wall - Man Page
write a message to all users
Examples (TL;DR)
Synopsis
Description
wall displays a message, or the contents of a file, or otherwise its standard input, on the terminals of all currently logged in users. The command will wrap lines that are longer than 79 characters. Short lines are whitespace padded to have 79 characters. The command will always put a carriage return and new line at the end of each line.
Only the superuser can write on the terminals of users who have chosen to deny messages or are using a program which automatically denies messages.
Reading from a file is refused when the invoker is not superuser and the program is set-user-ID or set-group-ID.
Options
- -n, --nobanner
Suppress the banner.
- -t, --timeout timeout
Abandon the write attempt to the terminals after timeout seconds. This timeout must be a positive integer. The default value is 300 seconds, which is a legacy from the time when people ran terminals over modem lines.
- -g, --group group
Limit printing message to members of group defined as a group argument. The argument can be group name or GID.
- -h, --help
Display help text and exit.
- -V, --version
Print version and exit.
Notes
Some sessions, such as wdm(1x), that have in the beginning of utmp(5) ut_type data a ':' character will not get the message from wall. This is done to avoid write errors.
History
A wall command appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX.
See Also
Reporting Bugs
For bug reports, use the issue tracker at https://github.com/util-linux/util-linux/issues.
Availability
The wall command is part of the util-linux package which can be downloaded from Linux Kernel Archive.
Referenced By
apccontrol(8), cowsay(1), dump(8), kded4(8), mesg(1), poweroff(8), rpc.rwalld(8), rsyslog.conf(5), rwall(1), shutdown(8), systemctl(1), systemd-ask-password(1), systemd-ask-password-console.service(8), systemd-journald.service(8), systemd-tty-ask-password-agent(1), telinit(8), upsmon(8).