine,
and their processes.
The header shows, in this order, the current time,
how long the system has been running,
how many users are currently logged on,
and the system load averages for the past 1, 5, and 15 minutes.
The following entries are displayed for each user:
login name, the tty name, the remote host, login time, idle time, JCPU, PCPU,
and the command line of their current process.
The JCPU time is the time used by all processes attached to the tty. It
does not include past background jobs, but does include currently
running background jobs.
The PCPU time is the time used by the current process, named in the "what"
field.
COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
- -h
-
Don't print the header.
- -u
-
Ignores the username while figuring out the current process and cpu
times. To demonstrate this, do a "su" and do a "w" and a "w -u".
- -s
-
Use the short format.
Don't print the login time, JCPU or PCPU times.
- -f
-
Toggle printing the
from
(remote hostname) field. The default as
released is for the
from
field to not be printed, although your system administrator or
distribution maintainer may have compiled a version in which the
from
field is shown by default.
- -V
-
Display version information.
- -o
-
Old style output. Prints blank space for idle times less than one minute.
- user
-
Show information about the specified user only.
ENVIRONMENT
- PROCPS_USERLEN
-
Override the default width of the username column. Defaults to 8.
- PROCPS_FROMLEN
-
Override the default width of the from column. Defaults to 16.
FILES
- /var/run/utmp
-
information about who is currently logged on
- /proc
-
process information
NOTES
The output for Idle, JCPU and PCPU times vaires depending on if you use
the -o (old style) option or not. These formats can be confusing if you
switch between the old style and standard. In the following paragraphs
days are DD, hours HH, minutes MM, seconds SS and 100ths of seconds CC.
The standard format is DDdays, HH:MMm, MM:SS or SS.CC if the times are
greater than 2 days, 1hour, or 1 minute respectively.
For the -o option, the output will be either DDdays, HH:MM, MM:SSm or
blank if the times are greater than 2 days, 1 hour or 1 minute
respectively.
SEE ALSO
free(1),
ps(1),
top(1),
uptime(1),
utmp(5),
who(1)
AUTHORS
w
was re-written almost entirely by Charles Blake, based on the version by Larry
Greenfield <greenfie@gauss.rutgers.edu> and Michael K. Johnson
<johnsonm@redhat.com>.
Please send bug reports to <albert@users.sf.net>
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS
-
- ENVIRONMENT
-
- FILES
-
- NOTES
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- AUTHORS
-
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Time: 07:35:58 GMT, March 26, 2013