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Full Discussion: find a process age
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers find a process age Post 97994 by Perderabo on Friday 3rd of February 2006 04:47:38 PM
Old 02-03-2006
I don't understand how the process age fits into this problem. In general, no, it is hard to get the age of a process. The tools mostly display start time. So you need to do calculations. I believe that you use SunOS, though. Bear in mind that on a Sun, you can using the find command on processes by using /proc. Each process gets a subdirectory. So as root you can do:
cd /proc
find . ! -name . -prune -mtime +3 -print | xargs ls -ld
or something like that.
 

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ptree(1)							   User Commands							  ptree(1)

NAME
ptree - print process trees SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/ptree [-a] [-c] [-z zone] [pid | user]... DESCRIPTION
The ptree utility prints the process trees containing the specified pids or users, with child processes indented from their respective par- ent processes. An argument of all digits is taken to be a process-ID, otherwise it is assumed to be a user login name. The default is all processes. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -a All. Print all processes, including children of process 0. -c Contracts. Print process contract memberships in addition to parent-child relationships. See process(4). This option implies the -a option. -z zone Zones. Print only processes in the specified zone. Each zone ID can be specified as either a zone name or a numerical zone ID. This option is only useful when executed in the global zone. OPERANDS
The following operands are supported: pid Process-id or a list of process-ids. ptree also accepts /proc/nnn as a process-id, so the shell expansion /proc/* can be used to specify all processes in the system. user Username or list of usernames. Processes whose effective user IDs match those given are displayed. EXAMPLES
Example 1 Using ptree The following example prints the process tree (including children of process 0) for processes which match the command name ssh: $ ptree -a `pgrep ssh` 1 /sbin/init 100909 /usr/lib/ssh/sshd 569150 /usr/lib/ssh/sshd 569157 /usr/lib/ssh/sshd 569159 -ksh 569171 bash 569173 /bin/ksh 569193 bash EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful operation. non-zero An error has occurred. FILES
/proc/* process files ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWesu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |See below. | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ The human readable output is Unstable. The options are Evolving. SEE ALSO
gcore(1), ldd(1), pargs(1), pgrep(1), pkill(1), plimit(1), pmap(1), preap(1), proc(1), ps(1), ppgsz(1), pwd(1), rlogin(1), time(1), truss(1), wait(1), fcntl(2), fstat(2), setuid(2), dlopen(3C), signal.h(3HEAD), core(4), proc(4), process(4), attributes(5), zones(5) SunOS 5.11 11 Oct 2005 ptree(1)
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