General :: How To Count How Many Of Processes Are Running
Nov 3, 2010I list all the instances of a running process my doing:ps -ef | grep myprogramThis lists all them.how can I simply output a count of how many are running?
View 2 RepliesI list all the instances of a running process my doing:ps -ef | grep myprogramThis lists all them.how can I simply output a count of how many are running?
View 2 RepliesGNU/linux kernel 2.6, Slackware 12.0.Hi:How do I know what processes are running?
View 6 Replies View RelatedThe command used to view processes running on the Linux machine is?
View 8 Replies View Relatedhow to write a shell script the searches for processes running on my system. I really don't know where to start. can anyone give me a hand and explain how the script works?
View 3 Replies View Relatedhow to list the currently running processes via code a shell script. FYI i now about the top method in the terminal but i need a way to have it via a shell script.
View 4 Replies View RelatedI'm trying to get the end result to have the same format as this as well:
1 bin
2 daemon
67 erozner
[code]....
Where the numbers are the number of processes being run by the user (the name right next to it).if I input the command egrep myFile into the terminal, it should look for every line with the letter x in myFile, right?
Are there any tools to view/edit user space memory of running processes on Linux?
It would be a great learning tool.
I have centos 5.2.....i get this error while booting...the total hard disk is about 1160 GB....This server is used for file share....it has lots of datas........is it recommended to run fsck.....i am afraid that i will lose datas....is there any way to sort this issue....logs and fstab details are as follows
error on boot
FSTAB
Previously I had posted a question on how to make it run every 7 minutes between 7 and and 11pm.However now I found out what I really need is every 7 minuted between 7:30 and 11pm BUT it has to be every 7 minutes, it cannot reset itself on the top of every hour, so the */7 wont work.How can it that it will be every 7 minutes, so it will go at 7:30, 37,44,51, 58, 8:05, etc..
View 4 Replies View RelatedI have the following perl/DBI script:
Quote:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use DBI;
my ($db, $user, $pw) = ('dbname', '****', '***********');
my $dbh = DBI->connect("DBI:mysql:$db",$user,$pw) or die "Cannot connect to $db: $DBI::errstr
[code].....
The error message is
[Wed Feb 24 13:03:27 2010] myscript.cgi: DBD::mysql::st execute failed: Column count doesn't match value count at row 1 at myscript.cgi. [Wed Feb 24 13:03:27 2010] myscript.cgi: DBI::db=HASH(0x8a30c60)->errstr
Does Debian 6 "Squeeze" automatically run boot processes in parallel if not how do I
configure it to do so. Here is the quote from my /etc/init.d/rc :
# Specify method used to enable concurrent init.d scripts.
# Valid options are 'none' and 'makefile'. Obsolete options
[code]...
I would like to do the following: Create a banner for any user logging in through ssh which warns him/her about the number of processors being used already by other users (or conversely the number of free processors). For example, if a user logged in he would then see a message like: Warning! 7 out of 8 processors are in use.I already figured out how to do a banner and with ps -e -o pcpu I can get all processes' %CPU usage. I think I would like to count the number of processes which have more than 90% CPU usage and output this number ("7" in the example) in the banner
View 7 Replies View RelatedTo: The Cog >>>
Code:
The Cog, heres the reszults for ps -ef | grep tty:
yo mama@blah:~$ ps -ef | grep tty
[code]....
Ubuntu 10.10. I am curious if there is kind of task manager in ubuntu I can see running processes etc? Like windows task manager?
View 5 Replies View RelatedHow can I find the PID for all processes running for a particular port?
View 3 Replies View RelatedMy University gives us access to a Linux server, named stud1.
Code:
me@stud1:~$ uname -a
Linux stud1.some.univ.ac 2.6.9-89.31.1.ELsmp #1 SMP Mon Oct 4 21:41:59 EDT 2010 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
Apparently I was logged in, and never logged out sometime:
Code:
me@stud1:~$ who
<snip>
me pts/37 Jan 30 13:27 (6.6.66.66)
<snip>
me pts/58 Dec 30 19:13
but when trying to find out why I'm still logged in, I can't find it:
Code:
me@stud1:~$ ps faux |grep me
root 30030 0.0 0.0 51128 4360 ? Ss 13:27 0:00 \_ sshd: me [priv]
me 30033 0.0 0.0 51132 2336 ? S 13:27 0:00 \_ sshd: me@pts/37
[code]....
how can I logout this unused session?
I have p1,p2,p3,p4 some processes created by me in C. p1, p2, p3 are started individually from several consoles. And I want process p4 to terminates processes p1, p2, p3 if they are running. Which is the easiest way to accomplish that? put all processes in the same process group and send from p4 a kill signal to the group. But I couldn't do that because I cannot call successfully setpgid(getpid(), 15000) from p1-p4. It's there some way to put them in the same group? the processes don't have a child-parent relationship, they are launched manually from consoles.
View 1 Replies View RelatedWhen I ps -e, I see a whole bunch of processes, many more that when I ran Slackware.Is there a list of processess I can look at to see what they are and what ones I dont need, instead of googling each one and getting some cryptic explanation?
View 2 Replies View Relatedis there any possible way to hide currently running processes from an user? This means I do not want him to know about what programs/processes does any other user but him run. In short words if that user runs 'ps -aux' he should get only his processes.
View 3 Replies View RelatedI'm looking for a command that will give me a list of users (unique, dont name my user account 60 times) that are running processes on a system.
View 5 Replies View RelatedWhen I open top and look at the running processes, there a bunch that are -5 in the nice and 0 with everything else.
[Code]....
Ran the most recent updates several days ago and now System Monitor show my CPU at %100 constantly although it shows no processes running.
View 9 Replies View RelatedFirst time Ubuntu user (used to be on debian earlier).
I like that everything works out of the box (had to install codecs etc, but thats standard); but I dont like that there are 260 processes running. Is there a utility to stop unnecessary processes from running in Ubuntu 10.10? I used rcconf but there did not seem to be a whole lot of startup processes that were enabled. Yet somehow I am running 260 processes now.
Even if I log into fluxbox, I get 200+ processes running.
I am trying to get a list of running processes using audio (using gstreamer), just like in gnome-volume-control, under applications, but have so far been unsuccessful in finding anything in either the gtk or gstreamer library, anyone out there who can point me in the right direction?
View 1 Replies View RelatedI've a Linux box with few users (with shell). I would like to prevent normal users see all the processes running on the box. How can I implement this?
View 1 Replies View RelatedWhile executing df command on an AIX Console, by mistake I ended the line with an ampersand:
[Code]...
I have written this script to monitor Apache2:
Code:
#!/bin/bash
#count lines that show apache2 but not the fgrep itself
let i=`ps aux | fgrep apache2 | fgrep -v grep | wc -l`
if [ "$i" -gt 0 ]
then
#log something
[Code]...
It has all been working fine until recently when Apache is becoming unresponsive. I manually ran ps to check and there were 3 processes. However when I ran apache2ctl graceful I got the message 'httpd not running, trying to start' Is there a better way to check if a daemon is up?
my computer is often very slow, to the point of stalling. I tty'd in and when I ran ps -ef I noticed about 10 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start I dont even want 1 apache running. Any suggestions why these are running, or how to stop it? Well, I can stop it with a sudo killall, but how can I make sure it doesnt happen again?
View 5 Replies View RelatedWhen I open a terminal and start the 'top' command to view the running processes, in the summary view I get 4 users. I guess that in addition to my account the root runs in the background but who are the other 2??
View 1 Replies View RelatedI am running Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server 5.1. I notice that when my server gets slow and the load goes up, there is a bunch of processes call mi_dmonq running. Does anyone know what this process does? I tried to find it online but didn't find anything. Also, I tried to find the binary on the server but find doesn't return anything. Does anyone know what it is?
View 3 Replies View Related