ps aux output meaning

When typing the command ps aux, what does each column of the output mean? For example:

$ ps aux
timothy 29217 0.0 0.0 11916 4560 pts/21 S+ 08:15 0:00 pine
root 29505 0.0 0.0 38196 2728 ? Ss Mar07 0:00 sshd: can [priv]
can 29529 0.0 0.0 38332 1904 ? S Mar07 0:00 sshd: can@notty 

Thanks and regards!

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3 Answers

$ ps aux
USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMAND
timothy 29217 0.0 0.0 11916 4560 pts/21 S+ 08:15 0:00 pine
root 29505 0.0 0.0 38196 2728 ? Ss Mar07 0:00 sshd: can [priv]
can 29529 0.0 0.0 38332 1904 ? S Mar07 0:00 sshd: can@notty 
  • USER = user owning the process
  • PID = process ID of the process
  • %CPU = It is the CPU time used divided by the time the process has been running.
  • %MEM = ratio of the process’s resident set size to the physical memory on the machine
  • VSZ = virtual memory usage of entire process (in KiB)
  • RSS = resident set size, the non-swapped physical memory that a task has used (in KiB)
  • TTY = controlling tty (terminal)
  • STAT = multi-character process state
  • START = starting time or date of the process
  • TIME = cumulative CPU time
  • COMMAND = command with all its arguments

See the ps man page for more info.

4

This might be helpful:

Process State Codes (STAT):

  • R running or runnable (on run queue)
  • D uninterruptible sleep (usually IO)
  • S interruptible sleep (waiting for an event to complete)
  • Z defunct/zombie, terminated but not reaped by its parent
  • T stopped, either by a job control signal or because it is being traced

Some extra modifiers:

  • < high-priority (not nice to other users)
  • N low-priority (nice to other users)
  • L has pages locked into memory (for real-time and custom IO)
  • s is a session leader
  • l is multi-threaded (using CLONE_THREAD, like NPTL pthreads do)
  • + is in the foreground process group
0

In Linux the command:

ps -aux

Means show all processes for all users. You might be wondering what the x means? The x is a specifier that means 'any of the users'. So you could type this:

ps -auroot

Which displays all the root processes, or

ps -auel

which displays all the processes from user el. The technobabble in the 'man ps' page is: "ps -aux prints all processes owned by a user named 'x' as well as printing all processes that would be selected by the -a option.

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