table of contents
- bookworm 252.17-1~deb12u1
- bookworm-backports 254.5-1~bpo12+1
- testing 254.5-1
- unstable 254.5-1
- experimental 255~rc1-3
SD_UID_GET_STATE(3) | sd_uid_get_state | SD_UID_GET_STATE(3) |
NAME¶
sd_uid_get_state, sd_uid_is_on_seat, sd_uid_get_sessions, sd_uid_get_seats, sd_uid_get_display, sd_uid_get_login_time - Determine login state of a specific Unix user ID
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <systemd/sd-login.h>
int sd_uid_get_state(uid_t uid, char **state);
int sd_uid_is_on_seat(uid_t uid, int require_active, const char *seat);
int sd_uid_get_sessions(uid_t uid, int require_active, char ***sessions);
int sd_uid_get_seats(uid_t uid, int require_active, char ***seats);
int sd_uid_get_display(uid_t uid, char **session);
int sd_uid_get_login_time(uid_t uid, uint64_t *usec);
DESCRIPTION¶
sd_uid_get_state() may be used to determine the login state of a specific Unix user identifier. The following states are currently known: "offline" (user not logged in at all), "lingering" (user not logged in, but some user services running), "online" (user logged in, but not active, i.e. has no session in the foreground), "active" (user logged in, and has at least one active session, i.e. one session in the foreground), "closing" (user not logged in, and not lingering, but some processes are still around). In the future additional states might be defined, client code should be written to be robust in regards to additional state strings being returned. The returned string needs to be freed with the libc free(3) call after use.
sd_uid_is_on_seat() may be used to determine whether a specific user is logged in or active on a specific seat. Accepts a Unix user identifier and a seat identifier string as parameters. The require_active parameter is a boolean value. If non-zero (true), this function will test if the user is active (i.e. has a session that is in the foreground and accepting user input) on the specified seat, otherwise (false) only if the user is logged in (and possibly inactive) on the specified seat.
sd_uid_get_sessions() may be used to determine the current sessions of the specified user. Accepts a Unix user identifier as parameter. The require_active parameter controls whether the returned list shall consist of only those sessions where the user is currently active (> 0), where the user is currently online but possibly inactive (= 0), or logged in but possibly closing the session (< 0). The call returns a NULL terminated string array of session identifiers in sessions which needs to be freed by the caller with the libc free(3) call after use, including all the strings referenced. If the string array parameter is passed as NULL, the array will not be filled in, but the return code still indicates the number of current sessions. Note that instead of an empty array NULL may be returned and should be considered equivalent to an empty array.
Similarly, sd_uid_get_seats() may be used to determine the list of seats on which the user currently has sessions. Similar semantics apply, however note that the user may have multiple sessions on the same seat as well as sessions with no attached seat and hence the number of entries in the returned array may differ from the one returned by sd_uid_get_sessions().
sd_uid_get_display() returns the name of the "primary" session of a user. If the user has graphical sessions, it will be the oldest graphical session. Otherwise, it will be the oldest open session.
sd_uid_get_login_time() may be used to determine the time the user's service manager has been invoked, which is the time when the user's first active session, since which they stayed logged in continuously, began. The usec is in microseconds since the epoch (CLOCK_REALTIME). This call will fail with -ENXIO if the user is not currently logged in.
RETURN VALUE¶
On success, sd_uid_get_state() and sd_uid_get_login_time() returns 0 or a positive integer. If the test succeeds, sd_uid_is_on_seat() returns a positive integer; if it fails, 0. sd_uid_get_sessions() and sd_uid_get_seats() return the number of entries in the returned arrays. sd_uid_get_display() returns a non-negative code on success. On failure, these calls return a negative errno-style error code.
Errors¶
Returned errors may indicate the following problems:
-ENODATA
-ENXIO
-EINVAL
-ENOMEM
NOTES¶
Functions described here are available as a shared library, which can be compiled against and linked to with the libsystemd pkg-config(1) file.
The code described here uses getenv(3), which is declared to be not multi-thread-safe. This means that the code calling the functions described here must not call setenv(3) from a parallel thread. It is recommended to only do calls to setenv() from an early phase of the program when no other threads have been started.
SEE ALSO¶
systemd 254 |