.TH LAST 1 .SH NAME last, uptime \- display recent on-line session records, show uptime .SH SYNOPSIS \fBlast\fR [\fB\-f \fIfile\fR]\fR [\fB\-r\fR] [\fB\-\fIn\fR] [\fIname\fR] [\fItty\fR] ...\fR .br \fBuptime\fR .br .de FL .TP \\fB\\$1\\fR \\$2 .. .de EX .TP 20 \\fB\\$1\\fR # \\$2 .. .SH OPTIONS .FL "\-f" "Use \fIfile\fR instead of /usr/adm/wtmp" .FL "\-r" "Search backwards only to last reboot" .FL "\-u" "Print uptime since last reboot" .FL "\-\fIn\fP" "Print a maximum of \fIn\fR lines" .SH EXAMPLES .EX "last reboot" "When was the system last rebooted?" .EX "last ast" "When was the last login for ast?" .EX "last \-10 tty00 tty01" "Display last 10 logins on tty00 or tty01" .EX "uptime" "Display uptime (likewise \fBlast \-u\fR)" .SH DESCRIPTION .PP .I Last Searches backward through the login administration file (default is \fI/usr/adm/wtmp\fR), printing information about previous logins and reboots. During a long search, the SIGQUIT signal (CTRL-\\) causes \fIlast\fR to display how far back it has gone; it then continues. .PP .IR Uptime , an alias for .IR "last \-u" , displays the time the system is running since the last reboot. .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR who (1), .BR utmp (5).