Provided by: wuzzah_0.53-3.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       wuzzah - keep an eye out for friends on a local system

SYNOPSIS

       wuzzah [OPTIONS...]

DESCRIPTION

       wuzzah  is  a program that just sits around and scans the utmpx entries to watch when your
       friends log  in  and  out.   By  default  upon  invocation,  wuzzah  looks  for  the  file
       ${HOME}/.wuzzah,  and  loads the list of buddies contained therein (which are separated by
       newlines), and then sits and watches.  If no file is found, and no other readable file  is
       specified  (see  OPTIONS),  wuzzah will attempt to just watch for whomever the current uid
       maps, and failing that will just quit.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              an informative usage summary, though nothing you don't see here...

       -a, --all-users
              watches for all users on the system, period.

       -c, --exec-cmd=CMD
              execute CMD upon a login.  NOTE:  this is done with a call to system(2), so you can
              do things like piping and whatever else you can do with sh -c

       -f, --buddy-file=FILE
              use FILE as buddyfile.  naturally FILE must be readable, and consists of usernames,
              one to a line.  optionally, these usernames can be followed by a colon, and then  a
              wuzzah command-line to override wuzzah's behavior for this specific user.

       -F, --no-buddyfile
              tells wuzzah to not bother loading any config files.

       -i, --interval=NUM
              sleep NUM seconds between each polling

       -m, --message=STRING
              use  STRING  as  a  message  template  to greet logged-in buddies.  See the section
              FORMATS for more information.

       -n, --no-newline
              don't end the messages with newlines (normally does by default)

       -o, --process-once
              scan the login records once, then exit

       -p, --process-current
              by default wuzzah doesn't message users who were already logged in when started up.
              this option overrides such behavior and messages them anyways (only useful with the
              -w/-c options)

       -q, --silent
              don't message buddies when they log in (default).

       -s, --status-message=STRING
              use STRING as a template for displaying the status of people logging  in  and  out.
              See FORMATS for more information.

       -u, --users=LIST
              adds  every user in LIST (a space/comma/colon separated list of users) to the buddy
              list

       -v, --version
              the current version and copyright.

       -w, --write-buddies
              turns on messaging of buddies as they log in.  NOTE:  this can get  quite  annoying
              rather quickly.  tune in soon for a less annoying solution

FORMATS

       message  templates  can  be defined as normal character strings, interspersed with special
       format characters.  format characters consist of a `%', followed  by  a  character,  which
       defines situation-specific data.  The current list of these characters is as follows:

       a      the alert character ('\a')

       b      the name of the buddy who has logged in/out

       d      the date, currently in HH:MM:SS format

       h and H
              the remote hostname or IP address (respectively) of your buddy's login

       l      the  line in/out on which the buddy is logged (typically, something like /dev/pts/9
              or /dev/ttyS0)

       m      whether or not you have just messaged your buddy (really only  useful  for  the  -s
              option)

       n      an embedded newline character

       o      your buddy's online status ("logged on" or "logged off")

       u      your own username, as can best be determined by the program.

EXAMPLES

       a simple invocation:

       username@machine$ wuzzah
       (13:45:39)  foo logged in on :0      (not messaging).
       (13:45:39)  bar logged in on pts/11  (not messaging).

       Message from username@machine on pts/11 at 14:00 ...
       (wuzzah)  username says: "shoutout to my homie foo."
       EOF

       an example with a little more user customization:

       username@machine$ wuzzah --message="hey, %b, it's %u. nice to see you at %d!"

       and when foo logs in, foo will get a message like so:

       Message from username@machine on pts/11 at 14:00 ...
       hey, foo, it's username. nice to see you at (14:00:00)!
       EOF

FILES

       $HOME/.wuzzah
              the default file containing the list of users to watch

BUGS

       don't  know  of  any, but reports (and patches too) are always welcome.  feel free to send
       them to the author.

AUTHOR

       sean finney <seanius@seanius.net>