xref: /freebsd/bin/ps/ps.1 (revision eb69d1f144a6fcc765d1b9d44a5ae8082353e70b)
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29.\"     @(#)ps.1	8.3 (Berkeley) 4/18/94
30.\" $FreeBSD$
31.\"
32.Dd January 23, 2018
33.Dt PS 1
34.Os
35.Sh NAME
36.Nm ps
37.Nd process status
38.Sh SYNOPSIS
39.Nm
40.Op Fl -libxo
41.Op Fl aCcdefHhjlmrSTuvwXxZ
42.Op Fl O Ar fmt | Fl o Ar fmt
43.Op Fl G Ar gid Ns Op , Ns Ar gid Ns Ar ...
44.Op Fl J Ar jid Ns Op , Ns Ar jid Ns Ar ...
45.Op Fl M Ar core
46.Op Fl N Ar system
47.Op Fl p Ar pid Ns Op , Ns Ar pid Ns Ar ...
48.Op Fl t Ar tty Ns Op , Ns Ar tty Ns Ar ...
49.Op Fl U Ar user Ns Op , Ns Ar user Ns Ar ...
50.Nm
51.Op Fl -libxo
52.Op Fl L
53.Sh DESCRIPTION
54The
55.Nm
56utility
57displays a header line, followed by lines containing information about
58all of your
59processes that have controlling terminals.
60If the
61.Fl x
62options is specified,
63.Nm
64will also display processes that do not have controlling terminals.
65.Pp
66A different set of processes can be selected for display by using any
67combination of the
68.Fl a , G , J , p , T , t ,
69and
70.Fl U
71options.
72If more than one of these options are given, then
73.Nm
74will select all processes which are matched by at least one of the
75given options.
76.Pp
77For the processes which have been selected for display,
78.Nm
79will usually display one line per process.
80The
81.Fl H
82option may result in multiple output lines (one line per thread) for
83some processes.
84By default all of these output lines are sorted first by controlling
85terminal, then by process ID.
86The
87.Fl m , r , u ,
88and
89.Fl v
90options will change the sort order.
91If more than one sorting option was given, then the selected processes
92will be sorted by the last sorting option which was specified.
93.Pp
94For the processes which have been selected for display, the information
95to display is selected based on a set of keywords (see the
96.Fl L , O ,
97and
98.Fl o
99options).
100The default output format includes, for each process, the process' ID,
101controlling terminal, state, CPU time (including both user and system time)
102and associated command.
103.Pp
104The options are as follows:
105.Bl -tag -width indent
106.It Fl -libxo
107Generate output via
108.Xr libxo 3
109in a selection of different human and machine readable formats.
110See
111.Xr xo_parse_args 3
112for details on command line arguments.
113.It Fl a
114Display information about other users' processes as well as your own.
115If the
116.Va security.bsd.see_other_uids
117sysctl is set to zero, this option is honored only if the UID of the user is 0.
118.It Fl c
119Change the
120.Dq command
121column output to just contain the executable name,
122rather than the full command line.
123.It Fl C
124Change the way the CPU percentage is calculated by using a
125.Dq raw
126CPU calculation that ignores
127.Dq resident
128time (this normally has
129no effect).
130.It Fl d
131Arrange processes into descendancy order and prefix each command with
132indentation text showing sibling and parent/child relationships as a tree.
133If either of the
134.Fl m
135and
136.Fl r
137options are also used, they control how sibling processes are sorted
138relative to each other.
139Note that this option has no effect if the
140.Dq command
141column is not the last column displayed.
142.It Fl e
143Display the environment as well.
144.It Fl f
145Show command-line and environment information about swapped out processes.
146This option is honored only if the UID of the user is 0.
147.It Fl G
148Display information about processes which are running with the specified
149real group IDs.
150.It Fl H
151Show all of the threads associated with each process.
152.It Fl h
153Repeat the information header as often as necessary to guarantee one
154header per page of information.
155.It Fl j
156Print information associated with the following keywords:
157.Cm user , pid , ppid , pgid , sid , jobc , state , tt , time ,
158and
159.Cm command .
160.It Fl J
161Display information about processes which match the specified jail IDs.
162This may be either the
163.Cm jid
164or
165.Cm name
166of the jail.
167Use
168.Fl J
169.Sy 0
170to display only host processes.
171This flag implies
172.Fl x
173by default.
174.It Fl L
175List the set of keywords available for the
176.Fl O
177and
178.Fl o
179options.
180.It Fl l
181Display information associated with the following keywords:
182.Cm uid , pid , ppid , cpu , pri , nice , vsz , rss , mwchan , state ,
183.Cm tt , time ,
184and
185.Cm command .
186.It Fl M
187Extract values associated with the name list from the specified core
188instead of the currently running system.
189.It Fl m
190Sort by memory usage, instead of the combination of controlling
191terminal and process ID.
192.It Fl N
193Extract the name list from the specified system instead of the default,
194which is the kernel image the system has booted from.
195.It Fl O
196Add the information associated with the space or comma separated list
197of keywords specified, after the process ID,
198in the default information
199display.
200Keywords may be appended with an equals
201.Pq Ql =
202sign and a string.
203This causes the printed header to use the specified string instead of
204the standard header.
205.It Fl o
206Display information associated with the space or comma separated
207list of keywords specified.
208The last keyword in the list may be appended with an equals
209.Pq Ql =
210sign and a string that spans the rest of the argument, and can contain
211space and comma characters.
212This causes the printed header to use the specified string instead of
213the standard header.
214Multiple keywords may also be given in the form of more than one
215.Fl o
216option.
217So the header texts for multiple keywords can be changed.
218If all keywords have empty header texts, no header line is written.
219.It Fl p
220Display information about processes which match the specified process IDs.
221.It Fl r
222Sort by current CPU usage, instead of the combination of controlling
223terminal and process ID.
224.It Fl S
225Change the way the process times, namely cputime, systime, and usertime,
226are calculated by summing all exited children to their parent process.
227.It Fl T
228Display information about processes attached to the device associated
229with the standard input.
230.It Fl t
231Display information about processes attached to the specified terminal
232devices.
233Full pathnames, as well as abbreviations (see explanation of the
234.Cm tt
235keyword) can be specified.
236.It Fl U
237Display the processes belonging to the specified usernames.
238.It Fl u
239Display information associated with the following keywords:
240.Cm user , pid , %cpu , %mem , vsz , rss , tt , state , start , time ,
241and
242.Cm command .
243The
244.Fl u
245option implies the
246.Fl r
247option.
248.It Fl v
249Display information associated with the following keywords:
250.Cm pid , state , time , sl , re , pagein , vsz , rss , lim , tsiz ,
251.Cm %cpu , %mem ,
252and
253.Cm command .
254The
255.Fl v
256option implies the
257.Fl m
258option.
259.It Fl w
260Use 132 columns to display information, instead of the default which
261is your window size.
262If the
263.Fl w
264option is specified more than once,
265.Nm
266will use as many columns as necessary without regard for your window size.
267Note that this option has no effect if the
268.Dq command
269column is not the last column displayed.
270.It Fl X
271When displaying processes matched by other options, skip any processes
272which do not have a controlling terminal.
273This is the default behaviour.
274.It Fl x
275When displaying processes matched by other options, include processes
276which do not have a controlling terminal.
277This is the opposite of the
278.Fl X
279option.
280If both
281.Fl X
282and
283.Fl x
284are specified in the same command, then
285.Nm
286will use the one which was specified last.
287.It Fl Z
288Add
289.Xr mac 4
290label to the list of keywords for which
291.Nm
292will display information.
293.El
294.Pp
295A complete list of the available keywords are listed below.
296Some of these keywords are further specified as follows:
297.Bl -tag -width lockname
298.It Cm %cpu
299The CPU utilization of the process; this is a decaying average over up to
300a minute of previous (real) time.
301Since the time base over which this is computed varies (since processes may
302be very young) it is possible for the sum of all
303.Cm %cpu
304fields to exceed 100%.
305.It Cm %mem
306The percentage of real memory used by this process.
307.It Cm class
308Login class associated with the process.
309.It Cm flags
310The flags associated with the process as in
311the include file
312.In sys/proc.h :
313.Bl -column P_SINGLE_BOUNDARY 0x40000000
314.It Dv "P_ADVLOCK" Ta No "0x00001" Ta "Process may hold a POSIX advisory lock"
315.It Dv "P_CONTROLT" Ta No "0x00002" Ta "Has a controlling terminal"
316.It Dv "P_KPROC" Ta No "0x00004" Ta "Kernel process"
317.It Dv "P_PPWAIT" Ta No "0x00010" Ta "Parent is waiting for child to exec/exit"
318.It Dv "P_PROFIL" Ta No "0x00020" Ta "Has started profiling"
319.It Dv "P_STOPPROF" Ta No "0x00040" Ta "Has thread in requesting to stop prof"
320.It Dv "P_HADTHREADS" Ta No "0x00080" Ta "Has had threads (no cleanup shortcuts)"
321.It Dv "P_SUGID" Ta No "0x00100" Ta "Had set id privileges since last exec"
322.It Dv "P_SYSTEM" Ta No "0x00200" Ta "System proc: no sigs, stats or swapping"
323.It Dv "P_SINGLE_EXIT" Ta No "0x00400" Ta "Threads suspending should exit, not wait"
324.It Dv "P_TRACED" Ta No "0x00800" Ta "Debugged process being traced"
325.It Dv "P_WAITED" Ta No "0x01000" Ta "Someone is waiting for us"
326.It Dv "P_WEXIT" Ta No "0x02000" Ta "Working on exiting"
327.It Dv "P_EXEC" Ta No "0x04000" Ta "Process called exec"
328.It Dv "P_WKILLED" Ta No "0x08000" Ta "Killed, shall go to kernel/user boundary ASAP"
329.It Dv "P_CONTINUED" Ta No "0x10000" Ta "Proc has continued from a stopped state"
330.It Dv "P_STOPPED_SIG" Ta No "0x20000" Ta "Stopped due to SIGSTOP/SIGTSTP"
331.It Dv "P_STOPPED_TRACE" Ta No "0x40000" Ta "Stopped because of tracing"
332.It Dv "P_STOPPED_SINGLE" Ta No "0x80000" Ta "Only one thread can continue"
333.It Dv "P_PROTECTED" Ta No "0x100000" Ta "Do not kill on memory overcommit"
334.It Dv "P_SIGEVENT" Ta No "0x200000" Ta "Process pending signals changed"
335.It Dv "P_SINGLE_BOUNDARY" Ta No "0x400000" Ta "Threads should suspend at user boundary"
336.It Dv "P_HWPMC" Ta No "0x800000" Ta "Process is using HWPMCs"
337.It Dv "P_JAILED" Ta No "0x1000000" Ta "Process is in jail"
338.It Dv "P_TOTAL_STOP" Ta No "0x2000000" Ta "Stopped for system suspend"
339.It Dv "P_INEXEC" Ta No "0x4000000" Ta "Process is in execve()"
340.It Dv "P_STATCHILD" Ta No "0x8000000" Ta "Child process stopped or exited"
341.It Dv "P_INMEM" Ta No "0x10000000" Ta "Loaded into memory"
342.It Dv "P_SWAPPINGOUT" Ta No "0x20000000" Ta "Process is being swapped out"
343.It Dv "P_SWAPPINGIN" Ta No "0x40000000" Ta "Process is being swapped in"
344.It Dv "P_PPTRACE" Ta No "0x80000000" Ta "Vforked child issued ptrace(PT_TRACEME)"
345.El
346.It Cm flags2
347The flags kept in
348.Va p_flag2
349associated with the process as in
350the include file
351.In sys/proc.h :
352.Bl -column P2_INHERIT_PROTECTED 0x00000001
353.It Dv "P2_INHERIT_PROTECTED" Ta No "0x00000001" Ta "New children get P_PROTECTED"
354.It Dv "P2_NOTRACE" Ta No "0x00000002" Ta "No ptrace(2) attach or coredumps"
355.It Dv "P2_NOTRACE_EXEC" Ta No "0x00000004" Ta "Keep P2_NOPTRACE on exec(2)"
356.It Dv "P2_AST_SU" Ta No "0x00000008" Ta "Handles SU ast for kthreads"
357.It Dv "P2_PTRACE_FSTP" Ta No "0x00000010" Ta "SIGSTOP from PT_ATTACH not yet handled"
358.El
359.It Cm label
360The MAC label of the process.
361.It Cm lim
362The soft limit on memory used, specified via a call to
363.Xr setrlimit 2 .
364.It Cm lstart
365The exact time the command started, using the
366.Ql %c
367format described in
368.Xr strftime 3 .
369.It Cm lockname
370The name of the lock that the process is currently blocked on.
371If the name is invalid or unknown, then
372.Dq ???\&
373is displayed.
374.It Cm logname
375The login name associated with the session the process is in (see
376.Xr getlogin 2 ) .
377.It Cm mwchan
378The event name if the process is blocked normally, or the lock name if
379the process is blocked on a lock.
380See the wchan and lockname keywords
381for details.
382.It Cm nice
383The process scheduling increment (see
384.Xr setpriority 2 ) .
385.It Cm rss
386the real memory (resident set) size of the process (in 1024 byte units).
387.It Cm start
388The time the command started.
389If the command started less than 24 hours ago, the start time is
390displayed using the
391.Dq Li %H:%M
392format described in
393.Xr strftime 3 .
394If the command started less than 7 days ago, the start time is
395displayed using the
396.Dq Li %a%H
397format.
398Otherwise, the start time is displayed using the
399.Dq Li %e%b%y
400format.
401.It Cm state
402The state is given by a sequence of characters, for example,
403.Dq Li RWNA .
404The first character indicates the run state of the process:
405.Pp
406.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
407.It Li D
408Marks a process in disk (or other short term, uninterruptible) wait.
409.It Li I
410Marks a process that is idle (sleeping for longer than about 20 seconds).
411.It Li L
412Marks a process that is waiting to acquire a lock.
413.It Li R
414Marks a runnable process.
415.It Li S
416Marks a process that is sleeping for less than about 20 seconds.
417.It Li T
418Marks a stopped process.
419.It Li W
420Marks an idle interrupt thread.
421.It Li Z
422Marks a dead process (a
423.Dq zombie ) .
424.El
425.Pp
426Additional characters after these, if any, indicate additional state
427information:
428.Pp
429.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
430.It Li +
431The process is in the foreground process group of its control terminal.
432.It Li <
433The process has raised CPU scheduling priority.
434.It Li C
435The process is in
436.Xr capsicum 4
437capability mode.
438.It Li E
439The process is trying to exit.
440.It Li J
441Marks a process which is in
442.Xr jail 2 .
443The hostname of the prison can be found in
444.Pa /proc/ Ns Ao Ar pid Ac Ns Pa /status .
445.It Li L
446The process has pages locked in core (for example, for raw
447.Tn I/O ) .
448.It Li N
449The process has reduced CPU scheduling priority (see
450.Xr setpriority 2 ) .
451.It Li s
452The process is a session leader.
453.It Li V
454The process' parent is suspended during a
455.Xr vfork 2 ,
456waiting for the process to exec or exit.
457.It Li W
458The process is swapped out.
459.It Li X
460The process is being traced or debugged.
461.El
462.It Cm tt
463An abbreviation for the pathname of the controlling terminal, if any.
464The abbreviation consists of the three letters following
465.Pa /dev/tty ,
466or, for pseudo-terminals, the corresponding entry in
467.Pa /dev/pts .
468This is followed by a
469.Ql -
470if the process can no longer reach that
471controlling terminal (i.e., it has been revoked).
472A
473.Ql -
474without a preceding two letter abbreviation or pseudo-terminal device number
475indicates a process which never had a controlling terminal.
476The full pathname of the controlling terminal is available via the
477.Cm tty
478keyword.
479.It Cm wchan
480The event (an address in the system) on which a process waits.
481When printed numerically, the initial part of the address is
482trimmed off and the result is printed in hex, for example, 0x80324000 prints
483as 324000.
484.El
485.Pp
486When printing using the command keyword, a process that has exited and
487has a parent that has not yet waited for the process (in other words, a zombie)
488is listed as
489.Dq Li <defunct> ,
490and a process which is blocked while trying
491to exit is listed as
492.Dq Li <exiting> .
493If the arguments cannot be located (usually because it has not been set, as is
494the case of system processes and/or kernel threads) the command name is printed
495within square brackets.
496The
497.Nm
498utility first tries to obtain the arguments cached by the kernel (if they were
499shorter than the value of the
500.Va kern.ps_arg_cache_limit
501sysctl).
502The process can change the arguments shown with
503.Xr setproctitle 3 .
504Otherwise,
505.Nm
506makes an educated guess as to the file name and arguments given when the
507process was created by examining memory or the swap area.
508The method is inherently somewhat unreliable and in any event a process
509is entitled to destroy this information.
510The ucomm (accounting) keyword can, however, be depended on.
511If the arguments are unavailable or do not agree with the ucomm keyword,
512the value for the ucomm keyword is appended to the arguments in parentheses.
513.Sh KEYWORDS
514The following is a complete list of the available keywords and their
515meanings.
516Several of them have aliases (keywords which are synonyms).
517.Pp
518.Bl -tag -width ".Cm sigignore" -compact
519.It Cm %cpu
520percentage CPU usage (alias
521.Cm pcpu )
522.It Cm %mem
523percentage memory usage (alias
524.Cm pmem )
525.It Cm acflag
526accounting flag (alias
527.Cm acflg )
528.It Cm args
529command and arguments
530.It Cm class
531login class
532.It Cm comm
533command
534.It Cm command
535command and arguments
536.It Cm cow
537number of copy-on-write faults
538.It Cm cpu
539short-term CPU usage factor (for scheduling)
540.It Cm dsiz
541data size (in Kbytes)
542.It Cm emul
543system-call emulation environment (ABI)
544.It Cm etime
545elapsed running time, format
546.Op days- Ns
547.Op hours: Ns
548minutes:seconds.
549.It Cm etimes
550elapsed running time, in decimal integer seconds
551.It Cm fib
552default FIB number, see
553.Xr setfib 1
554.It Cm flags
555the process flags, in hexadecimal (alias
556.Cm f )
557.It Cm flags2
558the additional set of process flags, in hexadecimal (alias
559.Cm f2 )
560.It Cm gid
561effective group ID (alias
562.Cm egid )
563.It Cm group
564group name (from egid) (alias
565.Cm egroup )
566.It Cm inblk
567total blocks read (alias
568.Cm inblock )
569.It Cm jid
570jail ID
571.It Cm jobc
572job control count
573.It Cm ktrace
574tracing flags
575.It Cm label
576MAC label
577.It Cm lim
578memoryuse limit
579.It Cm lockname
580lock currently blocked on (as a symbolic name)
581.It Cm logname
582login name of user who started the session
583.It Cm lstart
584time started
585.It Cm lwp
586thread (light-weight process) ID (alias
587.Cm tid )
588.It Cm majflt
589total page faults
590.It Cm minflt
591total page reclaims
592.It Cm msgrcv
593total messages received (reads from pipes/sockets)
594.It Cm msgsnd
595total messages sent (writes on pipes/sockets)
596.It Cm mwchan
597wait channel or lock currently blocked on
598.It Cm nice
599nice value (alias
600.Cm ni )
601.It Cm nivcsw
602total involuntary context switches
603.It Cm nlwp
604number of threads (light-weight processes) tied to a process
605.It Cm nsigs
606total signals taken (alias
607.Cm nsignals )
608.It Cm nswap
609total swaps in/out
610.It Cm nvcsw
611total voluntary context switches
612.It Cm nwchan
613wait channel (as an address)
614.It Cm oublk
615total blocks written (alias
616.Cm oublock )
617.It Cm paddr
618process pointer
619.It Cm pagein
620pageins (same as majflt)
621.It Cm pgid
622process group number
623.It Cm pid
624process ID
625.It Cm ppid
626parent process ID
627.It Cm pri
628scheduling priority
629.It Cm re
630core residency time (in seconds; 127 = infinity)
631.It Cm rgid
632real group ID
633.It Cm rgroup
634group name (from rgid)
635.It Cm rss
636resident set size
637.It Cm rtprio
638realtime priority (101 = not a realtime process)
639.It Cm ruid
640real user ID
641.It Cm ruser
642user name (from ruid)
643.It Cm sid
644session ID
645.It Cm sig
646pending signals (alias
647.Cm pending )
648.It Cm sigcatch
649caught signals (alias
650.Cm caught )
651.It Cm sigignore
652ignored signals (alias
653.Cm ignored )
654.It Cm sigmask
655blocked signals (alias
656.Cm blocked )
657.It Cm sl
658sleep time (in seconds; 127 = infinity)
659.It Cm ssiz
660stack size (in Kbytes)
661.It Cm start
662time started
663.It Cm state
664symbolic process state (alias
665.Cm stat )
666.It Cm svgid
667saved gid from a setgid executable
668.It Cm svuid
669saved UID from a setuid executable
670.It Cm systime
671accumulated system CPU time
672.It Cm tdaddr
673thread address
674.It Cm tdname
675thread name
676.It Cm tdev
677control terminal device number
678.It Cm time
679accumulated CPU time, user + system (alias
680.Cm cputime )
681.It Cm tpgid
682control terminal process group ID
683.It Cm tracer
684tracer process ID
685.\".It Cm trss
686.\"text resident set size (in Kbytes)
687.It Cm tsid
688control terminal session ID
689.It Cm tsiz
690text size (in Kbytes)
691.It Cm tt
692control terminal name (two letter abbreviation)
693.It Cm tty
694full name of control terminal
695.It Cm ucomm
696name to be used for accounting
697.It Cm uid
698effective user ID (alias
699.Cm euid )
700.It Cm upr
701scheduling priority on return from system call (alias
702.Cm usrpri )
703.It Cm uprocp
704process pointer
705.It Cm user
706user name (from UID)
707.It Cm usertime
708accumulated user CPU time
709.It Cm vmaddr
710vmspace pointer
711.It Cm vsz
712virtual size in Kbytes (alias
713.Cm vsize )
714.It Cm wchan
715wait channel (as a symbolic name)
716.It Cm xstat
717exit or stop status (valid only for stopped or zombie process)
718.El
719.Pp
720Note that the
721.Cm pending
722column displays bitmask of signals pending in the process queue when
723.Fl H
724option is not specified, otherwise the per-thread queue of pending signals
725is shown.
726.Sh ENVIRONMENT
727The following environment variables affect the execution of
728.Nm :
729.Bl -tag -width ".Ev COLUMNS"
730.It Ev COLUMNS
731If set, specifies the user's preferred output width in column positions.
732By default,
733.Nm
734attempts to automatically determine the terminal width.
735.El
736.Sh FILES
737.Bl -tag -width ".Pa /boot/kernel/kernel" -compact
738.It Pa /boot/kernel/kernel
739default system namelist
740.El
741.Sh EXAMPLES
742Display information on all system processes:
743.Pp
744.Dl $ ps -auxw
745.Sh SEE ALSO
746.Xr kill 1 ,
747.Xr pgrep 1 ,
748.Xr pkill 1 ,
749.Xr procstat 1 ,
750.Xr w 1 ,
751.Xr kvm 3 ,
752.Xr libxo 3 ,
753.Xr strftime 3 ,
754.Xr xo_parse_args 3 ,
755.Xr mac 4 ,
756.Xr procfs 5 ,
757.Xr pstat 8 ,
758.Xr sysctl 8 ,
759.Xr mutex 9
760.Sh STANDARDS
761For historical reasons, the
762.Nm
763utility under
764.Fx
765supports a different set of options from what is described by
766.St -p1003.2 ,
767and what is supported on
768.No non- Ns Bx
769operating systems.
770.Sh HISTORY
771The
772.Nm
773command appeared in
774.At v3
775in section 8 of the manual.
776.Sh BUGS
777Since
778.Nm
779cannot run faster than the system and is run as any other scheduled
780process, the information it displays can never be exact.
781.Pp
782The
783.Nm
784utility does not correctly display argument lists containing multibyte
785characters.
786