I could grep through /etc/passwd but that seems onerous. 'finger' isn't installed and I'd like to avoid that dependency. This is for a program so it would be nice if there was some command that let you just access user info.
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You don't specify a programming language, so I'll assume you want to use the shell; here's an answer for the bash shell. Two steps to this: get the appropriate record, then get the field you want from that record. First, getting the account record is done by querying the
For hysterical raisins, the full name of the user is recorded in a field called the “GECOS” field; to complicate matters, this field often has its own structure with the full name as just one of several optional sub-fields. So anything that wants to get the full name from the account record needs to parse both these levels.
Your programming language probably has a library function to do this in fewer steps. In C, you'd use the ‘getpwnam’ function and then parse the GECOS field. |
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On a modern glibc system, use this command:
That'll get you the Read the manpage of If you're already programming, you can use the
The Read the manpage of Be aware that many systems use this field for more than the full name of the user. The most common convention is to use a comma ( |
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Are you looking for getpwnam? |
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Just in case you want to do this from C, try something like this:
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