Andrew Tchernoivanov wrote:
>Is there a tool or a way of keeping track of which commands user's are
>executing on a system?
There is a .bash_history file in user's home folders. It contains all
commands executed by this user.
But as the OP said, it can be edited or deleted so he can not rel
>Is there a tool or a way of keeping track of which commands user's are
>executing on a system?
There is a .bash_history file in user's home folders. It contains all
commands executed by this user.
On Wed, Jul 16, 2008 at 7:22 PM, A. Khattri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 16 Jul 2008, Ric
On Wed, 16 Jul 2008, Richard Marzan wrote:
Is there a tool or a way of keeping track of which commands user's are
executing on a system? I understand that history files can be wiped out
and they don't really contain the time at which a command and it's
arguments were run so I refrain from relyin
Is there a tool or a way of keeping track of which commands user's are
executing on a system? I understand that history files can be wiped out
and they don't really contain the time at which a command and it's
arguments were run so I refrain from relying on it.
Regards,
Richard
--
gentoo-user@l
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