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AIX Version 4.3 Commands Reference, Volume 4
ps Command
Purpose
Shows current status of processes.
Syntax
ps [ -A ]
[ -N ] [ -a ] [ -d ] [ -e ] [ -f ] [ -k ]
[ -l ]
[ -F format]
[ -o Format ] [ -G Glist ] [ -g Glist ][ -m ]
[ -n NameList ] [ -p Plist ] [ -t Tlist ] [ -U Ulist ] [ -u Ulist ]
ps [ a ] [ c ] [ e ] [ ew ] [ eww ] [ g ] [ n ] [ U ] [ w ] [ x ] [ l | s | u | v ] [ t Tty ] [ ProcessNumber ]
Description
The ps command writes the current status of active processes
and (if the -m flag is given) associated kernel threads
to standard output.
Note that while the -m flag displays threads associated with processes using extra lines, you must use the -o flag with the THREAD field specifier to display extra thread-related columns.
Without flags, the ps command displays information about the current workstation. The -f,
-o,
l, -l, s, u, and v flags only determine how much information is provided about a process; they do not determine which processes are listed. The l, s, u, and v flags are mutually exclusive.
With the
-o
flag, the ps command examines memory or the paging area and determines what the command name and parameters were when the process was created. If the ps command cannot find this information, the command name stored in the kernel is displayed in square brackets.
The COLUMNS environment variable overrides the system-selected, horizontal screen size.
The command-line flags that accept a list of parameters (the -o, -G, -g, -p, -t, -U, and -u flags) are limited to 128 items. For example, the -u Ulist flag can specify no more than 128 users.
Depending on the flags used with the ps command, column headings appear above the information displayed to standard output. The headings are defined in the following list (flags that cause these headings to appear are shown in parentheses):
- ADDR
- (-l and l flags) Contains the segment number of the process stack, if normal; if a kernel process, the address of the preprocess data area.
- BND
- (-o THREAD flag) The logical processor number of the processor to which the kernel thread is bound (if any). For a process, this field is shown if all its threads are bound to the same processor.
- C
- (-f, l, and -l flags) CPU utilization of process or thread, incremented each time the system clock ticks and the process or thread is found to be running. The value is decayed by the scheduler by dividing it by 2 once per second. For the sched_other policy,
CPU utilization is used in determining process scheduling priority. Large values indicate a CPU intensive process and result in lower process priority whereas small values indicate an I/O intensive process and result in a more favorable priority.
- CMD
- (-f, -l, and l flags) Contains the command name. The full command name and its parameters are displayed with the -f flag.
- COMMAND
- (s, u, and v) Contains the command name. The full command name and its parameters are displayed with the -f flag.
F Field Table |
Flags |
Hexadecimal Value |
Definition |
SLOAD |
0x00000001 |
Indicates that the process is operating in core memory. |
SNOSWAP |
0x00000002 |
Indicates that the process cannot be swapped out. |
STRC |
0x00000008 |
Indicates that the process is being traced. |
SWTED |
0x00000010 |
Indicates that the process stopped while being traced. |
SFWTED |
0x00000020 |
Indicates that the process stopped after a call to the fork subroutine, while being traced. |
SEWTED |
0x00000040 |
Indicates that the process stopped after a call to the exec subroutine, while being traced. |
SLWTED |
0x00000080 |
Indicates that the process stopped after a call to the load or unload subroutine, while being traced. |
SFIXPRI |
0x00000100 |
Indicates that the process has a fixed priority, ignoring the pcpu field descriptor. |
SKPROC |
0x00000200 |
Indicates a Kernel process. |
SOMASK |
0x00000400 |
Indicates restoration of the old mask after a signal is received. |
SWAKEONSIG |
0x00000800 |
Indicates that the signal will abort the sleep subroutine. The contents must not be equal to those of the PCATCH flag. The contents of both PCATCH and SWAKEONSIG must be greater than those of PMASK. |
SUSER |
0x00001000 |
Indicates that the process is in user mode. |
SLKDONE |
0x00002000 |
Indicates that the process has done locks. |
STRACING |
0x00004000 |
Indicates that the process is a debugging process. |
SMPTRACE |
0x00008000 |
Indicates multi-process debugging. |
SEXIT |
0x00010000 |
Indicates that the process is exiting. |
SSEL |
0x00020000 |
Indicates that the processor is selecting: wakeup/waiting danger. |
SORPHANPGRP |
0x00040000 |
Indicates an orphaned process group. |
SNOCNTLPROC |
0x00080000 |
Indicates that the session leader relinquished the controlling terminal. |
SPPNOCLDSTOP |
0x00100000 |
Indicates that the SIGHLD signal is not sent to the parent process when a child stops. |
SEXECED |
0x00200000 |
Indicates that process has been run. |
SJOBSESS |
0x00400000 |
Indicates that job control was used in the current session. |
SJOBOFF |
0x00800000 |
Indicates that the process is free from job control. |
PSIGDELIVERY |
0x01000000 |
Indicates that the process is used by the program-check handler. |
SRMSHM |
0x02000000 |
Indicates that the process removed shared memory during a call to the exit subroutine. |
SSLOTFREE |
0x04000000 |
Indicates that the process slot is free. |
SNOMSG |
0x08000000 |
Indicates that there are no more uprintf subroutine messages. |
- F
- (-l and l flags) Some of the more important F field flags (hexadecimal and additive) associated with processes and threads are shown below:
F Field Table |
Flags |
Hex Value |
Definition |
SLOAD |
0x00000001 |
Indicates that the process is operating in core memory. |
SNOSWAP |
0x00000002 |
Indicates that the process cannot be swapped out. |
STRC |
0x00000008 |
Indicates that the process is being traced. |
SKPROC |
0x00000200 |
Indicates a kernel process. |
SEXIT |
0x00010000 |
Indicates that the process is exiting. |
SEXECED |
0x00200000 |
Indicates that the process has been run. |
SEXECING |
0x01000000 |
Indicates that the process is execing (performing an exec). |
TKTHREAD |
0x00001000 |
Indicates that the thread is a kernel-only thread. |
Note: You can see the definitions all process and thread flags by consulting the p_flags and t_flags fields in the /usr/include/sys/proc.h and /usr/include/sys/thread.h files respectively.
- LIM
- (v flag) The soft limit on memory used, specified via a call to the setrlimit subroutine. If no limit has been specified, then shown as xx. If the limit is set to the system limit, (unlimited), a value of UNLIM is displayed.
- NI
- (-l and l flags) The nice value; used in calculating priority for the sched other policy.
- PID
- (all flags) The process ID of the process.
- PGIN
- (v flag) The number of disk I/Os resulting from references by the process to pages not loaded in core.
- PPID
- (-f, l, and -l flags) The process ID of the parent process.
- PRI
- (-l and l flags) The priority of the process
or kernel thread
; higher numbers mean lower priority.
- RSS
- (v flag) The real-memory (resident set) size of the process (in 1KB units).
- S
- (-l and l flags) The state of the process
or kernel thread
:
For processes:
- O
- Nonexistent
- A
- Active
- W
- Swapped
- I
- Idle (waiting for startup)
- Z
- Canceled
- T
- Stopped
For kernel threads:
- O
- Nonexistent
- R
- Running
- S
- Sleeping
- W
- Swapped
- Z
- Canceled
- T
- Stopped
-
SC
- (-o THREAD flag) The suspend count of the process or kernel thread. For a process, the suspend count is defined as the sum of the kernel threads suspend counts.
- SCH
- (-o THREAD flag) The scheduling policy for a kernel thread. The policies sched_other, sched_fifo, and sched_rr are respectively displayed using: 0, 1, 2.
- SIZE
- (v flag) The virtual size of the data section of the process (in 1KB units).
- SSIZ
- (s flag) The size of the kernel stack. This value is always 0 (zero) for a multi-threaded process.
- STAT
- (s, u, and v flags) Contains the state of the process:
- 0
- Nonexistent
- A
- Active
- I
- Intermediate
- Z
- Canceled
- T
- Stopped
- K
- Available kernel process
- STIME
- (-f and u flags) The starting time of the process. The LANG environment variables control the appearance of this field.
- SZ
- (-l and l flags) The size in 1KB units of the core image of the process.
- THCNT
- (-o thcount flag) The number of kernel threads owned by the process.
-
TID
- (-o THREAD flag) The thread ID of the kernel thread.
- TIME
- (all flags) The total execution time for the process.
- TRS
- (v flag) The size of resident-set (real memory) of text.
- TSIZ
- (v flag) The size of text (shared-program) image.
- TTY
- (all flags) The controlling workstation for the process:
- -
- The process is not associated with a workstation.
- ?
- Unknown.
- Number
- The TTY number. For example, the entry 2 indicates TTY2.
- UID
- (-f, -l, and l flags) The user ID of the process owner. The login name is printed under the -f flag.
- USER
- (u flag) The login name of the process owner.
- WCHAN
- (-l flag) The event for which the process
or kernel thread
is waiting or sleeping.
For a kernel thread, this field is blank if the kernel thread is running. For a process, the wait channel is defined as the wait channel of the sleeping kernel thread if only one kernel thread is sleeping; otherwise a star is displayed.
- WCHAN
- (l flag) The event on which process is waiting (an address in the system). A symbol is chosen that classifies the address, unless numerical output is requested.
- %CPU
- (u and v flags) The percentage of time the process has used the CPU since the process started. The value is computed by dividing the time the process uses the CPU by the elapsed time of the process.
In a multi-processor environment, the value is further divided by the number of available CPUs since several threads in the same porcess can run on different CPUs at the same time.
(Because the time base over which this data is computed varies, the sum of all %CPU fields can exceed 100%.)
- %MEM
- (u and v flags) The percentage of real memory used by this process.
A process that has exited and has a parent that has not yet waited for the process is marked <defunct>. A process that is blocked trying to exit is marked <exiting>. The ps command attempts to determine the file name and arguments given when the process was created by memory or by the swap area.
Notes:
- The process can change while the ps command is running. Some data displayed for defunct processes is irrelevant.
- The ps program examines memory to retrieve the file name and arguments used when the process was created. However, a process can destroy information, making this method of retrieving file name and arguments unreliable.
Flags
The following flags are preceded by a - (minus sign):
-A |
Writes to standard output information about all processes. |
-a |
Writes to standard output information about all processes, except the session leaders and processes not associated with a terminal. |
-d |
Writes information to standard output about all processes, except the session leaders. |
-e |
Writes information to standard output about all processes, except kernel processes. |
-F Format |
Same as -o Format |
-f |
Generates a full listing. |
-G Glist |
Writes information to standard output only about processes that are in the process groups listed for the Glist variable. The Glist variable is either a comma-separated list of process group identifiers or a list of process group identifiers enclosed in double quotation marks (" ") and separated from one another by a comma or by one or more spaces. This flag is equivalent to the -g Glist flag. |
-g Glist |
This flag is equivalent to the -G Glist flag. |
-k |
Lists kernel processes. |
-l |
Generates a long listing. See also the l flag. |
-m |
Lists kernel threads as well as processes. Output lines for processes are followed by an additional output line for each kernel thread. This flag does not display thread-specific fields (bnd, scount, sched, thcount, and tid), unless the appropriate -o Format flag is specified. |
-N |
Gathers no thread statistics. With this flag ps simply reports those statistics that can be obtained by not traversing through the threads chain for the process. |
-n NameList |
Specifies an alternative system name-list file in place of the default. The AIX operating system does not use the -n flag, since information is supplied directly to the kernel. |
-o Format |
Displays information in the format specified by the Format variable. Multiple field specifiers can be specified for the Format variable. The Format variable is either a comma-separated list of field specifiers or a list of field specifiers enclosed within a set of " " (double-quotation marks) and separated from one another by a comma or by one or more spaces, or both.
Each field specifier has a default header. The default header can be overridden by appending an = (equal sign) followed by the user-defined text for the header. The fields are written in the order specified on the command line in column format. The field widths are specified by the system to be at least as wide as the default or user-defined header text. If the header text is null, (such as if
-o
user= is specified), the field width is at least as wide as the default header text. If all header fields are null, no header line is written.
The following field specifiers are recognized by the system:
- args
- Indicates the full command name being executed. All command-line arguments are included, though truncation may occur. The default header for this field is COMMAND.
- bnd
- Indicates to which (if any) processor a process or kernel thread is bound. The default header for this field is BND.
- comm
- Indicates the short name of the command being executed. Command-line arguments are not included. The default header for this field is COMMAND.
- cpu
- Determines process scheduling priority.
CPU utilization of process or thread, incremented each time
the system clock ticks and the process or thread is found
to be running. The value is decayed by the scheduler by
dividing it by 2 once per second. For the sched_other policy,
Large values indicate a CPU intensive process and
result in lower process priority whereas small values
indicate an I/O intensive process and result in a more
favorable priority.
- etime
- Indicates the elapsed time since the process started. The elapsed time is displayed in the following format:
[[ dd-]hh:]mm:ss
where dd specifies the number of days, hh specifies the number of hours, mm specifies the number of minutes, and ss specifies the number of seconds. The default header for this field is ELAPSED.
- group
- Indicates the effective group ID of the process. The textual group ID is displayed. If the textual group ID cannot be obtained, a decimal representation is used. The default header for this field is GROUP.
- nice
- Indicates the decimal value of the process nice value. The default header for this field is NI.
- pcpu
- Indicates the ratio of CPU time used to CPU time available, expressed as a percentage. The default header for this field is %CPU.
- pgid
- Indicates the decimal value of the process group ID. The default header for this field is PGID.
- pid
- Indicates the decimal value of the process ID. The default header for this field is PID.
- ppid
- Indicates the decimal value of the parent process ID. The default header for this field is PPID.
- rgroup
- Indicates the real group ID of the process. The textual group ID is displayed. If the textual group ID cannot be obtained, a decimal representation is used. The default header for this field is RGROUP.
- ruser
- Indicates the real user ID of the process. The textual user ID is displayed. If the textual user ID cannot be obtained, a decimal representation is used. The default header for this field is RUSER.
- scount
- Indicates the suspend count for a kernel thread. The default header for this field is SC.
- sched
- Indicates the scheduling policy for a kernel thread. The default header for this field is SCH.
- thcount
- Indicates the number of kernel threads owned by the process. The default header for this field is THCNT.
- THREAD
- Indicates the following fields:
- User name (the uname field)
- Process and parent process IDs for processes (the pid and ppid fields)
- Kernel thread ID for threads (the tid field)
- The state of the process or kernel thread (the S field)
- The CPU utilization of the process or kernel thread (the C field)
- The priority of the process or kernel thread (the PRI field)
- The suspend count of the process or kernel thread (the scount field)
- The wait channel of the process or kernel thread (the WCHAN field)
- The flags of the process or kernel thread (the F field)
- The controlling terminal of the process (the tty field)
- The CPU to which the process or kernel thread is bound (the bnd field)
- The command being executed by the process (the comm field).
Threads are not actually displayed with the -o THREAD flag, unless the -m flag is also specified.
- tid
- Indicates the thread ID of a kernel thread. The default header for this field is TID.
- time
- Indicates the cumulative CPU time since the process started. The time is displayed in the following format:
[ dd-]hh:mm:ss
where dd specifies the number of days, hh specifies the number of hours, mm specifies the number of minutes, and ss specifies the number of seconds. The default header for this field is TIME.
- tty
- Indicates the controlling terminal name of the process. The default header for this field is TT.
- user
- Indicates the effective user ID of the process. The textual user ID is displayed. If the textual user ID cannot be obtained, a decimal representation is used. The default header for this field is USER.
- vsz
- Indicates, as a decimal integer, the size in kilobytes of the process in virtual memory. The default header for this field is VSZ.
Otherwise, multiple fields in a specified format can be displayed by the Format variable, including field descriptors. If field descriptors are used in the Format variable, it must be enclosed in double quotation marks (" "). The following table shows how field descriptors correspond to field specifiers:
Field Field Default
Descriptors Specifiers Headers
%a args COMMAND
%c comm COMMAND
%t etime ELAPSED
%G group GROUP
%n nice NI
%C pcpu %CPU
%r pgid PGID
%p pid PID
%P ppid PPID
%g rgroup RGROUP
%u ruser RUSER
%x time TIME
%y tty TTY
%U user USER
%z vsz VSZ |
-p Plist |
Displays only information about processes with the process numbers specified for the Plist variable. The Plist variable is either a comma separated list of process ID numbers or a list of process ID numbers enclosed in double quotation marks (" ") and separated from one another by a comma or by one or more spaces, or both. |
-t Tlist |
Displays only information about processes associated with the workstations listed in the Tlist variable. The Tlist variable is either a comma separated list of workstation identifiers or a list of workstation identifiers enclosed in double quotation marks (" ") and separated from one another by a comma or by one or more spaces, or both. |
-U Ulist |
Displays only information about processes with the user ID numbers or login names specified for the Ulist variable. The Ulist variable is either a comma-separated list of user IDs or a list of user IDs enclosed in double quotation marks (" ") and separated from one another by a comma and one or more spaces. In the listing, the ps command displays the numerical user ID unless the -f flag is used; then the command displays the login name. This flag is equivalent to the -u Ulist flag. See also the u flag. |
-u Ulist |
This flag is equivalent to the -U Ulist flag. |
Options
The following options are not preceded by a - (minus sign):
a |
Displays information about all processes with terminals (ordinarily only the user's own processes are displayed). |
c |
Displays the command name, as stored internally in the system for purposes of accounting, rather than the command parameters, which are kept in the process address space. |
e |
Displays the environment as well as the parameters to the command, up to a limit of 80 characters. |
ew |
Wraps display from the e flag one extra line. |
eww |
Wraps display from the e flag as many times as necessary. |
g |
Displays all processes. |
l |
Displays a long listing having the F, S, UID, PID, PPID, C, PRI, NI, ADDR, SZ, PSS, WCHAN, TTY, TIME, and CMD fields. |
n |
Displays numerical output. In a long listing, the WCHAN field is printed numerically rather than symbolically. In a user listing, the USER field is replaced by a UID field. |
s |
Displays the size (SSIZ) of the kernel stack of each process (for use by system maintainers) in the basic output format.
This value is always 0 (zero) for a multi-threaded process. |
t Tty |
Displays processes whose controlling tty is the value of the Tty variable, which should be specified as printed by the ps command; that is, 0 for terminal /dev/tty/0,
lft0 for /dev/lft0
, and pts/2 for /dev/pts/2. |
u |
Displays user-oriented output. This includes the USER, PID, %CPU, %MEM, SZ, RSS, TTY, STAT, STIME, TIME, and COMMAND fields. |
v |
Displays the PGIN, SIZE, RSS, LIM, TSIZ, TRS, %CPU, %MEM fields. |
w |
Specifies a wide-column format for output (132 columns rather than 80). If repeated, (for example, ww), uses arbitrarily wide output. This information is used to decide how much of long commands to print. |
x |
Displays processes with no terminal. |
Exit Status
This command returns the following exit values:
0 |
Successful completion. |
>0 |
An error occurred. |
Examples
- To display all processes, enter:
ps -e -f
- To list processes owned by specific users, enter:
ps -f -l -ujim,jane,su
- To list processes that are associated with the /dev/console and /dev/tty1 ttys, enter:
ps -t console,tty/1
- To list processes not associated with a terminal, enter:
ps -t -
- To display a specified format with field specifiers, enter:
ps -o ruser,pid,ppid=parent,args
The output is:
RUSER PID parent COMMAND
helene 34 12 ps -o ruser,pid,ppid=parent,args
- To display a specified format with field descriptors, enter:
ps -o "< %u > %p %y : %a"
The output is:
< RUSER > PID TT : COMMAND
< helene > 34 pts/3 : ps -o < %u > %p %y : %a
- To display information about processes and kernel threads controlled by the current terminal , enter:
ps -lm
The output is similar to:
F S UID PID PPID C PRI NI ADDR SZ WCHAN TTY TIME CMD
240003 A 26 8984 7190 1 60 20 2974 312 pts/1 0:00 -ksh
400 S - - - 1 60 - - - - - -
200005 A 26 9256 8984 15 67 20 18ed 164 pts/1 0:00 ps
0 R - - - 15 67 - - - - - -
- To display information about all processes and kernel threads, enter:
ps -emo THREAD
The output is similar to:
USER PID PPID TID S C PRI SC WCHAN FLAG TTY BND CMD
jane 1716 19292 - A 10 60 1 * 260801 pts/7 - biod
- - - 4863 S 0 60 0 599e9d8 8400 - - -
- - - 5537 R 10 60 1 5999e18 2420 - 3 -
luke 19292 18524 - A 0 60 0 586ad84 200001 pts/7 - -ksh
- - - 7617 S 0 60 0 586ad84 400 - - -
luke 25864 31168 - A 11 65 0 - 200001 pts/7 - -
- - - 8993 R 11 65 0 - 0 - - -
Files
/usr/bin/ps |
Contains the ps command. |
/etc/passwd |
Specifies user ID information. |
/dev/pty* |
Indicates workstation (PTY) names. |
/dev/tty* |
Indicates workstation (TTY) names. |
Related Information
The kill command, nice command.
Using ps to Identify CPU-Intensive Programs in AIX Versions 3.2 and 4 Performance Tuning Guide.
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