How do I get the name of the active user via the command line in OS X?
问题:
回答1:
as 'whoami' has been obsoleted, it's probably more forward compatible to use:
id -un
回答2:
If you'd like to display the full name (instead of the username), add the -F
flag:
$ id -F
Andrew Havens
回答3:
whoami
EDIT
The whoami utility has been obsoleted by the id(1) utility, and is equivalent to id -un
. The command id -p
is suggested for normal interactive use.
回答4:
Via here
Checking the owner of /dev/console seems to work well.
stat -f "%Su" /dev/console
回答5:
I'm pretty sure the terminal in OS X is just like unix, so the command would be:
whoami
I don't have a mac on me at the moment so someone correct me if I'm wrong.
回答6:
If you want to know who's currently logged in to the system:
$ w 15:56:14 up 5 days, 20:58, 6 users, load average: 0.43, 0.53, 0.50 USER TTY LOGIN@ IDLE JCPU PCPU WHAT me pts/2 Fri19 1:03m 0.98s 0.98s -/bin/bash me pts/3 09:55 6:00m 0.43s 0.43s /bin/bash me pts/5 15:56 0.00s 0.23s 0.00s w
(This is from a Linux system; the formatting on OS X may be slightly different, but the information should be about the same.)
There may be multiple login sessions; UNIX is designed to be a multi-user system, after all.
回答7:
The question has not been completely answered, IMHO. I will try to explain: I have a crontab entry that schedules a bash shell command procedure, that in turn does some cleanup of my files; and, when done, sends a notification to me using the OS X notification center (with the command osascript -e 'display notification ...
). If someone (e.g. my wife or my daughter) switches the current user of the computer to her, leaving me in the background, the cron script fails when sending the notification.
So, Who is the current user means Has some other people become the effective user leaving me in the background? Do stat -f "%Su" /dev/console
returns the current active user name?
The answer is yes; so, now my crontab shell script has been modified in the following way:
...
if [ "$(/usr/bin/stat -f ""%Su"" /dev/console)" = "loreti" ]
then /usr/bin/osascript -e \
'display notification "Cleanup done" sound name "sosumi" with title "myCleanup"'
fi
回答8:
getting username in MAC terminal is easy...
I generally use whoami
in terminal...
For example, in this case, I needed that to install Tomcat Server...
回答9:
You can also use the logname
command from the BSD General Commands Manual under Linux or MacOS to see the username of the user currently logged in, even if the user is performing a sudo
operation. This is useful, for instance, when modifying a user's crontab while installing a system-wide package with sudo: crontab -u $(logname)
Per man logname
:
LOGNAME(1)
NAME
logname -- display user's login name
回答10:
You can also retrieve it from the environment variables, but that is probably not secure, so I would go with Andrew's answer.
printenv USER
If you need to retrieve it from an app, like Node, it's easier to get it from the environment variables, such as
process.env.USER
.
回答11:
Define 'active user'.
If the question is 'who is the logged in user', then 'who am i' or 'whoami' is fine (though they give different answers - 'whoami' reports just a user name; 'who am i' reports on terminal and login time too).
If the question is 'which user ID is the effective ID for the shell', then it is often better to use 'id'. This reports on the real and effective user ID and group ID, and on the supplementary group IDs too. This might matter if the shell is running SUID or SGID.
回答12:
There are two ways-
whoami
or
echo $USER