NAME¶
finger —
user information lookup
program
SYNOPSIS¶
finger |
[-lmsp]
[user ...]
[user@host ...] |
DESCRIPTION¶
The
finger displays information about the system users.
Options are:
- -s
- Finger displays the user's login name,
real name, terminal name and write status (as a ``*'' after the terminal
name if write permission is denied), idle time, login time, office
location and office phone number.
Login time is displayed as month, day, hours and minutes, unless more than
six months ago, in which case the year is displayed rather than the hours
and minutes.
Unknown devices as well as nonexistent idle and login times are displayed as
single asterisks.
- -l
- Produces a multi-line format displaying all of the
information described for the -s option as well as the
user's home directory, home phone number, login shell, mail status, and
the contents of the files “.plan”,
“.project”,
“.pgpkey” and
“.forward” from the user's home directory.
Phone numbers specified as eleven digits are printed as ``+N-NNN-NNN-NNNN''.
Numbers specified as ten or seven digits are printed as the appropriate
subset of that string. Numbers specified as five digits are printed as
``xN-NNNN''. Numbers specified as four digits are printed as ``xNNNN''.
If write permission is denied to the device, the phrase ``(messages off)''
is appended to the line containing the device name. One entry per user is
displayed with the -l option; if a user is logged on
multiple times, terminal information is repeated once per login.
Mail status is shown as ``No Mail.'' if there is no mail at all, ``Mail last
read DDD MMM ## HH:MM YYYY (TZ)'' if the person has looked at their
mailbox since new mail arriving, or ``New mail received ...'', `` Unread
since ...'' if they have new mail.
- -p
- Prevents the -l option of
finger from displaying the contents of the
“.plan”,
“.project” and
“.pgpkey” files.
- -m
- Prevent matching of user names.
User is usually a login name; however, matching will
also be done on the users' real names, unless the -m
option is supplied. All name matching performed by
finger is case insensitive.
If no options are specified,
finger defaults to the
-l style output if operands are provided, otherwise to the
-s style. Note that some fields may be missing, in either
format, if information is not available for them.
If no arguments are specified,
finger will print an entry for
each user currently logged into the system.
Finger may be used to look up users on a remote machine. The
format is to specify a
user as
“
user@host
”, or
“
@host
”, where the default output format
for the former is the
-l style, and the default output
format for the latter is the
-s style. The
-l option is the only option that may be passed to a remote
machine.
If standard output is a socket,
finger will emit a carriage
return (^M) before every linefeed (^J). This is for processing remote finger
requests when invoked by
fingerd(8).
FILES¶
- ~/.nofinger
- If finger finds this file in a user's home directory, it
will, for finger requests originating outside the local host, firmly deny
the existence of that user. For this to work, the finger program, as
started by fingerd(8), must be able to see the
.nofinger file. This generally means that the home
directory containing the file must have the other-users-execute bit set
(o+x). See chmod(1). If you use this feature for
privacy, please test it with ``finger @localhost'' before relying on it,
just in case.
- ~/.plan
-
- ~/.project
-
- ~/.pgpkey
- These files are printed as part of a long-format request.
The .plan file may be arbitrarily long.
SEE ALSO¶
chfn(1),
passwd(1),
w(1),
who(1)
HISTORY¶
The
finger command appeared in
3.0BSD.