can someone tell me the meaning of this commnad,
If you want to see a grand total of CPU time for a program when it finishes running, you can use the time command. At the Unix prompt, enter:
time java myprog
Replace myprog with the name of the program you are running. The following is an... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
Can someone extending on what the time field is explaining in a ps command.
Man page only has this:
time The cumulative execution time for the process.
Is this a combined CPU time? if that is the case then it should be impossible to have a 00:00 time on any process.
... (1 Reply)
Process start time is not showing the correct time:
I had started a process on Jun 17th at 23:30:00.
Next day morning when I run the command "ps -ef | grep mq", the process is showing the start date of Jun 17th but the start time is 00:16:41
Day/Date is setup correctly on the server.
It... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file that has data in it that says
00:01:48.233 1212
00:01:56.233 345
00:09:01.221 5678
00:12:23.321 93444
The file has more line than this but i just wanted to put in a snippet to ask how I would get the highest number with time stamp into another file. So from the above... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have 2 queries
1 .when I run some unix command, I am getting the output of "time" at std output (screen)
for eg
zegrep <pattern> *.v.gz
I almost found the reason but not sure, if the no of files matching *.v.gz is more then I am getting the time command output at the... (5 Replies)
Hi All
I am trying to run a script in linux wherein i have a command like this
grep ^prmAttunityUser= djpHewr2XFMAttunitySetup_ae1_tmp
djpHewr2XFMAttunitySetup_ae1_tmp is a temporary file in which the user value is stored but this command in the script returns me balnk value whereas it has a... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I am listing the files which are 4 hours older. For this first I have creted a dummy file with the 4 hours before timestamp, then I am using the below find command,
find /path/ -type f ! -newer 4_hours_oledr_file -exec ls -lrt {} \;
I am getting the files which are older than... (13 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I have a situation here, where no command is giving any output, and it's not even showing any error message also.
What could be the reason? (3 Replies)
Hello, I want to run a field from an awk command through a command in bash.
For example my input file is
1,2,3
20,30,40
60,70,80
I want tot run $2 thought the command
date +%d/%m/%y -d"01/01/15 + $2 days -1 day"
and get the output
1,02/01/15,3
20,30/01/15,40
60,11/03/15,80
... (2 Replies)
I am measuring the time it takes for a wget command to complete.
Right now my command is:
time wget https://`ifconfig -a | grep '32.29.120' | cut -d: -f2 | cut -d' ' -f1`:8443/primary-rest/shop?brandId=test --header="name: test" --no-check-certificate -o SELF_TEST.log
The output I get is ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Junaid Subhani
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
ps
PS(1) General Commands Manual PS(1)NAME
ps - process status
SYNOPSIS
ps [-alxU] [kernel mm fs]
OPTIONS -a Print all processes with controlling terminals
-l Give long listing
-x Include processes without a terminal
EXAMPLES
ps -axl # Print all processes and tasks in long format
DESCRIPTION
Ps prints the status of active processes. Normally only the caller's own processes are listed in short format (the PID, TTY, TIME and CMD
fields as explained below). The long listing contains:
F Kernel flags: 001: free slot 002: no memory map 004: sending; 010: receiving 020:
inform on pending signals 040: pending signals 100: being traced.
S State: R: runnable W: waiting (on a message) S: sleeping (i.e.,suspended on MM or FS) Z:
zombie T: stopped
UID, PID, PPID, PGRP The user, process, parent process and process group ID's.
SZ Size of the process in kilobytes.
RECV Process/task on which a receiving process is waiting or sleeping.
TTY Controlling tty for the process.
TIME Process' cumulative (user + system) execution time.
CMD Command line arguments of the process.
The files /dev/{mem,kmem} are used to read the system tables and command line arguments from. Terminal names in /dev are used to generate
the mnemonic names in the TTY column, so ps is independent of terminal naming conventions.
PS(1)