Thursday, May 28, 2009

bouncycastle

Bouncycastle supported Encodings and Algorithm
http://www.bouncycastle.org/specifications.html

fedora last reboot, poweroff

who command
You need to use who command, to print who is logged on. It also displays the time of last system boot. Use last command to display system reboot and shutdown date and time.

$ who –b

Output:system boot Apr 30 15:08

Use last command to display listing of last logged in users and system last reboot time and date:

$ last reboot lessOr better try:$ last reboot head -1
Output:reboot system boot 2.6.15.4 Sun Apr 30 15:08 - 16:22 (01:13)

last command searches back through the file /var/log/wtmp and displays a list of all users logged in (and out) since that file was created. The pseudo user reboot logs in each time the system is rebooted. Thus last reboot command will show a log of all reboots since the log file was created.

To display last shutdown date and time use following command:

$ last -x grep down
$ last -xgrep shutdown head -1
Output:shutdown system down 2.6.15.4 Sun Apr 30 13:31 - 15:08 (01:37)

Where,


-x: Display the system shutdown entries and run level changes.

fedora logs

Fedora's /etc/syslog.conf follows a standard logic:

mail logs are stored in /var/log/maillog,
system's logs are in /var/log/messages,
cron jobs activities are in /var/log/cron,
authentication data are in /var/log/secure.