How can I find the pid of an errant file? If I do top, (from home directory) I get a ton of stuff, and if I could expand the window from top to bottom, I'd get even more. top does not seem to take an argument--i.e., if I try top /kmail I get an error message. And if I can't give it an argument, must I just patiently wait until the file I'm looking for comes up, and then hope to catch it before it goes? --doug
-----Original Message-----
From: Doug McGarrett
How can I find the pid of an errant file? If I do top, (from home
Processes have pid's not files. Use ps auxww | grep <name of process> to find any process running under that name.
directory) I get a ton of stuff, and if I could expand the window from top to bottom, I'd get even more. top does not seem to take an argument--i.e., if I try top /kmail I get an error message. And if I can't give it an argument, must I just patiently wait until the file I'm looking for comes up, and then hope to catch it before it goes?
--doug
Top is meant to show the "top" processes of the running system which is why you want to use ps auxww|grep <name of process> for specific process. pidof will also show the same pid (only) but you need to be more specific in the name of the process. Ken
participants (2)
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Doug McGarrett
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Ken Schneider