Hi Rahul,
you may need to look at "man ps" in linux. there are examples given in
the "man ps". some are pasted...
EXAMPLES
To see every process on the system using standard syntax:
ps -e
ps -ef
ps -eF
ps -ely
To print a process tree:
ps -ejH
ps axjf
To get info about threads:
ps -eLf
ps axms
To get security info:
ps -eo euser,ruser,suser,fuser,f,comm,label
ps axZ
ps -eM
To see every process running as root (real & effective ID) in user
format:
ps -U root -u root u
To see every process with a user-defined format:
ps -eo pid,tid,class,rtprio,ni,pri,psr,pcpu,stat,wchan:14,comm
ps axo stat,euid,ruid,tty,tpgid,sess,pgrp,ppid,pid,pcpu,comm
ps -eopid,tt,user,fname,tmout,f,wchan
Print only the process IDs of syslogd:
ps -C syslogd -o pid=
Print only the name of PID 42:
ps -p 42 -o comm=
On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 2:15 PM, Rahul Kumar <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just want to know the command option for ps...so that i can see the
> complete arguments for the executable running. Right now, i'm seeing
> the truncated output. This i need because i would like to rerun the
> process with the same arguments.
>
> Can any one help me out on this.
>
> _______________________________________________
> Kernelnewbies mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies
>
--
Regards,
S. Sengottuvelan.
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