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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers how to find all processes that are running Post 302078741 by Hitori on Tuesday 4th of July 2006 09:37:40 AM
Old 07-04-2006
ps -ef | grep gap44049

Implying that gap44049 is your login you can type simply ps -f instead of ps -ef | grep gap44049.

In output that you recieved there are info about all processes that are being executed (tcsh -the shell, ps, grep commands) (dont know what means ' -tcsh')

-f means full, i.e. show process uids, ppids
-e shows different set of columns
 

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ZGREP(1)						      General Commands Manual							  ZGREP(1)

NAME
zgrep - search possibly compressed files for a regular expression SYNOPSIS
zgrep [ grep_options ] [ -e ] pattern filename... DESCRIPTION
Zgrep is used to invoke the grep on compress'ed or gzip'ed files. All options specified are passed directly to grep. If no file is speci- fied, then the standard input is decompressed if necessary and fed to grep. Otherwise the given files are uncompressed if necessary and fed to grep. If zgrep is invoked as zegrep or zfgrep then egrep or fgrep is used instead of grep. If the GREP environment variable is set, zgrep uses it as the grep program to be invoked. For example: for sh: GREP=fgrep zgrep string files for csh: (setenv GREP fgrep; zgrep string files) AUTHOR
Charles Levert (charles@comm.polymtl.ca) SEE ALSO
grep(1), egrep(1), fgrep(1), zdiff(1), zmore(1), znew(1), zforce(1), gzip(1), gzexe(1) ZGREP(1)
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