Sujet : Re: Basic ps Tips
De : mail (at) *nospam* rkta.de (Rene Kita)
Groupes : comp.unix.shellDate : 03. Aug 2024, 17:51:12
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v8ljlg$3gs0o$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5
User-Agent : tin/2.6.2-20221225 ("Pittyvaich") (OpenBSD/7.5 (amd64))
Ed Morton <
mortonspam@gmail.com> wrote:
On 8/3/2024 2:08 AM, Rene Kita wrote:
Jerry Peters <jerry@example.invalid> wrote:
Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> wrote:
On Sat, 27 Jul 2024 00:40:49 -0000 (UTC), I wrote:
[...]
ps -p$(pgrep -d, bash) -wwo pid,ppid,lstart,tty,etime,cmd
>
to report all the bash sessions I have running (quite a lot). The ???ww???
says not to truncate the output, which is handy for long command lines.
Or just use ps -C <command>:
[...]
Does noone know about -C? I keep seeing things like 'ps -ef | grep
<something> in scripts to see if <something is running, rather than
using 'ps -C'.
I did not know about it.
The man page on OpenBSD does not mention -C, but calling 'ps -C' does
not give an error. But:
#v+
$ ps -C ksh
ps: /dev/mem: Permission denied'
#v-
Dunno what to make out of it, but apparently one reason to use grep
instead of -C is portability.
Its described in the man page for FreeBSD ps,
https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?ps(1), as:
-C Change the way the CPU percentage is calculated by
using a
"raw" CPU calculation that ignores "resident" time (this nor-
mally has no effect).
so maybe you're running FreeBSD instead of the OpenBSD version.
I'm pretty sure I know which version of BSD I'm running and I would be
very surprised if OpenBSD would ship the FreeBSD version of ps...
But let's have a look at the source:
#v+
while ((ch = getopt(argc, argv,
"AaCcefgHhjkLlM:mN:O:o:p:rSTt:U:uvW:wx")) != -1)
switch (ch) {
case 'A':
all = 1;
xflg = 1;
break;
case 'a':
all = 1;
break;
case 'C':
break; /* no-op */
#v-
'-C' does nothing. I did not look further to see where that error is
coming from.