LPI Linux Certification/Create, Monitor And Kill Processes
Detailed Objectives
[edit | edit source](LPIC-1 Version 5.0)
Weight: 4
Description:
Candidates should be able to perform basic process management.
Key Knowledge Areas:
- Run jobs in the foreground and background.
- Signal a program to continue running after logout.
- Monitor active processes.
- Select and sort processes for display.
- Send signals to processes.
The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
&
bg
fg
jobs
kill
nohup
ps
top
free
uptime
pgrep
pkill
killall
watch
screen
tmux
Create processes
[edit | edit source]A running application is a process. Every process has: a process ID, a parent process ID, a current directory PWD, a file descriptor table, a program which it is executing, environment variables (inherited from its parent process), stdin, stdout, stderr (standard error), and possibly even more (optional) traits.
Bash is a program that when it is executed becomes a process. Each time you execute a command in a shell a new process is created. Except for the built-in shell command. They run in the shell context. Use type to check if a command is a built-in shell command.
Example:
type cp ls which type
Monitor processes
[edit | edit source]To monitor the processes in real-time, use top.
top - 9:20am up 2:48, 4 users, load average: 0.15, 0.13, 0.09 78 processes: 75 sleeping, 3 running, 0 zombie, 0 stopped CPU states: 15.3% user, 0.3% system, 0.0% nice, 84.2% idle Mem: 254896K av, 251204K used, 3692K free, 0K shrd, 27384K buff Swap: 514072K av, 0K used, 514072K free 120488K cached PID USER PRI NI SIZE RSS SHARE STAT %CPU %MEM TIME COMMAND 1517 rarrigon 0 0 40816 39M 17372 R 15.0 16.0 2:59 mozilla-bin 1727 rarrigon 19 0 988 988 768 R 0.3 0.3 0:00 top 1 root 20 0 220 220 188 S 0.0 0.0 0:04 init 2 root 20 0 0 0 0 SW 0.0 0.0 0:00 keventd
RSS is the total amount of physical memory used by the task. SHARE is the amount of shared memory used by the task. %CPU is the task's share of the CPU time. %MEM is the task's share of the physical memory. Once top is running it is also possible to execute interactive commands:
- Type N to sort tasks by pid.
- Type A to sort tasks by age (newest first).
- Type P to sort tasks by CPU usage.
- Type M to sort tasks by memory usage.
- Type k to kill a process (NOTE: You will be prompted for the process' pid).
Once the system is up and running from a terminal it is possible to see which processes are running with the ps program.
To display a long format of all the processes in the system, use the following:
ps -Al F S UID PID PPID C PRI NI ADDR SZ WCHAN TTY TIME CMD 004 S 0 1 0 0 80 0 - 112 do_sel ? 00:00:04 init 004 S 0 381 1 0 80 0 - 332 do_sel ? 00:00:00 dhcpcd 006 S 0 1000 1 0 80 0 - 339 do_sel ? 00:00:00 inetd 044 R 0 1524 1222 0 79 0 - 761 - pts/3 00:00:00 ps
The ps program will display all the processes running and their PID numbers and other information. To see a long format of the processes in your login session, use:
ps -l F S UID PID PPID C PRI NI ADDR SZ WCHAN TTY TIME CMD 000 S 500 1154 1139 0 80 0 - 724 wait4 pts/1 00:00:00 bash 002 S 500 1285 1283 0 77 0 - 24432 wait_f pts/1 00:00:00 soffice.bin 040 R 500 1442 1435 0 79 0 - 768 - pts/4 00:00:00 ps F: Process Flags 002: being created, 040: forked but didn't exec, 400: killed by a signal. S: Process States: R: runnable, S: sleeping, Z: zompbie UID: User ID, PID: Process ID, PPID: Parent Process ID, C: Scheduler, PRI: priority NI: Nice value, SZ: size of routine, WCHAN: name of routine
Kill processes
[edit | edit source]The ps program will display all the processes running and their PID numbers. Once the PID is known, it is possible to send signals to the process:
- SIGSTOP to stop a process.
- SIGCONT to continue a stopped process.
- SIGKILL to kill a process.
The program to send a signal to a process is called kill.
kill -SIGKILL [pid] kill -63 [pid] kill -l
By default a process is started in the foreground and it is the only one to receive keyboard input. Use CTRL+Z to suspend it.
To start a process in the background use the &.
bash & xeyes &
In a bash process it is possible to start multiple jobs. The command to manipulate jobs is jobs.
jobs # List all the active jobs bg %job # Resume job in background fg %job # Resume job in foreground kill %job # Kill background job
When bash is terminated all processes that have been started from the session will receive the SIGHUP signal. This will by default terminate the process.
To prevent the termination of a process, the program can be started with the nohup command.
nohup mydaemon
Exercises
[edit | edit source]1. How can you control CPU usage for PID 3196