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Manual page for ACCTPRC(8)

acctprc1, acctprc2 - process accounting

SYNOPSIS

/usr/lib/acct/acctprc1 [ ctmp ]

/usr/lib/acct/acctprc2

DESCRIPTION

acctprc1

acctprc1 reads input in the form described by acct.5 adds login names corresponding to user IDs, then writes for each process an ASCII line giving user ID, login name, prime CPU time (ticks), non-prime CPU time (ticks), and mean memory size (in pages). If ctmp is given, it is expected to be the name of a file containing a list of login sessions, in the form described in acctcon.8 sorted by user ID and login name. If this file is not supplied, it obtains login names from the password file. The information in ctmp helps it distinguish among different login names that share the same user ID.

acctprc2

acctprc2 reads records in the form written by acctprc1, summarizes them by user ID and name, then writes the sorted summaries to the standard output as total accounting records.

EXAMPLES

These commands are typically used as shown below:

acctprc1 ctmp </var/adm/pacct | acctprc2 >ptacct

FILES

/etc/passwd

SEE ALSO

acctcom.1 acct.2v acct.5 utmp.5v acct.8 acctcms.8 acctcon.8 acctmerg.8 acctsh.8 cron.8 fwtmp.8 runacct.8

BUGS

Although it is possible to distinguish among login names that share user IDs for commands run from the command line, it is difficult to do this for those commands run by cron.8 for example. More precise conversion can be done by faking login sessions on the console using the acctwtmp program in acct.8


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Created by unroff & hp-tools. © somebody (See intro for details). All Rights Reserved. Last modified 11/5/97