PS
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS LONG COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS SORT KEYS FIELD DESCRIPTIONS UPDATING NOTES AUTHOR
ps - report process status
ps [__lujsvmaxScewhrnu__? [__t__''xx''? [__O__[[__+__?k1[[[__+__?k2...]] [''pids''?
there are also three long options:
--sortX[__+__?key[,[[__+__?key[,__...__?]
--help
--version
More long options are on the way...
ps gives a snapshot of the current processes. If you want a repetitive update of this status, use top. This man page documents the /proc-based version of ps, or tries to.
The command-line options for this version of ps are derived from the BSD version of ps, not the System V version.
The command-line arguments should not be preceeded by a `-' character, because in the future, a `-' will be used to indicate Unix98-standard command-line arguments, while no `-' will indicate the current ``extended BSD'' style of command line arguments.
For now, ps will give you a warning if you use a `-' for a short option, but it will still work. If you have shell scripts which use BSD-style arguments to ps, take heed of the warning and fix them, or else your scripts will fail to function correctly at some point in the future. If you want to turn off the warnings, set the I_WANT_A_BROKEN_PS environment variable.
There are also some ``long options'' in GNU style; see below for those.
l
long format
u
user format: gives user name and start time
j
jobs format: pgid sid
s
signal format
v
vm format
m
displays memory info (combine with p flag to get number of pages).
f
a
show processes of other users too
x
show processes without controlling terminal
S
add child cpu time and page faults
c
command name from task_struct
e
show environment after command line and ` + '
w
wide output: don't truncate command lines to fit on one line. To be exact, every w that is specified will add another possible line to the output. If the space isn't needed it isn't used. You may up to 100 w's.
h
no header
r
running procs only
n
numeric output for USER and WCHAN.
txx
only procs with controlling tty xx; for xx you may use either the name of a device file under tty or cu sliced off. This is the reverse heuristic that ps uses to print out the abbreviated tty name in the TT field, e.g. ps t1.
O[__+__?k1[,[[__+__?k2[,__...__?]
Order the process listing according to the multi-level sort specified by the sequence of short keys from SORT KEYS, k1, k2, ... Default order specifications exist for each of the various formats of ps. These are over-ridden by a user specified ordering. The `+' is quite optional, merely re-iterating the default direction on a key. `-' reverses direction only on the key it precedes. As with t and pids, the O option must be the last option in a single command argument, but specifications in successive arguments are catenated.
pids
List only the specified processes; they are comma-delimited. The list must be given immediately after the last option in a single command-line argument, with no intervening space, e.g. ps j1,4,5. Lists specified in subsequent arguments are catenated, e.g. ps l 1,2 3,4 5 6 will list all of the processes 1-6 in long format. If pids are given, they are listed no matter what. If a tty is given matching processes are listed no matter what. These two features override the 'a' and 'x' flags.
These options are preceeded by a double-hyphen.
--sortX[__+__?key[,[[__+__?key[,__...__?]
Choose a multi-letter key from the SORT KEYS section. X may be any convenient separator character. To be GNU-ish use `='. The `+' is really optional since default direction is increasing numerical or lexicographic order. E.g.: ps jax --sort=uid,-ppid,+pid
--help
Get a help message that summarizes the usage and gives a list of supported sort keys. This list may be more up to date than this man page.
--version
Display version and source of this program.
Note that the values used in sorting are the internal values ps uses and not the `cooked' values used in some of the output format fields. If someone wants to volunteer to write special comparison functions for the cooked values, ... ;-)
SHORT LONG DESCRIPTION
c cmd simple name of executable
C cmdline full command line
f flags flags as in long format F field
g pgrp process group ID
G tpgid controlling tty process group ID
j cutime cumulative user time
J cstime cumulative system time
k utime user time
K stime system time
m min_flt number of minor page faults
M maj_flt number of major page faults
n cmin_flt cumulative minor page faults
N cmaj_flt cumulative major page faults
p pid process ID
P ppid parent process ID
r rss resident set size
R resident resident pages
s size memory size in kilobytes
S share amount of shared pages
t tty the minor device number of tty
T start_time time process was started
U uid user ID number
u user user name
v vsize total VM size in bytes
y priority kernel scheduling priority
PRI
This is the counter field in the task struct. It is the time in HZ of the process's possible timeslice.
NI
Standard unix nice value; a positive value means less cpu time.
SIZE
Virtual image size; size of text+data+stack.
RSS
Resident set size; kilobytes of program in memory.
WCHAN
Name of the kernel function where the process is sleeping, with the `sys_' stripped from the function name. If /etc/psdatabase does not exist, it is just a hex number instead.
STAT
Information about the status of the process. The first field is R for runnable, S for sleeping, D for uninterruptible sleep, T for stopped or traced, or Z for a zombie process. The second field contains W if the process has no resident pages. The third field is N if the process has a positive nice value (NI field).
TT
Controlling tty.
PAGEIN
Number of major page faults (page faults that cause pages to be read from disk, including pages read from the buffer cache).
TRS
Text resident size.
SWAP
Kilobytes (or pages if p is used) on swap device.
SHARE
Shared memory.
This proc-based ps works by reading the files in the proc filesystem, mounted on /proc. This ps does not need to be suid kmem or have any privileges to run. Do not give this ps any special permissions.
You will need to put in place the appropriate System.map file when you install a new kernel in order to get meaningful information from the WCHAN field. This should be done every time you compile a new kernel. You should also run 'ps' as root once and then any time the tty devices in the __
As of procps-1.00, ps/top read System.map directly if it is available. The search path for kernel address-to-symbol
$PS_SYSTEM_MAP
/boot/System.map-`uname -r` /boot/System.map /lib/modules/`uname -r`/System.map /etc/psdatabase /boot/psdatabase-`uname -r` /boot/psdatabase, /lib/modules/`uname -r`/psdatabase
The member used_math of task_struct is not shown, since crt0.s checks to see if math is present. This causes the math flag to be set for all processes, and so it is worthless.
Programs swapped out to disk will be shown without command line arguments, and unless the c option is given, in parentheses.
%CPU shows the cputime/realtime percentage. It will not add up to 100% unless you are lucky. It is time used divided by the time the process has been running.
The SIZE and RSS fields don't count the page tables and the task_struct of a proc; this is at least 12k of memory that is always resident. SIZE is the virtual size of the proc (code+data+stack).
ps was originally written by Branko Lankester __
Please send bug reports to