How do I find the uptime of a given linux process.
ps aux | grep gedit | grep -v grepgives me a whole lot of information which includes the time at which the process was started. I am specifically looking for switch which returns the uptime of a process in milliseconds.
Thanks
8 Answers
As "uptime" has several meanings, here is a useful command.
ps -eo pid,comm,lstart,etime,time,argsThis command lists all processes with several different time-related columns. It has the following columns:
PID COMMAND STARTED ELAPSED TIME COMMANDPID = Process ID
first COMMAND = only the command name without options and without argumentsSTARTED = the absolute time the process was startedELAPSED = elapsed time since the process was started (wall clock time), format [[dd-]hh:]mm:ss TIME = cumulative CPU time, "[dd-]hh:mm:ss" format
second COMMAND = again the command, this time with all its provided options and arguments
If you have a limited version of ps such as is found in busybox, you can get the process start time by looking at the timestamp of /proc/<PID>. For example, if the pid you want to look at is 55...
# ls -al /proc | grep 55
dr-xr-xr-x 7 root root 0 May 21 05:53 55... and then compare it with the current date...
# date
Thu May 22 03:00:47 EDT 2014 3 I think you can just run:
$ stat /proc/12341234 being the process id.
example with two processes started at the same hour minute seconds but not the same milliseconds:
$ stat /proc/9355
...
Access: 2017-11-13 17:46:39.778791165 +0100
Modify: 2017-11-13 17:46:39.778791165 +0100
Change: 2017-11-13 17:46:39.778791165 +0100
$ stat /proc/9209
...
Access: 2017-11-13 17:46:39.621790420 +0100
Modify: 2017-11-13 17:46:39.621790420 +0100
Change: 2017-11-13 17:46:39.621790420 +0100 yes, too old and yet too hard stuff. I tried with the above proposed "stat" method but what if I had "touch"-ed the PID proc dir yesterday? This means my year-old process is shown with yesterday's time stamp. Nah, not what I need :(
In the newer ones, it's simple:
ps -o etimes -p <PID>
ELAPSED
339521as simple as that. Time is present in seconds. Do whatever you need it for. With some older boxes, situation is harder, since there's no etimes. One could rely on:
ps -o etime -p <PID>
ELAPSED
76-03:26:15which look a "a bit" weird since it's in dd-hh:mm:ss format. Not suitable for further calculation. I would have preferred it in seconds, hence I used this one:
ps -o etime -p <PID> --no-headers | awk -F '(:)|(-)' 'BEGIN{a[4]=1;a[3]=60;a[2]=3600;a[1]=86400;s=0};{for (i=NF;i>=1;i--) s=s+a[i]*$i}END{print s}'
339544 2 Such a simple thing is not properly answered after 5 years?
I don't think you can accurately get milliseconds. eg. if you see man procfs and see /proc/$$/stat which has field 22 as startime, which is in "clock ticks", you would have something more precise, but clock ticks aren't going at a perfectly constant rate (relative to 'wall clock time') and will be off... sleeping and certain things (ntpd I guess) offset it. For example on a machine running ntpd, with 8 days uptime and has never slept, dmesg -T has the same problem (I think...), and you can see it here:
# date; echo h > /proc/sysrq-trigger; dmesg -T | tail -n1 ; date
Fri Mar 3 10:26:17 CET 2017
[Fri Mar 3 10:26:16 2017] sysrq: SysRq : HELP : loglevel(0-9) reboot(b) crash(c) terminate-all-tasks(e) memory-full-oom-kill(f) kill-all-tasks(i) thaw-filesystems(j) sak(k) show-backtrace-all-active-cpus(l) show-memory-usage(m) nice-all-RT-tasks(n) poweroff(o) show-registers(p) show-all-timers(q) unraw(r) sync(s) show-task-states(t) unmount(u) force-fb(V) show-blocked-tasks(w)
Fri Mar 3 10:26:17 CET 2017Here's seconds:
# example pid here is just your shell
pid=$$
# current unix time (seconds since epoch [1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC])
now=$(date +%s)
# process start unix time (also seconds since epoch)
# I'm fairly sure this is the right way to get the start time in a machine readable way (unlike ps)...but could be wrong
start=$(stat -c %Y /proc/"$pid")
# simple subtraction (both are in UTC, so it works)
age=$((now-start))
printf "that process has run for %s seconds\n" "$age" By process name:
ps -eo pid,comm,lstart,etime,args | grep MyProcessName | cut -b 1-200Where:
MyProcessNameis the process name.- The
pslists all processes. - The
grepfilters byMyProcessNameinargs. - The
cutlists the first 200 characters on each line. Useful, as often Java command lines are rather long.
Produces something like this:
10673 java Tue Aug 25 12:26:30 2020 19:19:25 /opt/apps/java_home/bin/java -Dservice.name=MyProcessName1 10908 java Tue Aug 25 12:26:41 2020 19:19:14 /opt/apps/java_home/bin/java -Dservice.name=MyProcessName2 11062 java Tue Aug 25 12:26:52 2020 19:19:03 /opt/apps/java_home/bin/java -Dservice.name=MyProcessName3We can see that all of the services started on August 26th at 12:26, and none of them have restarted for any reason.
as Systemd got introduced, people who search for this with SystemD distros can use systemctl status option. And get the uptime in the output as depicted here:
● openkm.service - LSB: Start and stop OpenKM Loaded: loaded (/etc/rc.d/init.d/openkm; bad; vendor preset: disabled) Active: active (exited) since Tue 2021-04-20 09:27:13 CAT; 2 weeks 4 days ago [root@ip-x-x-x-x ec2-user]# ps -p `pidof java` -o etimes= 266433pidof java => process id for java process
etimes= => time in Seconds and '=' is to remove header