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     PS(1)                                                       PS(1)



     NAME
          ps - report process status

     SYNOPSIS
          ps [ options ]

     DESCRIPTION
          ps prints certain information about active processes.
          Without options, information is printed about processes
          associated with the controlling 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 that is displayed
          is controlled by the selection of options.

          Options accept names or lists as arguments.  Arguments can
          be either separated from one another by commas or enclosed
          in double quotes and separated from one another by commas or
          spaces.  Values for proclist and grplist must be numeric.

          The options are given in descending order according to
          volume and range of information provided:

          -e          Print information about every process now
                      running.
          -d          Print information about all processes except
                      process group leaders.
          -a          Print information about all processes most
                      frequently requested:  all those except process
                      group leaders and processes not associated with
                      a terminal.
          -f          Generate a full listing.  (See below for
                      significance of columns in a full listing.)
          -l          Generate a long listing.  (See below.)
          -n name     Take argument signifying an alternate system
                      name in place of /unix.
          -t termlist List only process data associated with the
                      terminal given in termlist.  Terminal
                      identifiers may be specified in one of two
                      forms:  the device's file name (e.g., tty04) or,
                      if the device's file name starts with tty, just
                      the digit identifier (e.g., 04).
          -p proclist List only process data whose process ID numbers
                      are given in proclist.
          -u uidlist  List only process data whose 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.
          -g grplist  List only process data whose process 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



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     PS(1)                                                       PS(1)



                      number.  A login shell is a common example of a
                      process group leader.)

          Under the -f option, ps tries to determine the command name
          and arguments 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 that these two options determine 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

                             VAX PROCESSOR

                             00    Process has terminated: process
                                   table entry now available.
                             01    Process currently in primary
                                   memory.
                             02    A system process: always in primary
                                   memory.
                             04    Process is currently in primary
                                   memory:  locked until an event
                                   completes.
                             08    Should not occur on this system.
                             10    Parent is tracing process.
                             20    Tracing parent's signal has stopped
                                   process:  parent is waiting
                                   [ptrace(2)].
          S     (l)       The state of the process:
                           (the login name is printed under the -f
                           option).
          PID    (all)     The process ID of the process (this datum
                           is necessary in order to kill a process).
          PPID   (f,l)     The process ID of the parent process.
          C      (f,l)     Processor utilization for scheduling.
          PRI    (l)       The priority of the process (higher numbers
                           mean lower priority).
          NI     (l)       Nice value, used in priority computation.
          ADDR   (l)       The memory address of the process.
          SZ     (l)       The size (in pages or clicks) of the
                           swappable process's image in main memory.
          WCHAN  (l)       The address of an event for which the
                           process is sleeping, or in SXBRK state, (if



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     PS(1)                                                       PS(1)



                           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 message, ?, is printed when there is
                           no controlling terminal).
          TIME   (all)     The cumulative execution time for the
                           process.
          COMMAND(all)     The command name (the full command name and
                           its arguments are printed under the -f
                           option).

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

     FILES
          /dev
          /dev/sxt/*
          /dev/tty*
          /dev/xt/*      terminal (``tty'') names searcher files
          /dev/kmem      kernel virtual memory
          /dev/swap      the default swap device
          /dev/mem       memory
          /etc/passwd    UID information supplier
          /etc/ps_data   internal data structure
          /unix          system namelist

     SEE ALSO
          kill(1), nice(1).
          getty(1M) in the System Administrator's Reference Manual.

     WARNING
          Things can change while ps is running; the snap-shot it
          gives is only true 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 termlist, proclist, uidlist, or grplist is specified,
          ps checks stdin, stdout, and stderr in that order, looking
          for the controlling terminal and will attempt to report on
          processes associated with the controlling terminal.  In this
          situation, if stdin, stdout, and stderr are all redirected,
          ps will not find a controlling terminal, so there will be no
          report.








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     PS(1)                                                       PS(1)



          On a heavily loaded system, ps may report an lseek(2) error
          and exit.  ps may seek to an invalid user area address:
          having got the address of a process' user area, ps may not
          be able to seek to that address before the process exits and
          the address becomes invalid.

          ps -ef 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.

     ORIGIN
          AT&T V.3











































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