Florian Obser <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 2022-09-01 09:55 -06, "Theo de Raadt" <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Job Snijders <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >> On Thu, Sep 01, 2022 at 03:14:40PM +0200, Martin Schröder wrote:
> >> > Am Do., 1. Sept. 2022 um 05:38 Uhr schrieb Job Snijders 
> >> > <[email protected]>:
> >> > > Some ps(1) implementations have an '-d' ('descendancy') option. Through
> >> > > ASCII art parent/child process relationships are grouped and displayed.
> >> > >
> >> > > Thoughts?
> >> > 
> >> > gnu ps has
> >> > 
> >> > -d     Select all processes except session leaders.
> >> > 
> >> > and
> >> > 
> >> >        f      ASCII art process hierarchy (forest).
> >> > 
> >> >        --forest
> >> >               ASCII art process tree.
> >> 
> >> GNU ps uses both '-f', '--forest', and '-H' to display process
> >> hierarchy. The '-H' option uses indenting (no ASCII art).
> >> 
> >> NetBSD's and FreeBSD's ps(1) use '-d' to display process hierarchy.
> >
> > using -f would follow the path of least resistance.  Is there really a 
> > common
> > user commnity between freebsd netbsd and openbsd?  I doubt it.
> >
> 
> Curious, my Jesus Laptop (macOS 12.5) has
>      -A      Display information about other users' processes, including
>              those without controlling terminals.
> [...]
>      -d      Like -A, but excludes session leaders.
> 
> It does not have this feature at all. Is this a new thing in FreeBSD?

A lot of macos is really old, and does not follow any upstream.
 

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