[#]: subject: "Monitor your Linux system in your terminal with procps-ng" [#]: via: "https://opensource.com/article/21/8/linux-procps-ng" [#]: author: "Seth Kenlon https://opensource.com/users/seth" [#]: collector: "lujun9972" [#]: translator: " " [#]: reviewer: " " [#]: publisher: " " [#]: url: " " Monitor your Linux system in your terminal with procps-ng ====== How to find the process ID (PID) of a program. The most common Linux tools for this are provided by the procps-ng package, including the ps and pstree, pidof, and pgrep commands. ![System monitor][1] A process, in [POSIX][2] terminology, is an ongoing event being managed by an operating system’s kernel. A process is spawned when you launch an application, although there are many other processes running in the background of your computer, including programs to keep your system time accurate, to monitor for new filesystems, to index files, and so on. Most operating systems have a system activity monitor of some kind so you can learn what processes are running at any give moment. Linux has a few for you to choose from, including GNOME System Monitor and KSysGuard. Both are useful applications on the desktop, but Linux also provides the ability to monitor your system in your terminal. Regardless of which you choose, it’s a common task for those who take an active role in managing their computer is to examine a specific process. In this article, I demonstrate how to find the process ID (PID) of a program. The most common tools for this are provided by the [procps-ng][3] package, including the `ps` and `pstree`, `pidof`, and `pgrep` commands. ### Find the PID of a running program Sometimes you want to get the process ID (PID) of a specific application you know you have running. The `pidof` and `pgrep` commands find processes by command name. The `pidof` command returns the PIDs of a command, searching for the exact command by name: ``` $ pidof bash 1776 5736 ``` The `pgrep` command allows for regular expressions (regex): ``` $ pgrep .sh 1605 1679 1688 1776 2333 5736 $ pgrep bash 5736 ``` ### Find a PID by file You can find the PID of the process using a specific file with the `fuser` command. ``` $ fuser --user ~/example.txt                     /home/tux/example.txt:  3234(tux) ``` ### Get a process name by PID If you have the PID _number_ of a process but not the command that spawned it, you can do a "reverse lookup" with `ps`: ``` $ ps 3234  PID TTY      STAT   TIME COMMAND 5736 pts/1    Ss     0:00 emacs ``` ### List all processes The `ps` command lists processes. You can list every process on your system with the `-e` option: ``` $ ps -e | less PID TTY          TIME CMD   1 ?        00:00:03 systemd   2 ?        00:00:00 kthreadd   3 ?        00:00:00 rcu_gp   4 ?        00:00:00 rcu_par_gp   6 ?        00:00:00 kworker/0:0H-events_highpri [...] 5648 ?        00:00:00 gnome-control-c 5656 ?        00:00:00 gnome-terminal- 5736 pts/1    00:00:00 bash 5791 pts/1    00:00:00 ps 5792 pts/1    00:00:00 less (END) ``` ### List just your processes The output of `ps -e` can be overwhelming, so use `-U` to see the processes of just one user: ``` $ ps -U tux | less  PID TTY          TIME CMD 3545 ?        00:00:00 systemd 3548 ?        00:00:00 (sd-pam) 3566 ?        00:00:18 pulseaudio 3570 ?        00:00:00 gnome-keyring-d 3583 ?        00:00:00 dbus-daemon 3589 tty2     00:00:00 gdm-wayland-ses 3592 tty2     00:00:00 gnome-session-b 3613 ?        00:00:00 gvfsd 3618 ?        00:00:00 gvfsd-fuse 3665 tty2     00:01:03 gnome-shell [...] ``` That produces 200 fewer (give or take a hundred, depending on the system you're running it on) processes to sort through. You can view the same output in a different format with the `pstree` command: ``` $ pstree -U tux -u --show-pids [...] ├─gvfsd-metadata(3921)─┬─{gvfsd-metadata}(3923) │                      └─{gvfsd-metadata}(3924) ├─ibus-portal(3836)─┬─{ibus-portal}(3840) │                   └─{ibus-portal}(3842) ├─obexd(5214) ├─pulseaudio(3566)─┬─{pulseaudio}(3640) │                  ├─{pulseaudio}(3649) │                  └─{pulseaudio}(5258) ├─tracker-store(4150)─┬─{tracker-store}(4153) │                     ├─{tracker-store}(4154) │                     ├─{tracker-store}(4157) │                     └─{tracker-store}(4178) └─xdg-permission-(3847)─┬─{xdg-permission-}(3848)                         └─{xdg-permission-}(3850) ``` ### List just your processes with context You can see extra context for all of the processes you own with the `-u` option. ``` $ ps -U tux -u USER  PID %CPU %MEM    VSZ   RSS TTY STAT START  TIME COMMAND tux  3545  0.0  0.0  89656  9708 ?   Ss   13:59  0:00 /usr/lib/systemd/systemd --user tux  3548  0.0  0.0 171416  5288 ?   S    13:59  0:00 (sd-pam) tux  3566  0.9  0.1 1722212 17352 ?  S<sl 13:59  0:29 /usr/bin/pulseaudio [...] tux  3570  0.0  0.0 664736  8036 ?   SLl  13:59  0:00 /usr/bin/gnome-keyring-daemon [...] [...] tux  5736  0.0  0.0 235628  6036 pts/1 Ss 14:18  0:00 bash tux  6227  0.0  0.4 2816872 74512 tty2 Sl+14:30  0:00 /opt/firefox/firefox-bin [...] tux  6660  0.0  0.0 268524  3996 pts/1 R+ 14:50  0:00 ps -U tux -u tux  6661  0.0  0.0 219468  2460 pts/1 S+ 14:50  0:00 less ``` ### Troubleshoot with PIDs If you’re having trouble with a specific application, or you’re just curious about what else on your system an application uses, you can see a memory map of the running process with `pmap`: ``` $ pmap 1776 5736:   bash 000055f9060ec000   1056K r-x-- bash 000055f9063f3000     16K r---- bash 000055f906400000     40K rw---   [ anon ] 00007faf0fa67000   9040K r--s- passwd 00007faf1033b000     40K r-x-- libnss_sss.so.2 00007faf10345000   2044K ----- libnss_sss.so.2 00007faf10545000      4K rw--- libnss_sss.so.2 00007faf10546000 212692K r---- locale-archive 00007faf1d4fb000   1776K r-x-- libc-2.28.so 00007faf1d6b7000   2044K ----- libc-2.28.so 00007faf1d8ba000      8K rw--- libc-2.28.so [...] ``` ### Process IDs The **procps-ng** package has all the commands you need to investigate and monitor what your system is using at any moment. Whether you’re just curious about how all the disparate parts of a Linux system fit together, or whether you’re investigating an error, or you’re looking to optimize how your computer is performing, learning these commands gives you a significant advantage for understanding your OS. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- via: https://opensource.com/article/21/8/linux-procps-ng 作者:[Seth Kenlon][a] 选题:[lujun9972][b] 译者:[译者ID](https://github.com/译者ID) 校对:[校对者ID](https://github.com/校对者ID) 本文由 [LCTT](https://github.com/LCTT/TranslateProject) 原创编译,[Linux中国](https://linux.cn/) 荣誉推出 [a]: https://opensource.com/users/seth [b]: https://github.com/lujun9972 [1]: https://opensource.com/sites/default/files/styles/image-full-size/public/system-monitor-splash.png?itok=0UqsjuBQ (System monitor) [2]: https://opensource.com/article/19/7/what-posix-richard-stallman-explains [3]: https://gitlab.com/procps-ng