ps man page on Solaris

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   20652 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
Solaris logo
[printable version]

ps(1)				 User Commands				 ps(1)

NAME
       ps - report process status

SYNOPSIS
       ps  [-aAcdefjlLPyZ] [-g grplist] [-n namelist]  [-o format]...
       [-p proclist] [-s sidlist] [-t term] [-u uidlist] [-U uidlist]
       [-G gidlist] [-z zonelist]

DESCRIPTION
       The  ps	command	 prints	 information  about  active processes. Without
       options, ps prints information  about  processes	 that  have  the  same
       effective user ID and the same controlling terminal as the invoker. The
       output contains only the process ID,  terminal  identifier,  cumulative
       execution  time,	 and the command name. Otherwise, the information that
       is displayed is controlled by the options.

       Some options accept lists as arguments. Items in a list can  be	either
       separated  by commas or else enclosed in quotes and separated by commas
       or spaces. Values for proclist and grplist must be numeric.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -a		   Lists information about  all	 processes  most  fre‐
			   quently requested: all those except session leaders
			   and processes not associated with a terminal.

       -A		   Lists information for all processes.	 Identical  to
			   -e, below.

       -c		   Prints information in a format that reflects sched‐
			   uler properties as described in priocntl(1). The -c
			   option affects the output of the -f and -l options,
			   as described below.

       -d		   Lists information about all processes  except  ses‐
			   sion leaders.

       -e		   Lists information about every process now running.

			   When the -eoption is specified, options -z, -t, -u,
			   -U, -g, -G, -p, -g,	-s  and	 -a  options  have  no
			   effect.

       -f		   Generates  a	 full listing. (See below for signifi‐
			   cance of columns in a full listing.)

       -g grplist	   Lists only process data  whose  group  leader's  ID
			   number(s)  appears in grplist. (A group leader is a
			   process whose process ID number is identical to its
			   process group ID number.)

       -G gidlist	   Lists information for processes whose real group ID
			   numbers are given in gidlist. The gidlist must be a
			   single  argument  in the form of a blank- or comma-
			   separated list.

       -j		   Prints session ID and process group ID.

       -l		   Generates a long listing. (See below.)

       -L		   Prints information about each light weight  process
			   (lwp) in each selected process. (See below.)

       -n namelist	   Specifies   the   name  of  an  alternative	system
			   namelist file in place of the default. This	option
			   is accepted for compatibility, but is ignored.

       -o format	   Prints information according to the format specifi‐
			   cation given in format. This is fully described  in
			   DISPLAY  FORMATS. Multiple -o options can be speci‐
			   fied; the format specification will be  interpreted
			   as  the  space-character-separated concatenation of
			   all the format option-arguments.

       -p proclist	   Lists only process data whose  process  ID  numbers
			   are given in proclist.

       -P		   Prints  the	number	of  the processor to which the
			   process or lwp is bound, if	any,  under  an	 addi‐
			   tional column header, PSR.

       -s sidlist	   Lists  information on all session leaders whose IDs
			   appear in sidlist.

       -t term		   Lists only process data associated with term.  Ter‐
			   minal  identifiers  are  specified as a device file
			   name, and an identifier. For	 example,  term/a,  or
			   pts/0.

       -u uidlist	   Lists  only	process	 data  whose effective user ID
			   number or login name is given in  uidlist.  In  the
			   listing,  the  numerical  user  ID  will be printed
			   unless you give the -f  option,  which  prints  the
			   login name.

       -U uidlist	   Lists  information for processes whose real user ID
			   numbers or login names are given  in	 uidlist.  The
			   uidlist  must be a single argument in the form of a
			   blank- or comma-separated list.

       -y		   Under a long listing (-l), omits the obsolete F and
			   ADDR	 columns  and includes an RSS column to report
			   the resident set size of the process. Under the  -y
			   option,  both  RSS  and  SZ	(see  below)  will  be
			   reported in units of kilobytes instead of pages.

       -z zonelist	   Lists only processes in the specified zones.	 Zones
			   can	be specified either by name or ID. This option
			   is only useful when executed in the global zone.

       -Z		   Prints the name of the zone with which the  process
			   is  associated  under  an additional column header,
			   ZONE. The ZONE column width is limited to 8 charac‐
			   ters. Use ps -eZ for a quick way to see information
			   about every process	now  running  along  with  the
			   associated zone name. Use

			     ps -eo zone,uid,pid,ppid,time,comm,...

			   to see zone names wider than 8 characters.

       Many  of the options shown are used to select processes to list. If any
       are specified, the default list will be ignored and ps will select  the
       processes represented by the inclusive OR of all the selection-criteria
       options.

DISPLAY FORMATS
       Under the -f option, ps tries to determine the command name  and	 argu‐
       ments  given  when the process was created by examining the user block.
       Failing this, the command name is printed, as it	 would	have  appeared
       without the -f option, in square brackets.

       The  column headings and the meaning of the columns in a ps listing are
       given below; the letters f and l indicate the  option  (full  or	 long,
       respectively)  that  causes  the	 corresponding	heading to appear; all
       means that the heading always appears. Note: These two  options	deter‐
       mine  only  what	 information  is  provided  for a process; they do not
       determine which processes will be listed.

       F    (l)		   Flags (hexadecimal and  additive)  associated  with
			   the process. These flags are available for histori‐
			   cal	purposes;  no  meaning	should	be   currently
			   ascribed to them.

       S (l)		   The state of the process:

			   O		Process is running on a processor.

			   S		Sleeping:  process  is	waiting for an
					event to complete.

			   R		Runnable: process is on run queue.

			   T		Process is stopped, either  by	a  job
					control	 signal or because it is being
					traced.

			   W		Waiting: process is  waiting  for  CPU
					usage to drop to the CPU-caps enforced
					limits.

			   Z		Zombie state: process  terminated  and
					parent not waiting.

       UID (f,l)	   The	effective  user	 ID number of the process (the
			   login name is printed under the -f option).

       PID  (all)	   The process ID of the process (this datum is neces‐
			   sary in order to kill a process).

       PPID (f,l)	   The process ID of the parent process.

       C    (f,l)	   Processor  utilization  for	scheduling (obsolete).
			   Not printed when the -c option is used.

       CLS  (f,l)	   Scheduling class. Printed only when the  -c	option
			   is used.

       PRI  (l)		   The priority of the process. Without the -c option,
			   higher numbers mean lower  priority.	 With  the  -c
			   option, higher numbers mean higher priority.

       NI   (l)		   Nice	 value,	 used  in  priority  computation.  Not
			   printed when the -c option is used. Only  processes
			   in  the  certain  scheduling	 classes  have	a nice
			   value.

       ADDR (l)		   The memory address of the process.

       SZ   (l)		   The total size of the process  in  virtual  memory,
			   including  all  mapped files and devices, in pages.
			   See pagesize(1).

       WCHAN	 (l)	   The address of an event for which  the  process  is
			   sleeping (if blank, the process is running).

       STIME	 (f)	   The	starting  time of the process, given in hours,
			   minutes, and seconds. (A process  begun  more  than
			   twenty-four hours before the ps inquiry is executed
			   is given in months and days.)

       TTY  (all)	   The controlling terminal for the process (the  mes‐
			   sage,  ?,  is  printed when there is no controlling
			   terminal).

       TIME (all)	   The cumulative execution time for the process.

       LTIME	 (all)	   The execution time for the lwp being reported.

       CMD  (all)	   The command name (the full  command	name  and  its
			   arguments,  up  to  a  limit	 of 80 characters, are
			   printed under the -f option).

       The following two additional columns are printed when the -j option  is
       specified:

       PGID	    The process ID of the process group leader.

       SID	    The process ID of the session leader.

       The  following two additional columns are printed when the -L option is
       specified:

       LWP	    The lwp ID of the lwp being reported.

       NLWP	    The number of lwps in the process (if -f  is  also	speci‐
		    fied).

       Under  the  -L  option, one line is printed for each lwp in the process
       and the time-reporting fields STIME and LTIME show the values  for  the
       lwp,  not  the  process. A traditional single-threaded process contains
       only one lwp.

       A process that has exited and has a parent, but has not yet been waited
       for by the parent, is marked <defunct>.

   -o format
       The  -o option allows the output format to be specified under user con‐
       trol.

       The format specification must be a list of names presented as a	single
       argument,  blank-  or  comma-separated.	Each  variable	has  a default
       header. The default header can be overridden  by	 appending  an	equals
       sign  and the new text of the header. The rest of the characters in the
       argument will be used as the header text. The fields specified will  be
       written	in  the	 order	specified  on  the command line, and should be
       arranged in columns in the output. The field widths will be selected by
       the  system to be at least as wide as the header text (default or over‐
       ridden value). If the header text is null, such as -o user=, the	 field
       width  will  be	at  least  as  wide as the default header text. If all
       header text fields are null, no header line will be written.

       The following names are recognized in the POSIX locale:

       user		   The effective user ID of the process. This will  be
			   the	textual user ID, if it can be obtained and the
			   field width permits, or  a  decimal	representation
			   otherwise.

       ruser		   The	real  user ID of the process. This will be the
			   textual user ID, if it  can	be  obtained  and  the
			   field  width	 permits,  or a decimal representation
			   otherwise.

       group		   The effective group ID of the process. This will be
			   the textual group ID, if it can be obtained and the
			   field width permits, or  a  decimal	representation
			   otherwise.

       rgroup		   The	real group ID of the process. This will be the
			   textual group ID, if it can	be  obtained  and  the
			   field  width	 permits,  or a decimal representation
			   otherwise.

       pid		   The decimal value of the process ID.

       ppid		   The decimal value of the parent process ID.

       pgid		   The decimal value of the process group ID.

       pcpu		   The ratio of CPU time used  recently	 to  CPU  time
			   available  in  the same period, expressed as a per‐
			   centage. The meaning of ``recently'' in  this  con‐
			   text	 is  unspecified.  The	CPU  time available is
			   determined in an unspecified manner.

       vsz		   The total size of the process in virtual memory, in
			   kilobytes.

       nice		   The decimal value of the system scheduling priority
			   of the process. See nice(1).

       etime		   In the POSIX locale, the  elapsed  time  since  the
			   process was started, in the form:

			   [[dd-]hh:]mm:ss

			   where

			   dd		is the number of days

			   hh		is the number of hours

			   mm		is the number of minutes

			   ss		is the number of seconds

			   The	dd field will be a decimal integer. The hh, mm
			   and ss fields will be  two-digit  decimal  integers
			   padded on the left with zeros.

       time		   In the POSIX locale, the cumulative CPU time of the
			   process in the form:

			   [dd-]hh:mm:ss

			   The dd, hh, mm, and	ss fields will be as described
			   in the etime specifier.

       tty		   The name of the controlling terminal of the process
			   (if any) in the same format used by the who(1) com‐
			   mand.

       comm		   The	name  of  the  command being executed (argv[0]
			   value) as a string.

       args		   The command with all its arguments as a string. The
			   implementation may truncate this value to the field
			   width; it is implementation-dependent  whether  any
			   further   truncation	  occurs.  It  is  unspecified
			   whether the string represented is a version of  the
			   argument  list as it was passed to the command when
			   it started, or is a version	of  the	 arguments  as
			   they	 may  have  been  modified by the application.
			   Applications cannot depend on being able to	modify
			   their argument list and having that modification be
			   reflected in the output of ps. The  Solaris	imple‐
			   mentation limits the string to 80 bytes; the string
			   is the version of  the  argument  list  as  it  was
			   passed to the command when it started.

       The following names are recognized in the Solaris implementation:

       f		   Flags  (hexadecimal	and  additive) associated with
			   the process.

       s		   The state of the process.

       c		   Processor utilization for scheduling (obsolete).

       uid		   The effective user ID number of the	process	 as  a
			   decimal integer.

       ruid		   The real user ID number of the process as a decimal
			   integer.

       gid		   The effective group ID number of the process	 as  a
			   decimal integer.

       rgid		   The	real group ID number of the process as a deci‐
			   mal integer.

       projid		   The project ID number of the process as  a  decimal
			   integer.

       project		   The project ID of the process as a textual value if
			   that value can be obtained; otherwise, as a decimal
			   integer.

       zoneid		   The	zone  ID  number  of  the process as a decimal
			   integer.

       zone		   The zone ID of the process as a  textual  value  if
			   that value can be obtained; otherwise, as a decimal
			   integer.

       sid		   The process ID of the session leader.

       taskid		   The task ID of the process.

       class		   The scheduling class of the process.

       pri		   The priority of the process.	 Higher	 numbers  mean
			   higher priority.

       opri		   The obsolete priority of the process. Lower numbers
			   mean higher priority.

       lwp		   The decimal value of the lwp	 ID.  Requesting  this
			   formatting option causes one line to be printed for
			   each lwp in the process.

       nlwp		   The number of lwps in the process.

       psr		   The number of the processor to which the process or
			   lwp is bound.

       pset		   The	ID of the processor set to which  the  process
			   or lwp is bound.

       addr		   The memory address of the process.

       osz		   The total size of the process in virtual memory, in
			   pages.

       wchan		   The	address	 of  an event for which the process is
			   sleeping (if −, the process is running).

       stime		   The starting time or date of the  process,  printed
			   with no blanks.

       rss		   The resident set size of the process, in kilobytes.
			   The rss value reported by ps is  an	estimate  pro‐
			   vided  by proc(4) that may underestimate the actual
			   resident set size. Users who wish to get more accu‐
			   rate usage information for capacity planning should
			   use pmap(1) -x instead.

       pmem		   The ratio of the process's resident set size to the
			   physical memory on the machine, expressed as a per‐
			   centage.

       fname		   The first 8 bytes of the base name of the process's
			   executable file.

       ctid		   The contract ID of the process contract the process
			   is a member of as a decimal integer.

       Only comm and args are allowed to contain blank characters; all others,
       including the Solaris implementation variables, are not.

       The  following  table  specifies	 the  default header to be used in the
       POSIX locale corresponding to each format specifier.

       ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
       │    Format	    Default	     Format	     Default	 │
       │  Specifier	     Header	    Specifier	      Header	 │
       ├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
       │     args	    COMMAND	      ppid	       PPID	 │
       │     comm	    COMMAND	     rgroup	      RGROUP	 │
       │    etime	    ELAPSED	      ruser	      RUSER	 │
       │    group	     GROUP	      time	       TIME	 │
       │     nice	       NI	       tty		TT	 │
       │     pcpu	      %CPU	      user	       USER	 │
       │     pgid	      PGID	       vsz	       VSZ	 │
       │     pid	      PID					 │
       └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

       The following table lists the Solaris implementation format  specifiers
       and the default header used with each.

       ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
       │    Format	    Default	     Format	     Default	 │
       │  Specifier	     Header	    Specifier	      Header	 │
       ├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
       │     addr	      ADDR	     projid	      PROJID	 │
       │      c		       C	     project	     PROJECT	 │
       │    class	      CLS	       psr	       PSR	 │
       │      f		       F	      rgid	       RGID	 │
       │    fname	    COMMAND	       rss	       RSS	 │
       │     gid	      GID	      ruid	       RUID	 │
       │     lwp	      LWP		s		S	 │
       │     nlwp	      NLWP	       sid	       SID	 │
       │     opri	      PRI	      stime	      STIME	 │
       │     osz	       SZ	     taskid	      TASKID	 │
       │     pmem	      %MEM	       uid	       UID	 │
       │     pri	      PRI	      wchan	      WCHAN	 │
       │     ctid	      CTID	      zone	       ZONE	 │
       │				     zoneid	      ZONEID	 │
       └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Using ps Command

       The command:

	 example% ps -o user,pid,ppid=MOM -o args

       writes the following in the POSIX locale:

	  USER	PID   MOM   COMMAND
	 helene	 34    12   ps -o uid,pid,ppid=MOM -o args

       The  contents of the COMMAND field need not be the same due to possible
       truncation.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       See environ(5) for descriptions of the following environment  variables
       that  affect  the execution of ps: LANG, LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES,
       LC_TIME, and NLSPATH.

       COLUMNS			   Override  the  system-selected   horizontal
				   screen  size,  used to determine the number
				   of text columns to display.

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0			   Successful completion.

       >0			   An error occurred.

FILES
       /dev/pts/*

       /dev/term/*		   terminal (``tty'') names searcher files

       /etc/passwd		   UID information supplier

       /proc/*			   process control files

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWcsu			   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │CSI			     │Enabled (see USAGE)	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability	     │Standard			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       kill(1), nice(1), pagesize(1), pgrep(1), pmap(1), priocntl(1),  who(1),
       getty(1M),   proc(4),   ttysrch(4),  attributes(5),  environ(5),	 stan‐
       dards(5), zones(5)

NOTES
       Things can change while ps is running. The snapshot it  gives  is  true
       only for a split-second, and it may not be accurate by the time you see
       it. Some data printed for defunct processes is irrelevant.

       If no options to select processes are specified,	 ps  will  report  all
       processes associated with the controlling terminal. If there is no con‐
       trolling terminal, there will be no report other than the header.

       ps -ef or ps -o stime may not report the actual start of	 a  tty	 login
       session, but rather an earlier time, when a getty was last respawned on
       the tty line.

       ps is CSI-enabled except for login names (usernames).

SunOS 5.10			  9 Jan 2008				 ps(1)
[top]

List of man pages available for Solaris

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net