TranslateProject/sources/Built in Audit Trail Tool – Last Command in Linux.md
2013-12-05 15:51:19 +08:00

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Built in Audit Trail Tool Last Command in Linux

If you are working as a server administrator, you may understand that you have to protect your server. Not only from the outside, but you have to protect it from the inside. Linux has one built-in command to see who is the last logged in user into your server.

The command is last. This command is very useful for audit trail. Lets start to see what can last to do for you.

What is the function of Last command

Last display a list of all user logged in (and out) from /var/log/wtmp since the file was created. This file is binary file which cannot view by text editor such as Vi, Joe or another else. This trick is pretty smart because user (or root) can not modify the file as they want.

Last gives you information the name of all users logged in, its tty, IP Address (if the user doing a remote connection) date time, and how long the user logged in.

How to run Last

You just need to type last on your console. Heres the sample :

$ last

leni pts/0 10.0.76.162 Mon Dec 2 12:32 - 13:25 (00:53)
pungki tty1 Mon Dec 2 09:31 still logged in
reboot system boot 2.6.32-358.23.2 Mon Dec 2 09:20 - 13:25 (04:05) 

Heres how to read last information :

  • The first column tell who are the user
  • The second column give us information about how the user is connected
pts/0 (pseudo terminal) means that the user connect via remote connections such as SSH or telnet

tty (teletypewriter) means that the user connect via direct connection to the computer or local terminal

Exception for reboot activity the status will be shown is system boot
  • The third column show where the user come from. If the user connect from remote computer, you will see a hostname or an IP Address. If you see :0.0 or nothing it means that the user is connect via local terminal. Exception for reboot activity, the kernel version will be shown as the status
  • The remaining columns display when the log activity has happened. Numbers in the bracket tell us how many hours and minutes the connection was happened

Some examples of Last command on day-to-day operation

Limit the number of line shown

When you have a lot of lines to show, you can limit how many lines do you want to see. Use -n parameter to do it.

$ last -n 3

leni pts/0 10.0.76.162 Mon Dec 2 12:32 - 13:25 (00:53)
pungki tty1 Mon Dec 2 09:31 still logged in
reboot system boot 2.6.32-358.23.2 Mon Dec 2 09:20 - 13:25 (04:05)

-n parameter will make last command to display 3 lines starting from the current time and backwards

Dont display the hostname

Use -R parameter to do is. Heres the sample :

$ last -R

leni pts/0 Mon Dec 2 12:32 - 13:25 (00:53)
pungki tty1 Mon Dec 2 09:31 still logged in
reboot system boot Mon Dec 2 09:20 - 13:25 (04:05)

As you see, now there is no information about hostname or IP Address

Display the hostname in the last column

To do this, we can use -a parameter

$ last -a

leni pts/0 Mon Dec 2 12:32 - 13:25 (00:53) 10.0.76.162
pungki tty1 Mon Dec 2 09:31 still logged in :0.0
reboot system boot Mon Dec 2 09:20 - 13:25 (04:05) 2.6.32-358.23.2.el6.i686

Now the hostname information such as 10.0.76.162 will be placed in the last column.

Print full login and logout time and dates

You can use -F parameter for this. Heres a sample.

$ last -F

leni pts/0 10.0.76.162 Mon Dec 2 12:32:24 2013  Mon Dec 2013 13:25:24 2013 (00:53)

Print specific user name

If you want to trace specific user, you can print it specifically. Put the name of user behind last command.

$ last leni

leni tty1 Mon Dec 2 18-42 still logged in
leni pts/0 Mon Dec 2 12:32 - 13:25 (00:53) 10.0.76.162

Or if you want to know when reboot is done, you can also display it

$ last reboot

reboot system boot Mon Dec 2 09:20 - 16:55 (07:34)
reboot system boot Sun Dec 1 04:26 - 04:27 (00:01)
reboot system boot Wed Nov 27 20:27 - 01:24 (04:57)
reboot system boot Tue Nov 26 21:06 - 06:13 (09:06)

Print spesific tty / pts

Last can also print information about specific tty / pts. Just put the tty name or pty name behind the last command. Here are some sample outputs :

$ last tty1

pungki tty1 Mon Dec 2 09:31 still logged in
pungki tty1 Mon Dec 2 04:26  down (00:00)
pungki tty1 Mon Dec 2 04:07  down (00:00)
pungki tty1 Sun Dec 1 18:55  04:07 (09:12)

$ last pts/0

leni pts/0 10.0.76.162 Mon Dec 2 12:32 - 13:25 (00:53)
pungki pts/0 :0.0 Wed Nov 27 20:28  down (04:56)

When you see down value such as the second line above , it means that the user was logged in from specific time until the system is reboot or shutdown.

Use another file than /var/log/wtmp

By default, last command will parse information from /var/log/wtmp. If you want the last command parse from another file, you can use -f parameter. For example, you may rotate the log after a certain condition. Lets say the previous file is named /var/log/wtmp.1 . Then the last command will be like this.

$ last -f /var/log/wtmp.1

Display the run level changes

There is -x parameter if you want to display run level changes. Heres a sample output :

pungki tty1 Mon Dec 2 19:21 still logged in
runlevel (to lvl 3) 2.6.32-358.23.2 Mon Dec 2 19:20  19:29 (00:08)
reboot system boot 2.6.32-358.23.2 Mon Dec 2 19:20  19:29 (00:08)
shutdown system down 2.6.32-358.23.2 Mon Dec 2 18:56  19:20 (00:23)
runlevel (to lvl 0) 2.6.32-358.23.2 Mon Dec 2 18:56  18:56 (00:00)
leni tty1 Mon Dec 2 18:42  down (00:00) 

You can see that there are two entries of run level. Runlevel which has to lvl 3 entry means the system is running on full console mode. No active X Window or GUI. Meanwhile, when the system is shutdown, Linux us run level 0. Thats why last show you to lvl 0 entry

View bad logins

While last command logs successful logins, then lastb command record failed login attempts. You must have root access to run lastb command. Heres a sample output from lastb command. Lastb will parse information from /var/log/btmp.

# lastb

leni tty1 Mon Dec 2 22:12  22:12 (00:00)
rahma tty1 Mon Dec 2 22:11  22:11 (00:00) 

Rotate the logs

Since /var/log/wtmp record every single log in activities, the size of the file may grow quickly. By default, Linux will rotate /var/log/wtmp every month. The detail of rotation activity is put in /etc/logrotate.conf file. Heres the content of my /etc/logrotate.conf file.

/var/log/wtmp {
  monthly
  create 0664 root umtp
  minsize 1M
  rotate 1
}

And for /var/log/btmp, heres default configuration of rotate activity

/var/log/btmp {
  missingok
  monthly
  create 0600 root umtp
  minsize 1M
  rotate 1
}

Conclusion

You can combine those parameters to custom the output of last and lastb. All parameter which run on last command, also run on lastb command. For more detail, please visit last manual page by typing man last on your console.


via: http://linoxide.com/linux-command/linux-last-command/

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