output-format keyword, and the keyword they picked is an alias to
some other keyword. E.g.: ps -o stat=Zustand $$
('stat' is defined as an alias for 'state')
PR: bin/57833
MFC after: 3 weeks
- Document the fact that empty heading text suppresses the
heading line (e.g. 'ps -o pid='), as this is very useful
in scripts.
- Describe logname keyword more completely.
- Describe the printing of arguments more completely.
- Put lockname in the correct alphabetical order in the list
of all keywords.
- Correct sentence in standards section.
Submitted by: Jilles Tjoelker <jilles at stack nl>
PR: docs/73618
MFC After: 1 week
to exceed 10 megabytes in size (especially in X), bump the max
column width from 4 bytes to 5. This will make the ps auxw output
uniform again when a process's rss exceeds 10 megs.
It should be noted that when 5 digits becomes to small, other
solutions should be explored such as displaying them in megabytes
or having ps automatically re-size column widths.
Discussed with: gad
MFC after: 1 week
printing of the process environment will fail silently.
-define a function which will check to see if procfs is mounted on /proc
-Implement this test if the user specified -e
-If procfs is not mounted on /proc and -e was specified, print a warning.
informing the user that procfs(5) is required.
Reviewed by: wes, rwatson
(aka "command") will display "<defunct>", as does the output from "comm"
for those processes. Also do better checking for malloc() failures.
Submitted by: Cyrille Lefevre
threads, put the command name in square brackets instead of parenthesis.
This matches NetBSD, and also seems to be what linux does. The sentence
which is added to the man page is taken straight from NetBSD.
PR: bin/65803
Submitted by: Cyrille Lefevre
Obtained from: NetBSD
kvm_getprocs() will provide useful information if it can, or *it*
will provide a zero value if it can not find something appropriate.
Submitted by: bde
Any [standard output] field need not be meaningful in all
implementations. In such a case a hyphen ('-') should be
output in place of the field value
So have the `-O label' option print out the string " -" if the
process has no label.
Approved by: Silence from rwatson and green (when asked in March...)
and number-of-threads tied to a process. Result can be seen by typing,
e.g.: ps -HO lwp,nlwp
These new options are not documented yet. More options will be coming,
and I will update the man page after I get farther along.
PR: bin/65803 (though adjusted to fit our present source)
Submitted by: Cyrille Lefevre
when copying per-process info before starting to sort the list. This way,
sort-by-CPU or sort-by-memory will only calculate values once-per-process,
instead of twice-per-comparison. Also take advantage of this to simplify
the pscomp() routine.
process id, instead of using pid==0. Ie, `ps -p 12,' and `ps -p ,12'
are now errors (instead of being treated like `ps -p 0 -p 12').
Noticed by: Cyrille Lefevre on freebsd-arch
is treated like `ps -t p0', instead of changing it to `ps -T p0'.
Note that `ps t' is still changed to `ps -T', since that is one of
the main reasons for this kludge processing...
Noticed by: Jilles Tjoelker on freebsd-arch
more special situations. This is the code which process `ps blah',
when "blah" does not include a leading '-'.
This change also removes a long-undocumented BACKWARD_COMPATIBILITY
compile-time option, where:
ps -options arg1 arg2
(with no '-' on "arg1" and "arg2") was treated as:
ps -options -N arg1 -M arg2
This also changes `ps' to check for any additional arguments after
processing all the '-'-options, and attempt to use those arguments as
a pid or pidlist. If an extra argument is not a valid pidlist, then
`ps' will print an error and exit. This seems a more generally useful
extension of the kludge-option processing than the -N/-M behavior, and
has fewer confusing side-effects.
Reviewed by: freebsd-arch
(if trying to match only one real-group or one session-id), now that
those options are implemented in src/sys/kern/kern_proc.c (v1.203).
PR: bin/65803 (a very tiny piece of the PR)
Submitted by: Cyrille Lefevre