1 LAST

  The LAST utility (LAST 2.0) is a utility that will give the time a
user last logged in to the system.  The utility also provides the Group 
in which that user resides and how many days from the present day it has 
been since the last time the user logged into the system.  If the user
has never logged into the system, the program strips the creation date
from the user's default directory (it is assumed that the directory
was created at the same time as the user account).

2 parameters

  The only parameter is the supplying of a username.  When a username is
supplied to the utility, all qualifiers are ignored except the /OUTPUT
qualifier.

  i.e.

     $ LAST JBAKER
       JBAKER     GROUPNAME               10-JAN-1990    4 DAYS.

This means that if the program were run on 14-JAN-1990, the output would
look as it does above.

2 qualifiers

  /ALL_GROUPS  - Allows the output to be broken up by group, displaying
                 them all.

  /ALL_USERS   - Displays the status of all users in alphabetical order.

  /DAYS        - Allows you to specify to report on users that have not
                 logged in within so many days.  The default is 0.

  /GROUP       - Allows you to single out a certain group.

  /HELP        - Displays the HELP text for the LAST utility.

  /OUTPUT      - This qualifier allows you to write to an output file 
                 of your choice.

2 examples

  The following are some examples of the LAST utility using the qualifiers.

 $ LAST /ALL_USERS
   LAST LOGIN RESULTS FOR THE  UNCLASSIFIED CLUSTER  ON THE DAY 16-JAN-1990.
   THE FOLLOWING USERS HAVE NOT USED THEIR ACCOUNTS FOR AT LEAST    0 DAYS:

   AAA      PC-GROUP                10-JAN-1990    6 DAYS
   AAA3     NERD_GROUP              10-DEC-1989   37 DAYS **NEVER USED**
    .           .                        .            .
    .           .                        .            .
    .           .                        .            .

  This will display to the screen the loggin status of all the users in 
  alphabetical order.  (Note:  **NEVER USED**  means what it says.  The
  date used, is the date the user directory was created.)

  $ LAST /DAYS=90 /GROUP="SOME GROUP" /OUTPUT=LAST.TXT

  The output file, LAST.TXT looks as follows:

   LAST LOGIN RESULTS FOR THE  UNCLASSIFIED CLUSTER  ON THE DAY 16-JAN-1990.
   THE FOLLOWING USERS HAVE NOT USED THEIR ACCOUNTS FOR AT LEAST   90 DAYS:

   AUSER    user directory does not match UAF file.
   STUDENT  SOME GROUP              12-OCT-1989   96 DAYS
   ZAMFIR   SOME GROUP               3-NOV-1988  439 DAYS **NEVER USED**
    .           .                        .            .
    .           .                        .            .
    .           .                        .            .

  The list for the specified group is displayed.  This is the same for the
  qualifier /ALL_GROUPS, except no other groups will be tallied.  The 
  message displayed for AUSER is to note that the user has never logged
  in and that the attempt to open up the directory file was not successful.
  This should mean that SYSUAF.DAT contains the wrong directory as the 
  user's default.