acctprc(1M) acctprc(1M) NAME acctprc, acctprc1, acctprc2 - process accounting SYNOPSIS /usr/lib/acct/acctprc /usr/lib/acct/acctprc1 [ctmp] /usr/lib/acct/acctprc2 DESCRIPTION acctprc reads standard input, in the form described by acct(4), and converts it to total accounting records (see the tacct record in acct(4)). acctprc divides CPU time into prime time and nonprime time and determines mean memory size (in memory segment units). acctprc then summarizes the tacct records, according to user IDs, and adds login names corresponding to the user IDs. The summarized records are then written to standard output. acctprc1 reads input in the form described by acct(4), adds login names corresponding to user IDs, then writes for each process an ASCII line giving user ID, login name, prime CPU time (tics), nonprime CPU time (tics), and mean memory size (in memory segment units). If ctmp is given, it is expected to contain a list of login sessions sorted by user ID and login name. If this file is not supplied, it obtains login names from the password file, just as acctprc does. The information in ctmp helps it distinguish between different login names sharing the same user ID. From standard input, acctprc2 reads records in the form written by acctprc1, summarizes them according to user ID and name, then writes the sorted summaries to the standard output as total accounting records. acctprc1 checks the environment variable ACCT_A_SSIZE to figure out the maximum number of sessions that it might need to report in one accounting run. All three of these commands check the environment variable ACCT_A_USIZE to figure out the maximum number of distinct login names that need to be reported in one accounting run. EXAMPLES The acctprc command is typically used as shown below: acctprc < /var/adm/pacct > ptacct The acctprc1 and acctprc2 commands are typically used as shown below: acctprc1 ctmp < /var/adm/pacct | acctprc2 > ptacct FILES /etc/passwd REFERENCES acct(1M), acctcms(1M), acctcom(1), acctcon(1M), acctmerg(1M), acctsh(1M), cron(1M), fwtmp(1M), runacct(1M), acct(2), acct(4), utmp(4). NOTICES Although it is possible for acctprc1 to distinguish among login names that share user IDs for commands run normally, it is difficult to do this for those commands run from cron(1M), for example. A more precise conversion can be done using the acctwtmp program in acct(1M). acctprc does not distinguish between users with identical user IDs. A memory segment of the mean memory size is a unit of measure for the number of bytes in a logical memory segment on a particular processor. Page 2