Method 1
Check the .bash_history file in user's home location.
NOTE: You will not be able to see the commands executed in the currently logged in session unless the user logs out.
# less /home/deepak/.bash_history
man yum
yum deplist httpd
sud iptables -L
sudo iptables -L
sudo iptables --list
less /etc/sysconfig/iptables
sudo less /etc/sysconfig/iptables
sudo iptables --list WEBSHPHERE
sudo iptables --list INPUT
cd test
Method 2
There are two other commands which can be used for the same purpose namely lastcomm and sa which comes under the package psacct.
$ rpm -q psacct
psacct-6.3.2-44.el5
If the package is missing you can isntall it using yum
# yum install psacct
Now lets look at the files which are installed under this package
$ rpm -ql psacct-6.3.2-44.el5
/etc/logrotate.d/psacct
/etc/rc.d/init.d/psacct
/sbin/accton
/usr/bin/ac
/usr/bin/lastcomm
/usr/sbin/accton
/usr/sbin/dump-acct
/usr/sbin/dump-utmp
/usr/sbin/sa
/usr/share/info/accounting.info.gz
/usr/share/man/man1/ac.1.gz
/usr/share/man/man1/lastcomm.1.gz
/usr/share/man/man8/accton.8.gz
/usr/share/man/man8/sa.8.gz
/var/account
/var/account/pacct
lastcomm prints out information about previously executed commands. If no arguments are specified, lastcomm will print info about all of the commands in acct (the record file).
# lastcomm --user deepak
sshd SF deepak __ 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:08
bash deepak pts/11 0.01 secs Thu Jun 12 03:08
clear deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:30
bash-prompt-xte deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:30
man deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:14
sh deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:14
less deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:14
bzip2 deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:14
gunzip deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:14
bash-prompt-xte deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:12
bash-prompt-xte deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:12
lastcomm deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:12
bash-prompt-xte deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:09
bash-prompt-xte deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:09
date deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:09
For each entry the following information is printed:
+ command name of the process
+ flags, as recorded by the system accounting routines:
S -- command executed by super-user
F -- command executed after a fork but without a following exec
C -- command run in PDP-11 compatibility mode (VAX only)
D -- command terminated with the generation of a core file
X -- command was terminated with the signal SIGTERM
+ the name of the user who ran the process
+ time the process exited
lets sort out our output with unique commands ran by user deepak along with count
# lastcomm --user root | awk -F " " '{ print $1 }' | sort | uniq --count
3 ac
1 accton
3537 awk
650 basename
17 bash
4 bzip2
11030 cat
5 chmod
1 clear
325 consoletype
1 cp
1591 crond
663 cut
1 date
4 egrep
2754 ethtool
42 find
5 finger
list the time and the user details who ran rm command
# lastcomm rm
rm deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:35
rm deepak pts/11 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 03:35
rm root pts/5 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 02:59
rm root pts/5 0.00 secs Thu Jun 12 02:59
rm root __ 0.00 secs Wed Jun 11 23:53
rm root __ 0.00 secs Wed Jun 11 23:53
rm root pts/5 0.00 secs Wed Jun 11 05:59
rm root pts/5 0.00 secs Wed Jun 11 05:59
rm root pts/5 0.00 secs Wed Jun 11 05:59
rm root pts/5 0.00 secs Wed Jun 11 05:59
rm root pts/5 0.00 secs Wed Jun 11 05:58
rm root pts/5 0.00 secs Wed Jun 11 05:58
Method 3
sa summarizes information about previously executed commands as recorded in the acct file. In addition, it condenses this data into a summary file named savacct which contains the number of times the command was called and the system resources used. The information can also be summarized on a per-user basis; sa will save this information into a file named usracct.
# sa -u | grep root |awk -F " " '{ print $6}' |sort | uniq --count
1 accton
423 awk
78 basename
9 bash-prompt-xte
1306 cat
5 chmod
38 consoletype
188 crond
78 cut
532 dhclient-script
325 ethtool
41 find
336 free
2 gconftool-2
593 grep
I would appreciate if you can post any other relevant command in the comment section.
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