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   ps.1p    ( 1 )

отчет о состоянии процесса (report process status)

Стандартный вывод (Stdout)

When the -o option is not specified, the standard output format is unspecified.

On XSI-conformant systems, the output format shall be as follows. The column headings and descriptions of the columns in a ps listing are given below. The precise meanings of these fields are implementation-defined. The letters 'f' and 'l' (below) indicate the option (full or long) that shall cause the corresponding heading to appear; all means that the heading always appears. Note that these two options determine only what information is provided for a process; they do not determine which processes are listed.

F (l) Flags (octal and additive) associated with the process. S (l) The state of the process. UID (f,l) The user ID number of the process owner; the login name is printed under the -f option. PID (all) The process ID of the process; it is possible to kill a process if this datum is known. PPID (f,l) The process ID of the parent process. C (f,l) Processor utilization for scheduling. PRI (l) The priority of the process; higher numbers mean lower priority. NI (l) Nice value; used in priority computation. ADDR (l) The address of the process.

SZ (l) The size in blocks of the core image of the process. WCHAN (l) The event for which the process is waiting or sleeping; if blank, the process is running. STIME (f) Starting time of the process. TTY (all) The controlling terminal for the process. TIME (all) The cumulative execution time for the process. CMD (all) The command name; the full command name and its arguments are written under the -f option.

A process that has exited and has a parent, but has not yet been waited for by the parent, shall be marked defunct.

Under the option -f, ps tries to determine the command name and arguments given when the process was created by examining memory or the swap area. Failing this, the command name, as it would appear without the option -f, is written in square brackets.

The -o option allows the output format to be specified under user control.

The application shall ensure that the format specification is a list of names presented as a single argument, <blank> or <comma>-separated. Each variable has a default header. The default header can be overridden by appending an <equals-sign> and the new text of the header. The rest of the characters in the argument shall be used as the header text. The fields specified shall be written in the order specified on the command line, and should be arranged in columns in the output. The field widths shall be selected by the system to be at least as wide as the header text (default or overridden value). If the header text is null, such as -o user=, the field width shall be at least as wide as the default header text. If all header text fields are null, no header line shall be written.

The following names are recognized in the POSIX locale:

ruser The real user ID of the process. This shall be the textual user ID, if it can be obtained and the field width permits, or a decimal representation otherwise.

user The effective user ID of the process. This shall be the textual user ID, if it can be obtained and the field width permits, or a decimal representation otherwise.

rgroup The real group ID of the process. This shall be the textual group ID, if it can be obtained and the field width permits, or a decimal representation otherwise.

group The effective group ID of the process. This shall be the textual group ID, if it can be obtained and the field width permits, or a decimal representation otherwise.

pid The decimal value of the process ID.

ppid The decimal value of the parent process ID.

pgid The decimal value of the process group ID.

pcpu The ratio of CPU time used recently to CPU time available in the same period, expressed as a percentage. The meaning of ``recently'' in this context is unspecified. The CPU time available is determined in an unspecified manner.

vsz The size of the process in (virtual) memory in 1024 byte units as a decimal integer.

nice The decimal value of the nice value of the process; see nice.

etime In the POSIX locale, the elapsed time since the process was started, in the form:

[[dd-]hh:]mm:ss

where dd shall represent the number of days, hh the number of hours, mm the number of minutes, and ss the number of seconds. The dd field shall be a decimal integer. The hh, mm, and ss fields shall be two-digit decimal integers padded on the left with zeros.

time In the POSIX locale, the cumulative CPU time of the process in the form:

[dd-]hh:mm:ss

The dd, hh, mm, and ss fields shall be as described in the etime specifier.

tty The name of the controlling terminal of the process (if any) in the same format used by the who utility.

comm The name of the command being executed (argv[0] value) as a string.

args The command with all its arguments as a string. The implementation may truncate this value to the field width; it is implementation-defined whether any further truncation occurs. It is unspecified whether the string represented is a version of the argument list as it was passed to the command when it started, or is a version of the arguments as they may have been modified by the application. Applications cannot depend on being able to modify their argument list and having that modification be reflected in the output of ps.

Any field need not be meaningful in all implementations. In such a case a <hyphen-minus> ('-') should be output in place of the field value.

Only comm and args shall be allowed to contain <blank> characters; all others shall not. Any implementation-defined variables shall be specified in the system documentation along with the default header and indicating whether the field may contain <blank> characters.

The following table specifies the default header to be used in the POSIX locale corresponding to each format specifier.

Table: Variable Names and Default Headers in ps

┌──────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────┐ │Format Specifier Default Header Format Specifier Default Header │ ├──────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────┤ │args COMMAND ppid PPID │ │comm COMMAND rgroup RGROUP │ │etime ELAPSED ruser RUSER │ │group GROUP time TIME │ │nice NI tty TT │ │pcpu %CPU user USER │ │pgid PGID vsz VSZ │ │pid PID │ │ └──────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────┘