PGREP(1) User Commands PGREP(1)
NAME
pgrep, pkill - find or signal processes by name and other attributes
SYNOPSIS
pgrep [
-flvx] [
-n |
-o] [
-d delim] [
-P ppidlist]
[
-g pgrplist] [
-s sidlist] [
-u euidlist] [
-U uidlist]
[
-G gidlist] [
-J projidlist] [
-t termlist]
[
-T taskidlist] [
-c ctidlist] [
-z zoneidlist]
[
pattern]
pkill [
-signal] [
-fvx] [
-n |
-o] [
-P ppidlist]
[
-g pgrplist] [
-s sidlist] [
-u euidlist] [
-U uidlist]
[
-G gidlist] [
-J projidlist] [
-t termlist]
[
-T taskidlist] [
-c ctidlist] [
-z zoneidlist]
[
pattern]
DESCRIPTION
The
pgrep utility examines the active processes on the system and
reports the process
IDs of the processes whose attributes match the
criteria specified on the command line. Each process
ID is printed as
a decimal value and is separated from the next
ID by a delimiter
string, which defaults to a newline. For each attribute option, the
user can specify a set of possible values separated by commas on the
command line. For example,
pgrep -G other,daemon matches processes whose real group
ID is
other OR daemon. If multiple
criteria options are specified,
pgrep matches processes whose
attributes match the logical
AND of the criteria options. For
example,
pgrep -G other,daemon -U root,daemon matches processes whose attributes are:
(real group
ID is
other OR daemon)
AND (real user
ID is
root OR daemon)
pkill functions identically to
pgrep, except that each matching
process is signaled as if by
kill(1) instead of having its process
ID printed. A signal name or number may be specified as the first
command line option to
pkill.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-c ctidlist Matches only processes whose process contract ID is
in the given list.
-d delim Specifies the output delimiter string to be printed
between each matching process
ID. If no
-d option is
specified, the default is a newline character. The
-d option is only valid when specified as an option
to
pgrep.
-f The regular expression
pattern should be matched
against the full process argument string (obtained
from the
pr_psargs field of the
/proc/nnnnn/psinfo
file). If no
-f option is specified, the expression
is matched only against the name of the executable
file (obtained from the
pr_fname field of the
/proc/nnnnn/psinfo file).
-g pgrplist Matches only processes whose process group
ID is in
the given list. If group 0 is included in the list,
this is interpreted as the process group
ID of the
pgrep or
pkill process.
-G gidlist Matches only processes whose real group
ID is in the
given list. Each group
ID may be specified as either
a group name or a numerical group
ID.
-J projidlist Matches only processes whose project
ID is in the
given list. Each project
ID may be specified as
either a project name or a numerical project
ID.
-l Long output format. Prints the process name along
with the process
ID of each matching process. The
process name is obtained from the
pr_psargs or
pr_fname field, depending on whether the
-f option
was specified (see above). The
-l option is only
valid when specified as an option to
pgrep.
-n Matches only the newest (most recently created)
process that meets all other specified matching
criteria. Cannot be used with option
-o.
-o Matches only the oldest (earliest created) process
that meets all other specified matching criteria.
Cannot be used with option
-n.
-P ppidlist Matches only processes whose parent process
ID is in
the given list.
-s sidlist Matches only processes whose process session
ID is
in in the given list. If
ID 0 is included in the
list, this is interpreted as the session
ID of the
pgrep or
pkill process.
-t termlist Matches only processes which are associated with a
terminal in the given list. Each terminal is
specified as the suffix following "/dev/" of the
terminal's device path name in
/dev. For example,
term/a or
pts/0.
-T taskidlist Matches only processes whose task
ID is in the given
list. If
ID 0 is included in the list, this is
interpreted as the task
ID of the
pgrep or
pkill process.
-u euidlist Matches only processes whose effective user
ID is in
the given list. Each user
ID may be specified as
either a login name or a numerical user
ID.
-U uidlist Matches only processes whose real user
ID is in the
given list. Each user
ID may be specified as either
a login name or a numerical user
ID.
-v Reverses the sense of the matching. Matches all
processes
except those which meet the specified
matching criteria.
-x Matches only processes whose executable file name
(ignoring any path)
exactly matches the specified
pattern. However, when used with -f, the
pattern should be matched against the full process argument
string. For example if there exists a process
`/bin/ls /home' then:
$ pgrep -x ls
1780
$ pgrep -x -f '/bin/ls /home'
1780
$ pgrep -x -f '/bin/ls.*'
1780
$ pgrep -x /bin/ls
$ pgrep -x -f 'ls /home'
$ pgrep -x -f /bin/ls
$
-z zoneidlist Matches only processes whose zone
ID is in the given
list. Each zone
ID may be specified as either a zone
name or a numerical zone
ID. This option is only
useful when executed in the global zone. If the
pkill utility is used to send signals to processes
in other zones, the process must have asserted the
{PRIV_PROC_ZONE} privilege (see
privileges(7)).
-signal Specifies the signal to send to each matched
process. If no signal is specified,
SIGTERM is sent
by default. The value of
signal can be one of the
symbolic names defined in
signal.h(3HEAD) without
the
SIG prefix, or the corresponding signal number
as a decimal value. The
-signal option is only valid
when specified as the first option to
pkill.
OPERANDS
The following operand is supported:
pattern Specifies an Extended Regular Expression (
ERE) pattern to
match against either the executable file name or full
process argument string. See
regex(7) for a complete
description of the
ERE syntax.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Obtaining a Process ID
Obtain the process
ID of
sendmail:
example%
pgrep -x -u root sendmail 283
Example 2: Terminating a Process
Terminate the most recently created
xterm:
example%
pkill -n xtermEXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 One or more processes were matched.
1 No processes were matched.
2 Invalid command line options were specified.
3 A fatal error occurred.
FILES
/proc/nnnnn/psinfo
Process information files
SEE ALSO
kill(1),
proc(1),
ps(1),
truss(1),
kill(2),
signal.h(3HEAD),
proc(5),
attributes(7),
privileges(7),
regex(7),
zones(7)NOTES
Both utilities match the
ERE pattern argument against either the
pr_fname or
pr_psargs fields of the
/proc/nnnnn/psinfo files. The
lengths of these strings are limited according to definitions in
<sys/procfs.h>. Patterns which can match strings longer than the
current limits may fail to match the intended set of processes.
If the
pattern argument contains
ERE meta-characters which are also
shell meta-characters, it may be necessary to enclose the pattern
with appropriate shell quotes.
Defunct processes are never matched by either
pgrep or
pkill.
The current
pgrep or
pkill process will never consider itself a
potential match.
January 17, 2014 PGREP(1)