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whoami

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Stillnotelf (talk | contribs) at 19:59, 25 October 2016 (I don't think this is a stub, it's a complete description for this tiny utility). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In computing, whoami is a command found on most Unix-like operating systems and every Windows operating system since Windows Server 2003. It is a concatenation of the words "Who am I?" and prints the effective username of the current user when invoked. It has the same effect as the Unix command id -un.

On Unix-like operating systems, the output of the command is slightly different from $USER because whoami outputs the username that the user is working under, whereas $USER outputs the username that was used to log in. For example, if the user logged in as John and su into root, whoami displays root and echo $USER displays John. This is because the su command does not invoke a login shell by default.

The earliest versions were created in 2.9 BSD as a convenience form for who am i, the Berkeley Unix who command's way of printing just the logged in user's identity.[1] The GNU version was written by Richard Mlynarik and is part of the GNU Core Utilities (coreutils).

The command is also available as part of the Windows 2000 Resource Kit[2] and Windows XP SP2 Support Tools.[3]

This command was also available as a NetWare-Command residing in the public-directory of the fileserver. It also outputs the current connections to which server the workstation is attached with which username.

Example

  • Unix:
# whoami
root
  • DOS:
C:\Users\admin>whoami
workgroup\admin

See also

References

External links