FUSER(8) Maintenance Commands and Procedures FUSER(8)
NAME
fuser - identify users of files and devices
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/fuser [
-c |
-d |
-f] [
-nu] [
-k |
-s sig]
files [ [
- ] [
-c |
-d |
-f] [
-nu] [
-k |
-s sig]
files] ...
DESCRIPTION
The
fuser utility displays the process
IDs of the processes that are
using the
files specified as arguments.
Each process
ID is followed by a letter code. These letter codes are
interpreted as follows. If the process is using the file as
c Indicates that the process is using the file as its current
directory.
m Indicates that the process is using a file mapped with
mmap(2).
See
mmap(2) for details.
n Indicates that the process is holding a non-blocking mandatory
lock on the file.
o Indicates that the process is using the file as an open file.
r Indicates that the process is using the file as its root
directory.
t Indicates that the process is using the file as its text file.
y Indicates that the process is using the file as its controlling
terminal.
For block special devices with mounted file systems, all processes
using any file on that device are listed. For all types of files
(text files, executables, directories, devices, and so forth), only
the processes using that file are reported.
For all types of devices,
fuser also displays any known kernel
consumers that have the device open. Kernel consumers are displayed
in one of the following formats:
[
module_name]
[
module_name,dev_path=
path]
[
module_name,dev=(
major,
minor)]
[
module_name,dev=(
major,
minor),dev_path=
path]
If more than one group of files are specified, the options may be
respecified for each additional group of files. A lone dash cancels
the options currently in force.
The process IDs are printed as a single line on the standard output,
separated by spaces and terminated with a single new line. All other
output is written on standard error.
Any user can run fuser, but only the superuser can terminate another
user's process.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-c Reports on files that are mount points for file systems,
and any files within that mounted file system.
-d Report device usage information for all minor nodes bound
to the same device node as the specified minor node. This
option does not report file usage for files within a
mounted file system.
-f Prints a report for the named file, not for files within a
mounted file system.
-k Sends the
SIGKILL signal to each process. Since this option
spawns kills for each process, the kill messages may not
show up immediately (see
kill(2)). No signals will be sent
to kernel file consumers.
-n Lists only processes with non-blocking mandatory locks on a
file.
-s sig Sends a signal to each process. The
sig option argument
specifies one of the symbolic names defined in the
<signal.h> header, or a decimal integer signal number. If
sig is a symbolic name, it is recognized in a case-
independent fashion, without the
SIG prefix. The
-k option
is equivalent to
-s KILL or
-s 9. No signals will be sent
to kernel file consumers.
-u Displays the user login name in parentheses following the
process
ID.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Reporting on the Mount Point and Files
The following example reports on the mount point and files within the
mounted file system.
example%
fuser -c /export/foo Example 2: Restricting Output when Reporting on the Mount Point and
Files
The following example reports on the mount point and files within the
mounted file system, but the output is restricted to processes that
hold non-blocking mandatory locks.
example%
fuser -cn /export/foo Example 3: Sending SIGTERM to Processes Holding a Non-blocking
Mandatory Lock
The following command sends
SIGTERM to any processes that hold a non-
blocking mandatory lock on file
/export/foo/my_file.
example%
fuser -fn -s term /export/foo/my_fileENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
See
environ(7) for descriptions of the following environment
variables that affect the execution of
fuser:
LANG,
LC_ALL LC_CTYPE,
LC_MESSAGES, and
NLSPATH.
ATTRIBUTES
See
attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+--------------------+-----------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+--------------------+-----------------+
|Interface Stability | Standard |
+--------------------+-----------------+
SEE ALSO
ps(1),
kill(2),
mmap(2),
signal(3C),
attributes(7),
environ(7),
standards(7),
mount(8)NOTES
Because
fuser works with a snapshot of the system image, it may miss
processes that begin using a file while
fuser is running. Also,
processes reported as using a file may have stopped using it while
fuser was running. These factors should discourage the use of the
-k option.
October 21, 2003 FUSER(8)