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⬅️ Previous capture (2021-12-17)
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Nristen's (g)log
2021-12-07
warning! very simple scripting to follow...
Today, when I was logged into my tilde server home, I suddenly wondered how many other people were logged in so I ran the command 'who' which produced a lot of output.
$ who nristen pts/72 2021-12-02 13:57 <ip address> user1 user4 nristen user2
Ok, I only want to see the usernames so pipe that output to awk which will only print the first column:
$ who | awk '{ print $1 }' nristen user1 user4 nristen user2
Ok, that looks a little better however the output still has many duplicates (for people logged in more than once). I want to only show one entry for each user. For this, I will first sort the list and pipe the sorted output to the 'uniq' command which gets rid of the duplicate entries.
$ who | awk '{ print $1 }' | sort | uniq nristen user1 user2 user4
Awesome, now I have a list of users currently logged in. Now just out of curiosity, I wonder how many users are logged in? Counting by hand... never!
$ who | awk '{ print $1 }' | sort | uniq | wc -l 34
The command wc is short for word count and if I add the "-l" parameter, it counts the number of lines.
In the examples above, I did not include any actual usernames besides my own (nristen). The number of logged in unique users was actually 34 when I ran that command however.
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