Re: no pon!
Martin Bialasinski <martin@internet-treff.uni-koeln.de> writes:
> >> "DP" == David Parmet <dparmet@interport.net> writes:
>
> DP> who is this pid 109 and what does it want with my life?
>
> pid = Process ID
>
> To check what prozess has ID 109 do a "ps ax|grep 109"
Incidentally, if you have the process id already, all you have to do
is:
ps <pid>
That is,
ps 109
The advantage of this is that you also get the headers telling you
what each column means; for example when one does:
ps u 1
And gets:
USER PID %CPU %MEM SIZE RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND
root 1 0.0 0.2 768 76 ? S Jul 26 0:03 init [2]
One has at least some chance of figuring out what all that information
means.
The "ps ax | grep <foo>" idiom is so common that it's sometimes easy
to forget that ps does take non-option arguments.
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Reply to:
- References:
- no pon!
- From: David Parmet <dparmet@interport.net>
- Re: no pon!
- From: Martin Bialasinski <martin@internet-treff.uni-koeln.de>