table of contents
| ACCT(2) | System Calls Manual | ACCT(2) | 
NAME¶
acct — enable or
    disable process accounting
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
    <unistd.h>
int
  
  acct(const
    char *file);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
    acct()
    system call enables or disables the collection of system accounting records.
    If the argument file is a null pointer, accounting is
    disabled. If file is an
    existing
    pathname (null-terminated), record collection is enabled and for every
    process initiated which terminates under normal conditions an accounting
    record is appended to file. Abnormal conditions of
    termination are reboots or other fatal system problems. Records for
    processes which never terminate cannot be produced by
    acct().
For more information on the record structure used by
    acct(), see
    <sys/acct.h> and
    acct(5).
This call is permitted only to the super-user.
NOTES¶
Accounting is automatically disabled when the file system the accounting file resides on runs out of space; it is enabled when space once again becomes available. The values controlling this behaviour can be modified using the following sysctl(8) variables:
- kern.acct_chkfreq
- Specifies the frequency (in seconds) with which free disk space should be checked.
- kern.acct_resume
- The percentage of free disk space above which process accounting will resume.
- kern.acct_suspend
- The percentage of free disk space below which process accounting will suspend.
RETURN VALUES¶
On error -1 is returned. The file must exist and the call may be exercised only by the super-user.
ERRORS¶
The acct() system call will fail if one of
    the following is true:
- [EPERM]
- The caller is not the super-user.
- [ENOTDIR]
- A component of the path prefix is not a directory.
- [ENAMETOOLONG]
- A component of a pathname exceeded 255 characters, or an entire path name exceeded 1023 characters.
- [ENOENT]
- The named file does not exist.
- [EACCES]
- Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix, or the path name is not a regular file.
- [ELOOP]
- Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating the pathname.
- [EROFS]
- The named file resides on a read-only file system.
- [EFAULT]
- The file argument points outside the process's allocated address space.
- [EIO]
- An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file system.
- [EINTEGRITY]
- Corrupted data was detected while reading from the file system.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The acct() function appeared in
    Version 7 AT&T UNIX.
| March 30, 2020 | Debian |