130

If I create the script /root/bin/whoami.sh containing:

#!/bin/bash
whoami

and this script is called by a user with a properly configured sudo, it will indicate

root

Is there a fast way to obtain the actual user in a script, or will I have to resort to parameters passing along this username?

8 Answers 8

169

$SUDO_USER doesn't work if you are using sudo su -.
It also requires multiple checks - if $USER == 'root' then get $SUDO_USER.

Instead of the command whoami use who am i. This runs the who command filtered for the current session. It gives you more info than you need. So, do this to get just the user:

who am i | awk '{print $1}'

Alternatively (and simpler) you can use logname. It does the same thing as the above statement.

This gives you the username that logged in to the session.

These work regardless of sudo or sudo su [whatever]. It also works regardless of how many times su and sudo are called.

10
  • 57
    Alternative to who am i is who mom likes. Your choice.
    – wchargin
    Aug 31, 2014 at 20:36
  • 3
    who returns 2 lines for me, both containing my name, and who am i returns none. Any help?
    – GManz
    Sep 23, 2014 at 20:55
  • 10
    I'm on Ubuntu 16.04 and the command who am i does nothing, it seems to be simply who, so who | awk '{print $1}' works as expected ;)
    – daveoncode
    May 15, 2016 at 8:43
  • 3
    Just incase you don't have awk installed, you can also use cut: who mom likes | cut -d' ' -f1 or sed for some reason: who mom likes | sed -n 's/^\([^ ]*\).*/\1/p' Aug 2, 2016 at 17:05
  • 1
    Note: logname doesn't work when you run it from a terminal window because it's a non-login terminal.
    – Lucas
    Jun 13, 2017 at 17:01
67

I think $SUDO_USER is valid.

#!/bin/bash
echo $SUDO_USER
whoami
6
  • 4
    Strange thing: sudo env shows SUDO_USER but sudo echo $SUDO_USER prints nothing...
    – mtvec
    Aug 19, 2010 at 13:54
  • 21
    job, this is not strange, it's expected. in sudo echo $SUDO_USER, bash is evaluating $SUDO_USER before executing sudo. try the script posted in this solution, it works.
    – user410344
    Aug 19, 2010 at 13:57
  • @quadmore: If you're happy with the answer, don't forget to accept it.
    – mtvec
    Aug 19, 2010 at 14:41
  • 4
    You could also use echo ${SUDO_USER:-$USER} to catch both sudo and non-sudo running. But evan's answer logname sounds easer Feb 6, 2013 at 9:34
  • 2
    @TobiasKienzler - And as evan points out, $SUDO_USER doesn't work with sudo su -, but logname always works. Sep 6, 2013 at 18:42
15

Here is how to get the username of the person who called the script no matter if sudo or not:

if [ $SUDO_USER ]; then user=$SUDO_USER; else user=`whoami`; fi

or a shorter version

[ $SUDO_USER ] && user=$SUDO_USER || user=`whoami`
1
8

Using whoami, who am i, who, id or $SUDO_USER isn't right here.

Actually, who is never a solution to the question, as it will only list the logged in users, which might be dozens...

In my eyes, the only valuable answer is the use of logname.

Hope this helps

Rob

5

If it's the UID you're looking for (useful for docker shenanigans), then this works:

LOCAL_USER_ID=$(id -u $(logname))
2

who am i | awk '{print $1}' didn't work for me but who|awk '{print $1}' will serve the job

3
  • 2
    Not on a host where more than one user has session Dec 17, 2018 at 15:14
  • It's whoami all one word, not who am i. This follows typical structure where shell commands typically are a single word, with arguments following. who am i would be interpereted as running the command who with the arguments of am and i. who just so happens to also be a command, but it outputs more than is needed in this case, whereas whoami just prints the username.
    – Eli Smith
    Nov 9, 2022 at 23:32
  • @EliSmith whoami doesn't solve the problem, because it doesn't look for the caller via root.
    – Falmarri
    Sep 6, 2023 at 21:23
1

Odd, the system does distinguish between real and effective UIDs, but I can find no program that exports this at shell level.

0

Having the same question, using Rocky Linux 9.2, I ran this script:

#!/bin/bash
echo "LOGNAME: $LOGNAME"
echo "SUDO_USER: $SUDO_USER"
set | grep username

in each of these scenarios:

  • as user (./script.sh)

    • LOGNAME: username
    • SUDO_USER: null
  • as root via sudo (sudo ./script.sh)

    • LOGNAME: root
    • SUDO_USER: username
  • as root via su (./script.sh)

    • LOGNAME: username
    • SUDO_USER: null
  • as root via sudo su (./script.sh)

    • LOGNAME: root
    • SUDO_USER: username

Using an if...then...else check would work, unless you inadvertently sudo run the script while you are already at the superuser prompt:

#root: sudo ./script.sh
  • via either su or sudo su the results are
    • LOGNAME: root
    • SUDO_USER: root

However, one set variable has proven to be consistent though all of my scenarios:

MAIL=/var/spool/mail/username

I now set the logged in user as:

UNAME=$(echo $MAIL |cut -d/ -f5)

I'm sure there are situations where this would not work, but I haven't found one yet.

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