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
This corrects a problem of lost-precision for `-r' (sort-by-CPU). Also,
for sort-by-CPU and sort-by-memory, any processes which have the same
value CPU or MEMORY are now sorted by TTY and then (if needed) by pid.
(* - I just added the NODEV checks, after doing some testing of my own)
Submitted by: bde
MFC after: 1 week
(if any) and exit, thus matching the behavior on -stable and other OS's.
My earlier attempt to fix this (v1.65) only seemed to work because of a
lucky random value in nentries (which was not being initialized back
when I tested that earlier patch).
is compiled with LAZY_PS, so that there is only one PS_ARGS string to
modify when changing the option-list. Also get `-f' to show up in the
usage() statement when compiled with LAZY_PS.
- Change `-p' to allow a list of process IDs, and `-t' to allow a list
of terminal names, instead of only a single value for each.
- Add the `-A' option of SUSv3, which is exactly the same as `-ax'.
- Add the `-G gidlist' (group id).
- Allow any of these "selector options" to be specified multiple times,
and have `ps' keep adding to a given list -- instead of replacing the
previously-specified values.
- Fix interactions between selector-options, so that: "If any are
specified, ... ps shall select the processes represented by the
inclusive OR of all the selection-criteria options." (from SUSv3)
- Add a `-X' option, which is the reverse of the `-x' option.
- various minor improvements in parsing and error handling.
This does not get us to match POSIX/SUSv3, but it gets us closer. The
`-g pgidlist', `-R ruserlist' and `-s sidlist' options mentioned in
freebsd-standards are still under debate, so they skipped for now.
It should be true that this introduces no user-visible incompatible
changes, except to support "new stuff" that was not supported before.
sysctl(3) interface in kvm(3).
- Document the correct default when no -N is specified.
- Remove stale reference to /var/db/kvm_kernel.db.
- Remove stale reference to /var/run/dev.db.
just print the header (if any) and exit, thus matching the behavior on -stable
and other OS's.
Also adds support for <x> being a comma-separated list of processes, and does
a much better checking for invalid-values of <x>, such as 'ps -p someword'.
Reviewed by: mentioned on freebsd-current
MFC after: 10 days
* Remove mention of '>', 'A', and 'S' states
* Mention 'W' state.
* List 'J' state in the correct location.
* Sync with flags in sys/proc.h
Approved by: rwatson (mentor)
MFC after: 7 days
one that is already there. This is consistent with GNU ps(1)'s BSD mode, and
POLA.
Reported by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
Tested by: Andy Farkas <andyf@speednet.com.au>
the LOMAC-specific interface (which is being deprecated). The
revised LOMAC using the MAC framework will export levels listable
using this mechanism.
Approved by: re
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, Network Associates Laboratories
off_t is for offsets in files, and it is signed so it was no better
than the original type of int for avoiding warnings from broken lints,
except accidentally on machines like i386's where size_t is smaller
than off_t.
ps(1) formatting, using pgtok() to get the value in K, rather than printing
it in pages. This is consistent with behaviour before keyword.c:1.26 (et al)
which exists in STABLE today, and which uses the same metric as VSZ.
Submitted by: bde
to the Makefile didn't affect this bug because WFORMAT only controls
higher- level format checking (not the -Wformat that is implicit in
-Wall).
Fixed a nearby printf format error that was benign and 3 nearby style bugs.
second character represents some option taking an argument. This fixes
problem when ps(1) is invoked for examply as follows:
$ ps -Ufoobar1234
the above example results in option string being interpreted as
-U foobarp1234 - note extra `p'.
Reported by: Vladimir Sotnikov <vovan@kyivstar.net>
MFC after: 2 weeks
again, but also allow it in the user-specified header, too. This is far more
backwards compatible and SUSv3-happy than allowing only comma to seperate the
keywords list.
Submitted by: tjr
was worried about truncation of arg_max by this cast, but if it gets truncated,
we know it'll obviously be greater than SIZE_MAX anyway.
Big pointy hat to: jmallett
Submitted by: keramida