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nps(1)                         DG/UX R4.11MU05                        nps(1)


NAME
       nps, ps - report process status

SYNOPSIS
       nps [ -acdefjlL ] [ -t termlist ] [ -u uidlist ]
           [ -p proclist ] [ -g grplist ] [ -s sidlist ]
           [ -o collist ] [ -WL ] [ -WC ]

DESCRIPTION
       nps prints certain information about active processes.  Without any
       options, information is printed about processes associated with the
       current terminal.  The output consists of a short listing containing
       only the process ID, terminal identifier, cumulative execution time,
       and the command name.  Otherwise, the information displayed is
       controlled by the selection of options.

       Options using lists as arguments can specify them in two forms: a
       list of identifiers separated by commas, or a list of identifiers
       enclosed in double quotes and separated from one another by a comma
       and/or one or more spaces.

       The options are:

       -e          Print information about all processes.
       -d          Print information about all processes, except process
                   group leaders.
       -a          Print information about all processes, except process
                   group leaders and processes not associated with a
                   terminal.
       -f          Generate a full listing.  (See below for meaning of
                   columns in a full listing).
       -j          Print session ID and process group ID for each process
                   listed.
       -l          Generate a long listing (see below).
       -L          Print process ID, thread ID, terminal identifier,
                   cumulative execution time and command name information
                   for each LWP (thread/ light weight process) listed.  When
                   used in conjunction with other options, causes
                   information to be on a per LWP (instead of on a per
                   process) basis.
       -WL         Print process ID, LWP ID, a multi-character state
                   (Kernel-User-Special), CPU upon which the LWP is running,
                   the number of LWPs joining, the LWP join target, any
                   mutex upon which the LWP is waiting, any condition upon
                   which the LWP is waiting, the cumulative execution time
                   (for globally scheduled LWPs) and command name
                   information for each LWP listed.  This option cannot be
                   used in conjunction with other column-formatting options
                   (-cjlfLo and -WC).  When used in conjunction with other
                   process-selecting options, causes information to be on a
                   per LWP basis.
       -WC         Print local exec depth and scheduling class name for each
                   process listed.  See the discussion on LEDEPTH and SCNAME
                   columns below and dgcsfctl(2) for more info.
       -o collist  Generate a listing containing only the columns specified.
                   This option cannot be used in conjunction with other
                   column-formatting options (-cjlfLW). Identifiers in
                   collist can have values assigned to them: [valid column
                   identifiers are described below]
                     column         use the default header text for column
                     column=        do not display a header for column;
                                    minimum column width is the width of
                                    default header
                     column=colhdr  use colhdr as header text for column
       -c          Print scheduling class and priority for each process
                   listed.  If this option is specified, the processor
                   utilization and nice value columns are not listed.  It is
                   intended that in a future release of DG/UX this option
                   will be removed, and that the output format produced by
                   using this option will become the default format.
       -t termlist List data only about the processes associated with the
                   terminals given in termlist.  Terminal identifiers may be
                   specified as:  the device's filename (e.g., tty04) or if
                   the device's filename starts with tty, just the digit
                   identifier (e.g., 04).
       -p proclist List data only about processes whose process ID numbers
                   are given in proclist.
       -u uidlist  List data only about processes whose user ID numbers or
                   login names are given in uidlist.  In the listing, the
                   numerical user ID is printed unless the -f option is
                   used, in which case the login name will be printed.
       -g grplist  List data only about processes whose process group
                   leaders are given in grplist.
       -s sidlist  List data only about processes whose session leaders are
                   given in sidlist.

       The column headings and the meaning of the columns in a nps listing
       are given below; the letters f,l, L, WL and WC indicate the option
       (full, long, LWP info, DG-specific LWP info or DG-specific Cluster
       info) that causes the corresponding heading to appear; & indicates
       that both options must be used in order for a column to appear; all
       means that the heading always appears.  Note that these four options
       determine only what information is provided for a process/LWP; they
       do not determine which processes/LWPs will be listed.

       S          (l)      The state of the process:
                           -     Non-existent;
                           S     Sleeping;
                           W     Waiting;
                           R     Running;
                           I     Intermediate;
                           Z     Terminated;
                           T     Stopped;

       UID        (f,l)    The user ID number of the process owner; the
                           login name is printed under the -f option.
       PID        (all)    The process ID of the process; you can kill a
                           process if you know this datum.
       PPID       (f,l)    The process ID of the parent process.
       LWP        (L,WL)   The ID of the LWP.
       NLWP       (f)      The number of LWPs active in the process.
       PGID       (f,l,L)  The group ID of the process.  Only printed when
                           -j option is used.
       SID        (f,l,L)  The session ID of the process.  Only printed when
                           -j option is used.
       CLS        (f,l,L)  Scheduling class.  Only printed when -c option is
                           used.  The value pFF indicates POSIX 1003.4 Draft
                           12 specified FIFO fixed scheduling class.  The
                           value pRR indicates POSIX RR (round robin) fixed
                           scheduling class. The value dTS indicates the
                           DG/UX Timeshare scheduling class. The value dLF
                           indicates the DG/UX LIFO scheduling class and the
                           value dFF indicates the DG/UX FIFO scheduling
                           class.
       PRI        (l)      The priority of the process; higher numbers mean
                           better priority.
       RSS        (l)      The resident set size in kilobytes.
       SZ         (l)      The virtual address size in kilobytes.
       WCHAN      (l)      The event for which the process is waiting or
                           sleeping; if blank, the process is running. This
                           column is replaced by MUTEX column when -l used
                           with -L.
       K U SPECL  (WL)     The state of the LWP. The K column refers to
                           kernel space, the U column refers to user space
                           and the SPECL column displays special annotations
                           about the LWP state. See dglstate column below
                           for more information.
       CPU        (WL)     The cpu id, "-" when the LWP is not on a cpu.
       NJOIN      (WL)     The number of LWPs joining an LWP, '-' if no
                           joiners.
       JNTARG     (WL)     The LWP ID of the LWP being joined, '-' if not
                           joining.
       MUTEX      (l&L,WL) The hexadecimal address of the mutex upon which
                           the LWP is waiting or the mutex associated with
                           the condition variable if waiting on a condition,
                           '-' otherwise.
       CONDVAR    (WL)     The hexadecimal address of the conditional
                           variable upon which the LWP is waiting, '-' if
                           the LWP is not waiting on a condition.
       LEDEPTH    (WC)     On a system with the Cluster package loaded and
                           set up, this column represents the local exec
                           depth with respect to class scheduling.  A value
                           greater than zero signifies that any exec done by
                           the process can only execute on the current node.
                           On a system which does not have the Cluster
                           package loaded and set up, the value is always 0.
       SCNAME     (WC)     On a system with the Cluster package loaded and
                           set up, this column represents the scheduling
                           class of which the process is a member.  The
                           value will be a class name as defined by an
                           administrator (or the default scheduling class
                           name, if no user classes are defined).  On a
                           system which does not have the Cluster package
                           loaded and set up, the value is the default
                           scheduling class name.
       STIME      (f)      Starting time of the process, in
                           hours:minutes:seconds.
       TTY        (f,l,L)  The controlling terminal for the process.
       TIME       (f,l)    The cumulative execution time for the process, in
                           minutes:seconds.  Replaced by LTIME when -f/-l
                           used with -L.
       LTIME      (L,WL)   The total cpu time for globally scheduled LWPs in
                           mm:ss format, '-' for locally scheduled LWPs.
       CMD        (all)    The command name; the full command name and its
                           arguments are printed under the -f option.


       The -o option gives the user more control over what information is
       displayed with nps. With this option, the user can choose which
       columns (and their header text) to include in the output.  The
       following column names are available for use with -o:

       column   default default    description
                 header  width

       flag     F           1      flags (octal and additive)
                                   associated with a process:
                                     1 being traced
                                     2 bound
                                     3 not bound
       state    S           1      state of the process
       lstate   S           1      state abbreviation for the
                                   simple state of the LWP:
                                     O on cpu
                                     S waiting in sleep
                                     W waiting on a condition
                                     R running (i.e. eligible)
                                     X exiting
                                     T stopped
       dglstate K U SPECL   9      state abbreviations for the
                                   state of the LWP in kernel
                                   and user space and also
                                   displays special annotations.
                                   In kernel (K) space:
                                     R running
                                     X exiting
                                     W waiting
                                   In user (U) space:
                                     R running
                                     X exiting
                                     W waiting
                                     S sleeping
                                   The special (SPECL) annotations:
                                     Y yielded
                                     I interrupted
                                     T stopped
                                     D detached
                                     C canceled
       cpu      CPU         3      cpu id, "-" when the LWP is not
                                   on a cpu
       uid      UID         5      user id of the process owner
       uname    UID         8      user name of the process owner
       pid      PID         5      process id
       ppid     PPID        5      parent process id
       lwpid    LWP         5      id of the LWP
       nlwp     NLWP        4      number of LWPs
       pgid     PGID        5      process group id
       sid      SID         5      process session id
       putil    C           2      processor utilization,
                                   represented by an integer
                                   from 0 to 8. This number
                                   reflects the sum of a process'
                                   interactive level and its starving
                                   level . A process with 8
                                   is both highly interactive and highly
                                   starving. A process with 0 is
                                   not considered interactive or
                                   starving, but uses mostly CPU
                                   resources
       sclass   CLS         4      scheduling class
       lsclass  LCLS        4      scheduling class of the LWP;
                                   G/L appended for globally/
                                   locally scheduled LWPs,
                                   respectively
       prior    PRI         4      process priority
       lprior   LPRI        4      scheduling priority of LWP.
                                   Higher values indicate better
                                   priority. The priority depends
                                   upon whether the LWP was locally
                                   or globally scheduled
       nice     NI          2      nice value of the process
       addr     ADDR        8      process memory address
       sz       SZ          6      virtual address size in
                                   kilobytes
       wchan    WCHAN       8      event on which the process is
                                   waiting or sleeping; '-' if
                                   the process is not waiting
       condvar  CONDVAR     8      hexadecimal address of the
                                   conditional variable upon which
                                   the LWP is waiting; '-' if the
                                   LWP is not waiting on a
                                   condition
       mutex    MUTEX       8      mutex address if the LWP is
                                   waiting upon a mutex;'-' if
                                   the LWP is not waiting
       stime    STIME       8      start time of the process
       tty      TTY         7      controlling terminal of the
                                   process
       time     TIME        5      cumulative execution time of
                                   the process in mm:ss format
       ltime    LTIME       5      total cpu time for globally
                                   scheduled LWPs in mm:ss format;
                                   '-' for locally scheduled LWPs
       etime    ETIME      14      elapsed time since process
                                   started in [dd-]hh:mm:ss.ff
                                   format
       cmd      CMD         8      command name
       args     CMD         0      command name and its arguments
       utime    UTIME      14      user cpu time in
                                   [dd-]hh:mm:ss.ff format
       lutime   LUTIME     11      user cpu time in
                                   [dd-]hh:mm:ss.ff format for a
                                   globally scheduled LWP; '-'
                                   for locally scheduled LWPs
       systime  SYSTIME    14      system cpu time in
                                   [dd-]hh:mm:ss.ff format
       lsystime LSYSTIME   11      system cpu time in
                                   [dd-]hh:mm:ss.ff format for a
                                   globally scheduled LWP;'-' for
                                   locally scheduled LWPs
       swap     SWAP        6      reserved anonymous pages in
                                   kilobytes
       emul     EMUL        6      emulated instruction count
       fpx      FPX         6      fp exception count
       ruid     RUID        5      real uid
       runame   RUID        8      real user name
       suid     SUID        5      saved uid
       suname   SUID        8      saved user name
       rgid     RGID        5      real gid
       rgname   RGID        8      real group name
       sgid     SGID        5      saved gid
       sgname   SGID        8      saved group name
       nbind    NBIND       6      times bound
       swrit    SWRIT       6      socket writes
       sread    SREAD       6      socket reads
       nsig     NSIG        6      signals caught
       vswtch   VSWTC       6      voluntary context switches
       lvswtch  LVSWTCH     7      voluntary context switches
                                   associated with a globally
                                   scheduled LWP; '-' for locally
                                   scheduled LWPs
       nswtch   NSWTC       6      involuntary context switches
       lnswtch  LNSWTCH     7      involuntary context switches
                                   associated with a globally
                                   scheduled LWP; '-' for locally
                                   scheduled LWPs
       jntarg   JNTARG      6      LWP ID of LPW being joined,
                                   '-' if not joining
       njoin    NJOIN       5      number of LWPs joining the LWP,
                                   '-' if no joiners
       timeout  TIMEOUT     9      timeout value in mm:ss.fff
                                   format on a LWP if the LWP is
                                   in a valid timeout state, else
                                   '-'
       timeleft TIMELEFT    9      time left in mm:ss.fff format on
                                   a LWP timeout if the LWP is in a
                                   valid timeout state, else '-'
       rss      RSS         6      resident set size in kilobytes
       xrss     XRSS        6      sum of shared program file, data
                                   file and shared anonymous pages
                                   in kilobytes
       drss     DRSS        6      private unshared or COW-shared
                                   anonymous pages excluding stack
                                   pages in kilobytes
       srss     SRSS        6      private unshared or COW-shared
                                   stack pages in kilobytes
       hfault   HFAULT      6      hard page faults
       sfault   SFAULT      6      soft page faults
       maxrss   MAXRSS      6      max rss in kilobytes
       fsiops   FSIOPS      6      file system input operations
       fsoops   FSOOPS      6      file system output operations
       ledepth  LEDEPTH     6      local exec depth; set to 0 on a system
                                   which does not have the Cluster package
                                   loaded and set up
       scname   SCNAME      8      scheduling class of which a process is
                                   a member; set to the default scheduling
                                   class on a system which does not have the
                                   Cluster package loaded and set up


EXAMPLES
       $ nps

       Prints information about active processes associated with the current
       terminal. Lists the process ID, the tty number of the controlling
       terminal.

       $ nps -u xyz,abc

       Prints information about active processes belonging to the login
       names "xyz" and "abc". Lists the process ID, tty number, time the
       process took to execute, and the command.

       $ nps -ef

       Prints information on all active processes.  Lists the user ID,
       process ID, process ID of the parent process, scheduling information,
       process starting time, tty number, execution time for the process,
       and the command and its options.

       $ nps -fL

       Prints information about each LWP for the active processes associated
       with the current terminal in full format. Lists the UID associated
       with, PID, PPID and the LWP ID for each LWP, the number of LWPs for
       the process, process start time, tty number, total cpu time if the
       LWP is globally scheduled and the command.

       $ nps -eWL

       Prints information about each LWP for all active processes.  Lists
       the PID, LWP ID, kernel and user space states of the LWP, any special
       states of the LWP, the cpu id if on a cpu, number of LWPs joining the
       LWP, LWP ID of the LWP being joined, mutex address, condition
       variable address, total cpu time if LWP is globally scheduled and the
       command.  The following column listing can be used as an argument to
       -o to create an equivalent listing:
       pid,lwpid,dglstate,cpu,njoin,jntarg,mutex,condvar,ltime,cmd

       $ nps -opid,lwpid,dglstate,cpu,njoin,jntarg,mutex,condvar=COND, \
               ltime,args

       Prints equivalent output to nps -WL, but changes the default header
       text for the condvar column to COND and uses "args" instead of "cmd"
       to print out the command along with its arguments.

FILES
       /etc/passwd    Supplies UID information
       /etc/psdata   Internal data structure
       /dev           Searched to find terminal (tty) names

SEE ALSO
       ops(1), acctcom(1), kill(1), nice(1), who(1), dgcsfctl(2).

BUGS
       Things can change while nps is running; the picture it gives is only
       a close approximation to reality.  Some data printed for defunct
       processes is irrelevant.

NOTES
       nps is a new version of ps that provides capabilities unavailable in
       previous versions.  This version will eventually become the default
       version of ps.

       DG/UX nps extracts information from the currently running kernel.
       The -n option is not implemented.

       Multiple threads might be shown to have the same cpu ID. This occurs
       because it cannot be guaranteed that the snapshot of information
       displayed by nps for each LWP will correspond to the same moment in
       time.

       Whenever an LWP-specific column heading is used as an argument to the
       -o option, the information displayed by nps is on a per LWP (instead
       of a per process) basis. The LWP-specific columns include:

         lstate, dglstate, lwpid, lsclass, lprior,
         ltime, lutime, lsystime, condvar, mutex,
         jntarg, njoin, timeout, timeleft, lvswtch,
         lnswtch, cpu


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Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026