psacct or acct both are open source utilities for monitoring users’ activities on the Linux system. These utilities run in the background and keep track of each user’s activity on your system as well as what resources are being consumed.
I personally used these tools in our company, we have a development team where our developers continuously work on servers. So, these are the best utilities to keep an eye on them.
These programs provide an excellent way to monitor what users are doing, what commands are they executing, how many resources are being consumed by them, and how long users are active on the system. Another useful feature is, that it gives total resources consumed by services like Apache, MySQL, FTP, SSH, etc.
[ You might also like: How to Monitor Linux Commands Executed by System Users in Real-time ]
I think this is one of the great and most needed utilities for every Linux/Unix System Administrator, who wanted to keep a track of user activities on their servers/systems.
The psacct or acct package provides several features for monitoring process activities.
- ac command prints the statistics of user logins/logouts (connect time) in hours.
- lastcomm command prints the information of previously executed commands of the user.
- accton commands is used to turn on/off process for accounting.
- sa command summarizes information of previously executed commands.
- last and lastb commands show a listing of last logged-in users.
Installing psacct or acct Packages in Linux
psacct and acct both are similar packages and there is not much difference between them, but the psacct package is only available for rpm-based distributions such as RHEL, CentOS, and Fedora, whereas the acct package is available for distributions like Ubuntu, Debian, and Linux Mint.
To install the psacct package under rpm-based distributions issue the following yum command.
# yum install psacct
To install the acct package using the apt command under Ubuntu / Debian / Linux Mint.
$ sudo apt install acct
On other Linux distributions, you can install it as shown.
$ sudo apk add psacct [On Alpine Linux] $ sudo pacman -S acct [On Arch Linux] $ sudo zypper install acct [On OpenSUSE]
Starting psacct or acct service
By default, the psacct service is in disabled mode and you need to start it manually under RHEL-based distributions. Use the following command to check the status of the service.
$ sudo systemctl status psacct
You see the status showing as disabled, so let’s start it manually using the following commands, which will create a /var/account/pacct file.
$ sudo systemctl start psacct $ sudo systemctl enable psacct $ sudo systemctl status psacct
Under Ubuntu, Debian, and Mint service is started automatically, you don’t need to start it again.
Display Statistics of Users Connect Time
ac command without specifying any argument will display total statistics of connect time in hours based on the user logins/logouts from the current wtmp file.
# ac total 11299.15
Display Statistics of Linux Users Day-wise
Using the command “ac -d” will print out the total login time in hours by day-wise.
# ac -d Jun 25 total 0.19 Oct 13 total 14.45 Oct 27 total 672.00 Oct 28 total 15.82 Nov 3 total 4.29 Nov 5 total 10.13 Dec 7 total 14.04 Dec 10 total 23.60 Dec 27 total 808.93 Jan 3 total 12.31 Mar 3 total 1438.67 Jul 22 total 6767.81 Today total 1517.09
Display Total Login Time of All Linux Users
Using the command “ac -p” will print the total login time of each Linux user in hours.
# ac -p rockylinux 425.61 tecmint 702.29 root 10171.54 total 11299.44
Display Linux User Login Time
To get the total login statistics time of user “tecmint” in hours, use the command as.
# ac tecmint
total 702.29
Display Day-Wise Login Time of User
The following command will print the day-wise total login time of user “tecmint” in hours.
# ac -d tecmint
Oct 11 total 8.01 Oct 12 total 24.00 Oct 15 total 70.50 Oct 16 total 23.57 Oct 17 total 24.00 Oct 18 total 18.70 Nov 20 total 0.18
Print All Linux Commands Executed by Users
The “sa” command is used to print the summary of commands that were executed by users.
# sa
2 9.86re 0.00cp 2466k sshd* 8 1.05re 0.00cp 1064k man 2 10.08re 0.00cp 2562k sshd 12 0.00re 0.00cp 1298k psacct 2 0.00re 0.00cp 1575k troff 14 0.00re 0.00cp 503k ac 10 0.00re 0.00cp 1264k psacct* 10 0.00re 0.00cp 466k consoletype 9 0.00re 0.00cp 509k sa 8 0.02re 0.00cp 769k udisks-helper-a 6 0.00re 0.00cp 1057k touch 6 0.00re 0.00cp 592k gzip 6 0.00re 0.00cp 465k accton 4 1.05re 0.00cp 1264k sh* 4 0.00re 0.00cp 1264k nroff* 2 1.05re 0.00cp 1264k sh 2 1.05re 0.00cp 1120k less 2 0.00re 0.00cp 1346k groff 2 0.00re 0.00cp 1383k grotty 2 0.00re 0.00cp 1053k mktemp 2 0.00re 0.00cp 1030k iconv 2 0.00re 0.00cp 1023k rm 2 0.00re 0.00cp 1020k cat 2 0.00re 0.00cp 1018k locale 2 0.00re 0.00cp 802k gtbl
Explanation of the above command output:
- 9.86re is a “real-time” as per wall clock minutes
- 0.01cp is a sum of system/user time in cpu minutes
- 2466k is a cpu-time averaged core usage, i.e. 1k units
- sshd command name
Print Linux User Information
To get the information of an individual user, use the options -u.
# sa -u
root 0.00 cpu 465k mem accton root 0.00 cpu 1057k mem touch root 0.00 cpu 1298k mem psacct root 0.00 cpu 466k mem consoletype root 0.00 cpu 1264k mem psacct * root 0.00 cpu 1298k mem psacct root 0.00 cpu 466k mem consoletype root 0.00 cpu 1264k mem psacct * root 0.00 cpu 1298k mem psacct root 0.00 cpu 466k mem consoletype root 0.00 cpu 1264k mem psacct * root 0.00 cpu 465k mem accton root 0.00 cpu 1057k mem touch
Print Number of Linux Processes
This command prints the total number of processes and CPU minutes. If you see a continued increase in these numbers, then it’s time to look into the system about what is happening.
# sa -m
sshd 2 9.86re 0.00cp 2466k root 127 14.29re 0.00cp 909k
Print and Sort Usage by Percentage
The command “sa -c” displays the highest percentage of users.
# sa -c
132 100.00% 24.16re 100.00% 0.01cp 100.00% 923k 2 1.52% 9.86re 40.83% 0.00cp 53.33% 2466k sshd* 8 6.06% 1.05re 4.34% 0.00cp 20.00% 1064k man 2 1.52% 10.08re 41.73% 0.00cp 13.33% 2562k sshd 12 9.09% 0.00re 0.01% 0.00cp 6.67% 1298k psacct 2 1.52% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 6.67% 1575k troff 18 13.64% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 509k sa 14 10.61% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 503k ac 10 7.58% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 1264k psacct* 10 7.58% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 466k consoletype 8 6.06% 0.02re 0.07% 0.00cp 0.00% 769k udisks-helper-a 6 4.55% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 1057k touch 6 4.55% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 592k gzip 6 4.55% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 465k accton 4 3.03% 1.05re 4.34% 0.00cp 0.00% 1264k sh* 4 3.03% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 1264k nroff* 2 1.52% 1.05re 4.34% 0.00cp 0.00% 1264k sh 2 1.52% 1.05re 4.34% 0.00cp 0.00% 1120k less 2 1.52% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 1346k groff 2 1.52% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 1383k grotty 2 1.52% 0.00re 0.00% 0.00cp 0.00% 1053k mktemp
List Last Executed Commands of User
The ‘latcomm‘ command is used to search and display previously executed user command information. You can also search commands of individual usernames. For example, we see commands of the user (tecmint).
# lastcomm tecmint
su tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 ls tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 ls tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 ls tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 bash F tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 id tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 grep tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 grep tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 bash F tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 dircolors tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 bash F tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 tput tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 tty tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 bash F tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 id tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 bash F tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 id tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56
Search Logs for Commands
With the help of the lastcomm command, you will be able to view the individual use of each command.
# lastcomm ls
ls tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 ls tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56 ls tecmint pts/0 0.00 secs Wed Feb 13 15:56
For more information and usage, check out the manual pages of these tools.