Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Process information
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Process information Post 302099697 by Corona688 on Wednesday 13th of December 2006 11:28:52 AM
Old 12-13-2006
You don't have to use a program to see the information available on a process, you can see it directly in /proc/, a virtual directory provided by the kernel. Process 1235 would have information available in /proc/1235/ for instance.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Process Information

Hi, If we have a process p1 running and then p2 attempts to shutdown p1. Is there a means for p1 to know who has requested him to shutdown Thanks and regards, Reji (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rejise
1 Replies

2. Programming

Process Run time information

Hello, I am working on Sun Solaris 5.7. I am trying to read the running time of a process through a C program. One way I am reading it is by using the command ps -<pid> -f The other way is from the struct psinfo_t which is there under /proc/pid/psinfo. However, the two times are... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hmurali
1 Replies

3. Programming

Obtaining Process information on AIX

I have written a program to collect some performance metrics on and AIX box, but I'm having difficultly getting the process information. I'm lead to believe that I'm not getting the correct information because I'm trying to run the program on AIX 5.1 (5100-03), but I'm not convinced as the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: StuBob
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Report Process Information (Help me)

I need a script to record top 5 processes to a file. I need the timestamp, cpu and memory utilization along with the process ID. Thanks in advance! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jabcd
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

get process information remotely

Hello, We have a domain where instances attached to it are in multiple machines. Is there any way that I can get the process information of the domain of a secondary server from the primary. ssh authentication is enabled on the functional ID and if I scsu to that ID and do the ssh: $ssh machine2... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: chiru_h
0 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

get Thread information from process

Hello all im trying to build small script in tcsh that will monitor some process that are making some api calles to some server . first of all im trying to find way to see how many threads each process is using , and else how can i print each Thread id . can it be done ? ( using sunOs ) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: umen
2 Replies

7. Programming

reading process information

Can any one tell me is there any problem in reading the /proc/#/status file for finding out the exact process name..??? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: clintoo
4 Replies

8. Solaris

Need Information About Process

Hi All:- 1- i am working in unix system that is runnign some script 2- this script put the log file into specific folder 3- the log does not include the start time of the script and the end time What i need to know what is the duration time for each request Note:- I don't any thing... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dellsh
3 Replies

9. Solaris

ZFS get process I/O information

Hi Guys Is it possible to display which process generates the most i/o on my zpool? With # zpool iostst 3 and iostat i just see the general i/o but not the i/o on the process level. thx in advance, Fry (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: fryzh
0 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Process Scheduling Information Extraction

I want to extract the process having highest utilization on each processor core and then output its information (PID etc.) to a file. How can I do it by using either top or ps command? Thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Vaibhavs1985
1 Replies
PROC(3) 						     Library Functions Manual							   PROC(3)

NAME
proc - running processes SYNOPSIS
bind #p /proc /proc/n/ctl /proc/n/mem /proc/n/note /proc/n/noteid /proc/n/notepg /proc/n/proc /proc/n/segment /proc/n/status /proc/n/text /proc/n/wait ... DESCRIPTION
The proc device serves a two-level directory structure. The first level contains numbered directories corresponding to pids of live pro- cesses; each such directory contains a set of files representing the corresponding process. The mem file contains the current memory image of the process. A read or write at offset o, which must be a valid virtual address, accesses bytes from address o up to the end of the memory segment containing o. Kernel virtual memory, including the kernel stack for the process and saved user registers (whose addresses are machine-dependent), can be accessed through mem. Writes are permitted only while the process is in the Stopped state and only to user addresses or registers. The read-only proc file contains the kernel per-process structure. Its main use is to recover the kernel stack and program counter for kernel debugging. The read-only segment file contains a textual display of the memory segments attached to the process. Each line has multiple fields: the type of segment (Stack, Text, Data, Bss, etc.); one-letter flags such as R for read-only, if any; starting virtual address, in hexadecimal; ending virtual address, and reference count. The read-only status file contains a string with eight fields, each followed by a space. The fields are: the process name and user name, each 27 characters left justified; the process state, 11 characters left justified (see ps(1)); the six 11-character numbers also held in the process's #c/cputime file, and the amount of memory used by the process, except its stack, in units of 1024 bytes. The text file is a pseudonym for the file from which the process was executed; its main use is to recover the symbol table of the process. The wait file may be read to recover Waitmsg records from the exiting children of the process. If the process has no extant children, liv- ing or exited, a read of wait will block. It is an error for a process to attempt to read its own wait file when it has no children. When a process's wait file is being read, the process will draw an error if it attempts a wait system call; similarly, if a process is in a wait system call, its wait file cannot be read by any process. Textual messages written to the ctl file control the execution of the process. Some require that the process is in a particular state and return an error if it is not. stop Suspend execution of the process, putting it in the Stopped state. start Resume execution of a Stopped process. waitstop Do not affect the process directly but, like all other messages ending with stop, block the process writing the ctl file until the target process is in the Stopped state or exits. Also like other stop control messages, if the target process would receive a note while the message is pending, it is instead stopped and the debugging process is resumed. startstop Allow a Stopped process to resume, and then do a waitstop action. hang Set a bit in the process so that, when it completes an exec(2) system call, it will enter the Stopped state before returning to user mode. This bit is inherited across a fork(2). nohang Clear the hang bit. kill Kill the process the next time it crosses the user/kernel boundary. Strings written to the note file will be posted as a note to the process (see notify(2)). The note should be less than characters long; the last character is reserved for a terminating NUL character. A read of at least characters will retrieve the oldest note posted to the process and prevent its delivery to the process. The notepg file is similar, but the note will be delivered to all the processes in the target process's note group (see fork(2)). However, if the process doing the write is in the group, it will not receive the note. The notepg file is write-only. The textual noteid file may be read to recover an integer identifying the note group of the process (see RFNOTEG in fork(2)). The file may be written to cause the process to change to another note group, provided the group exists and is owned by the same user. FILES
/sys/src/9/*/mem.h /sys/src/9/*/dat.h SEE ALSO
debugger(2), mach(2), cons(3) SOURCE
/sys/src/9/port/devproc.c PROC(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:14 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy