Last updated: Fri Aug 8 09:25:58 HKT 1997
This document describes how to enable system process accounting on a Linux host, and the usage of various process accounting commands. It is intended for users running kernel version greater than or equal to 1.3.73 (recently tested on RedHat 4.1 kernel 2.0.27). Kernels older than 1.3.73 may need a patch in order to use the process accounting feature.
Feel free to send any feedback or comments to bertie@scn.org if you find an error, or if any information is missing. I appreciate it.
Process accounting is the method of recording and summarizing commands executed on Linux. The modern Linux kernel is capable of keeping process accounting records for the commands being run, the user who executed the command, the CPU time, and much more.
Process accounting enables you to keep detailed accounting information for the system resources used, their allocation among users, and system monitoring.
Process accounting support has been integrated into the newer kernels (version >= 1.3.73). If you are running an older kernel, you may need some patch files. The patches are available from
Kernel
Linux Kernel version greater than or equal to version 1.3.73, I recommended 2.x. The kernel source is available from
Process accounting software
Depending on the Linux distribution you have, you may, or may not have the process accounting software package installed on your system. If you don't have it, try downloading the package from
1. Compile and install process accounting softwares
The process accounting software package is available from
2. Modify your system init script and turn on process accounting at boot time
Here's an example:
# Turn process accounting on. if [ -x /sbin/accton ] then /sbin/accton /var/log/pacct echo "Process accounting turned on." fi
3. Create accounting record file "pacct"
Your process accounting softwares will print out all commands executed to the file /var/log/pacct by default.
To create the accounting record file:
touch /var/log/pacct
This record file should be owned by root, has read-write permission for root, and read permission for anybody else:
chown root /var/log/pacct chmod 0644 /var/log/pacct
4. Reboot
Now reboot your system for changes you made to take effect.
ac
ac prints out statistics about users' connection time in hours, based on the logins and logouts in the current /var/log/wtmp file. ac is also capable of printing out time totals for each day (-d option), and for each user (-p option).
accton
accton is used to turn on or turn off process accounting. The file is normally executed at system bootup or shutdown via system init scripts.
last
last goes through the /var/log/wtmp file and prints out information about connection times of users.
sa
sa summarizes accounting information from previously executed commands, software I/O operation times, CPU times, as recorded in the accounting record file /var/account/pacct.
lastcomm
lastcomm prints out the information about all previously executed commands, recorded in /var/account/pacct.