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fea681da 1.\" Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 by Daniel Quinlan (quinlan@yggdrasil.com)
b4e9ee8f 2.\" and Copyright (C) 2002-2008 Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
fea681da
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3.\" with networking additions from Alan Cox (A.Cox@swansea.ac.uk)
4.\" and scsi additions from Michael Neuffer (neuffer@mail.uni-mainz.de)
5.\" and sysctl additions from Andries Brouwer (aeb@cwi.nl)
6.\" and System V IPC (as well as various other) additions from
c11b1abf 7.\" Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
fea681da 8.\"
1dd72f9c 9.\" %%%LICENSE_START(GPLv2+_DOC_FULL)
fea681da
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10.\" This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or
11.\" modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
12.\" published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
13.\" the License, or (at your option) any later version.
14.\"
15.\" The GNU General Public License's references to "object code"
16.\" and "executables" are to be interpreted as the output of any
17.\" document formatting or typesetting system, including
18.\" intermediate and printed output.
19.\"
20.\" This manual is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
21.\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
22.\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
23.\" GNU General Public License for more details.
24.\"
25.\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
c715f741
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26.\" License along with this manual; if not, see
27.\" <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
6a8d8745 28.\" %%%LICENSE_END
fea681da
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29.\"
30.\" Modified 1995-05-17 by faith@cs.unc.edu
31.\" Minor changes by aeb and Marty Leisner (leisner@sdsp.mc.xerox.com).
32.\" Modified 1996-04-13, 1996-07-22 by aeb@cwi.nl
33.\" Modified 2001-12-16 by rwhron@earthlink.net
34.\" Modified 2002-07-13 by jbelton@shaw.ca
35.\" Modified 2002-07-22, 2003-05-27, 2004-04-06, 2004-05-25
c11b1abf 36.\" by Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com>
5d6d14a0
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37.\" 2004-11-17, mtk -- updated notes on /proc/loadavg
38.\" 2004-12-01, mtk, rtsig-max and rtsig-nr went away in 2.6.8
568105c6
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39.\" 2004-12-14, mtk, updated 'statm', and fixed error in order of list
40.\" 2005-05-12, mtk, updated 'stat'
6d64ca9c 41.\" 2005-07-13, mtk, added /proc/sys/fs/mqueue/*
363f747c
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42.\" 2005-09-16, mtk, Added /proc/sys/fs/suid_dumpable
43.\" 2005-09-19, mtk, added /proc/zoneinfo
b4e9ee8f 44.\" 2005-03-01, mtk, moved /proc/sys/fs/mqueue/* material to mq_overview.7.
69119dc7
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45.\" 2008-06-05, mtk, Added /proc/[pid]/oom_score, /proc/[pid]/oom_adj,
46.\" /proc/[pid]/limits, /proc/[pid]/mountinfo, /proc/[pid]/mountstats,
47.\" and /proc/[pid]/fdinfo/*.
48.\" 2008-06-19, mtk, Documented /proc/[pid]/status.
cc2d5c36 49.\" 2008-07-15, mtk, added /proc/config.gz
363f747c 50.\"
bea08fec 51.\" FIXME . cross check against Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
c13182ef 52.\" to see what information could be imported from that file
c533af9d 53.\" into this file.
fea681da 54.\"
97986708 55.TH PROC 5 2016-03-15 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual"
fea681da 56.SH NAME
9ee4a2b6 57proc \- process information pseudo-filesystem
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58.SH DESCRIPTION
59The
60.I proc
ac8727b6 61filesystem is a pseudo-filesystem which provides an interface to
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62kernel data structures.
63It is commonly mounted at
fea681da 64.IR /proc .
c13182ef 65Most of it is read-only, but some files allow kernel variables to be
fea681da 66changed.
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67.SS Mount options
68The
69.I proc
70filesystem supports the following mount options:
71.TP
72.BR hidepid "=\fIn\fP (since Linux 3.3)"
73.\" commit 0499680a42141d86417a8fbaa8c8db806bea1201
74This option controls who can access the information in
75.IR /proc/[pid]
76directories.
77The argument,
78.IR n ,
79is one of the following values:
80.RS
81.TP 4
820
83Everybody may access all
84.IR /proc/[pid]
85directories.
86This is the traditional behavior,
87and the default if this mount option is not specified.
88.TP
891
90Users may not access files and subdirectories inside any
91.IR /proc/[pid]
92directories but their own (the
93.IR /proc/[pid]
94directories themselves remain visible).
95Sensitive files such as
97949440 96.IR /proc/[pid]/cmdline
fee59977 97and
97949440 98.IR /proc/[pid]/status
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99are now protected against other users.
100This makes it impossible to learn whether any user is running a
101specific program
102(so long as the program doesn't otherwise reveal itself by its behavior).
103.\" As an additional bonus, since
97949440 104.\" .IR /proc/[pid]/cmdline
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105.\" is unaccessible for other users,
106.\" poorly written programs passing sensitive information via
107.\" program arguments are now protected against local eavesdroppers.
108.TP
1092
110As for mode 1, but in addition the
111.IR /proc/[pid]
112directories belonging to other users become invisible.
113This means that
114.IR /proc/[pid]
115entries can no longer be used to discover the PIDs on the system.
116This doesn't hide the fact that a process with a specific PID value exists
117(it can be learned by other means, for example, by "kill -0 $PID"),
118but it hides a process's UID and GID,
119which could otherwise be learned by employing
120.BR stat (2)
121on a
122.IR /proc/[pid]
123directory.
124This greatly complicates an attacker's task of gathering
125information about running processes (e.g., discovering whether
126some daemon is running with elevated privileges,
127whether another user is running some sensitive program,
128whether other users are running any program at all, and so on).
129.RE
130.TP
131.BR gid "=\fIgid\fP (since Linux 3.3)"
132.\" commit 0499680a42141d86417a8fbaa8c8db806bea1201
133Specifies the ID of a group whose members are authorized to
134learn process information otherwise prohibited by
135.BR hidepid
136(ie/e/, users in this group behave as though
137.I /proc
138was mounted with
139.IR hidepid=0 .
140This group should be used instead of approaches such as putting
141nonroot users into the
142.BR sudoers (5)
143file.
144.SS Files and directories
ac8727b6 145The following list describes many of the files and directories under the
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146.I /proc
147hierarchy.
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148.PD 1
149.TP
69119dc7 150.I /proc/[pid]
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151There is a numerical subdirectory for each running process; the
152subdirectory is named by the process ID.
153Each such subdirectory contains the following
154pseudo-files and directories.
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155.TP
156.I /proc/[pid]/attr
157.\" https://lwn.net/Articles/28222/
158.\" From: Stephen Smalley <sds@epoch.ncsc.mil>
159.\" To: LKML and others
160.\" Subject: [RFC][PATCH] Process Attribute API for Security Modules
161.\" Date: 08 Apr 2003 16:17:52 -0400
162.\"
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163.\" http://www.nsa.gov/research/_files/selinux/papers/module/x362.shtml
164.\"
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165The files in this directory provide an API for security modules.
166The contents of this directory are files that can be read and written
167in order to set security-related attributes.
168This directory was added to support SELinux,
169but the intention was that the API be general enough to support
170other security modules.
171For the purpose of explanation,
172examples of how SELinux uses these files are provided below.
173
174This directory is present only if the kernel was configured with
175.BR CONFIG_SECURITY .
176.TP
177.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/current " (since Linux 2.6.0)"
178The contents of this file represent the current
179security attributes of the process.
180
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181In SELinux, this file is used to get the security context of a process.
182Prior to Linux 2.6.11, this file could not be used to set the security
183context (a write was always denied), since SELinux limited process security
184transitions to
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185.BR execve (2)
186(see the description of
187.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/exec ,
188below).
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189Since Linux 2.6.11, SELinux lifted this restriction and began supporting
190"set" operations via writes to this node if authorized by policy,
191although use of this operation is only suitable for applications that are
192trusted to maintain any desired separation between the old and new security
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193contexts.
194Prior to Linux 2.6.28, SELinux did not allow threads within a
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195multi-threaded process to set their security context via this node
196as it would yield an inconsistency among the security contexts of the
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197threads sharing the same memory space.
198Since Linux 2.6.28, SELinux lifted
fd44bdc7 199this restriction and began supporting "set" operations for threads within
b6620a25 200a multithreaded process if the new security context is bounded by the old
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201security context, where the bounded relation is defined in policy and
202guarantees that the new security context has a subset of the permissions
203of the old security context.
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204Other security modules may choose to support "set" operations via
205writes to this node.
206.TP
207.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/exec " (since Linux 2.6.0)"
208This file represents the attributes to assign to the
209process upon a subsequent
210.BR execve (2).
211
212In SELinux,
213this is needed to support role/domain transitions, and
214.BR execve (2)
215is the preferred point to make such transitions because it offers better
216control over the initialization of the process in the new security label
217and the inheritance of state.
218In SELinux, this attribute is reset on
219.BR execve (2)
220so that the new program reverts to the default behavior for any
221.BR execve (2)
222calls that it may make.
223In SELinux, a process can set
224only its own
225.I /proc/[pid]/attr/exec
226attribute.
227.TP
228.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/fscreate " (since Linux 2.6.0)"
229This file represents the attributes to assign to files
230created by subsequent calls to
231.BR open (2),
232.BR mkdir (2),
233.BR symlink (2),
234and
235.BR mknod (2)
236
237SELinux employs this file to support creation of a file
238(using the aforementioned system calls)
239in a secure state,
240so that there is no risk of inappropriate access being obtained
241between the time of creation and the time that attributes are set.
242In SELinux, this attribute is reset on
243.BR execve (2),
244so that the new program reverts to the default behavior for
245any file creation calls it may make, but the attribute will persist
246across multiple file creation calls within a program unless it is
247explicitly reset.
248In SELinux, a process can set only its own
249.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/fscreate
250attribute.
251.TP
252.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/prev " (since Linux 2.6.0)"
253This file contains the security context of the process before the last
254.BR execve (2);
255that is, the previous value of
256.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/current .
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257.TP
258.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/keycreate " (since Linux 2.6.18)"
259.\" commit 4eb582cf1fbd7b9e5f466e3718a59c957e75254e
260.\" /Documentation/keys.txt
261If a process writes a security context into this file,
262all subsequently created keys
263.RB ( add_key (2))
264will be labeled with this context.
265For further information, see the kernel source file
266.IR Documentation/keys.txt .
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267.TP
268.IR /proc/[pid]/attr/socketcreate " (since Linux 2.6.18)"
269.\" commit 42c3e03ef6b298813557cdb997bd6db619cd65a2
270If a process writes a security context into this file,
271all subsequently created sockets will be labeled with this context.
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272.\"
273.\" FIXME Describe /proc/[pid]/autogroup
274.\" 2.6.38
275.\" commit 5091faa449ee0b7d73bc296a93bca9540fc51d0a
276.\" CONFIG_SCHED_AUTOGROUP
b4e9ee8f 277.\"
fea681da 278.TP
69119dc7 279.IR /proc/[pid]/auxv " (since 2.6.0-test7)"
857f1942 280This contains the contents of the ELF interpreter information passed
c13182ef 281to the process at exec time.
857f1942 282The format is one \fIunsigned long\fP ID
c13182ef 283plus one \fIunsigned long\fP value for each entry.
857f1942 284The last entry contains two zeros.
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285See also
286.BR getauxval (3).
b5d204d0 287.TP
8d708d6b 288.IR /proc/[pid]/cgroup " (since Linux 2.6.24)"
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289See
290.BR cgroups (7).
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291.TP
292.IR /proc/[pid]/clear_refs " (since Linux 2.6.22)"
293.\" commit b813e931b4c8235bb42e301096ea97dbdee3e8fe (2.6.22)
294.\" commit 398499d5f3613c47f2143b8c54a04efb5d7a6da9 (2.6.32)
295.\" commit 040fa02077de01c7e08fa75be6125e4ca5636011 (3.11)
b4e9ee8f 296.\"
b4e9ee8f 297.\" "Clears page referenced bits shown in smaps output"
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298.\" write-only, writable only by the owner of the process
299
300This is a write-only file, writable only by owner of the process.
301
302The following values may be written to the file:
303.RS
304.TP
3051 (since Linux 2.6.22)
306.\" Internally: CLEAR_REFS_ALL
307Reset the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG
308bits for all the pages associated with the process.
309(Before kernel 2.6.32, writing any nonzero value to this file
310had this effect.)
311.TP
3122 (since Linux 2.6.32)
313.\" Internally: CLEAR_REFS_ANON
314Reset the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG
315bits for all anonymous pages associated with the process.
316.TP
3173 (since Linux 2.6.32)
318.\" Internally: CLEAR_REFS_MAPPED
319Reset the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG
320bits for all file-mapped pages associated with the process.
321.RE
322.IP
323Clearing the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG bits provides a method
324to measure approximately how much memory a process is using.
322d49fb 325One first inspects the values in the "Referenced" fields
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326for the VMAs shown in
327.IR /proc/[pid]/smaps
328to get an idea of the memory footprint of the
329process.
330One then clears the PG_Referenced and ACCESSED/YOUNG bits
331and, after some measured time interval,
322d49fb 332once again inspects the values in the "Referenced" fields
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333to get an idea of the change in memory footprint of the
334process during the measured interval.
335If one is interested only in inspecting the selected mapping types,
336then the value 2 or 3 can be used instead of 1.
337
338A further value can be written to affect a different bit:
339.RS
340.TP
3414 (since Linux 3.11)
342Clear the soft-dirty bit for all the pages associated with the process.
343.\" Internally: CLEAR_REFS_SOFT_DIRTY
344This is used (in conjunction with
345.IR /proc/[pid]/pagemap )
346by the check-point restore system to discover which pages of a process
347have been dirtied since the file
348.IR /proc/[pid]/clear_refs
349was written to.
350.RE
351.IP
352Writing any value to
353.IR /proc/[pid]/clear_refs
354other than those listed above has no effect.
355
356The
357.IR /proc/[pid]/clear_refs
358file is present only if the
359.B CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
360kernel configuration option is enabled.
857f1942 361.TP
69119dc7 362.I /proc/[pid]/cmdline
6975c16e 363This read-only file holds the complete command line for the process,
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364unless the process is a zombie.
365.\" In 2.3.26, this also used to be true if the process was swapped out.
366In the latter case, there is nothing in this file:
75b94dc3 367that is, a read on this file will return 0 characters.
b447cd58 368The command-line arguments appear in this file as a set of
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369strings separated by null bytes (\(aq\\0\(aq),
370with a further null byte after the last string.
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371.TP
372.IR /proc/[pid]/comm " (since Linux 2.6.33)"
373.\" commit 4614a696bd1c3a9af3a08f0e5874830a85b889d4
374This file exposes the process's
375.I comm
376value\(emthat is, the command name associated with the process.
377Different threads in the same process may have different
378.I comm
379values, accessible via
380.IR /proc/[pid]/task/[tid]/comm .
381A thread may modify its
382.I comm
383value, or that of any of other thread in the same thread group (see
384the discussion of
385.B CLONE_THREAD
386in
387.BR clone (2)),
388by writing to the file
389.IR /proc/self/task/[tid]/comm .
390Strings longer than
391.B TASK_COMM_LEN
392(16) characters are silently truncated.
393
ef4f4031 394This file provides a superset of the
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395.BR prctl (2)
396.B PR_SET_NAME
397and
398.B PR_GET_NAME
399operations, and is employed by
400.BR pthread_setname_np (3)
401when used to rename threads other than the caller.
fea681da 402.TP
7e07d950 403.IR /proc/[pid]/coredump_filter " (since Linux 2.6.23)"
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404See
405.BR core (5).
5c411b17 406.TP
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407.IR /proc/[pid]/cpuset " (since Linux 2.6.12)"
408.\" and/proc/[pid]/task/[tid]/cpuset
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409See
410.BR cpuset (7).
b4e9ee8f 411.TP
69119dc7 412.I /proc/[pid]/cwd
c13182ef 413This is a symbolic link to the current working directory of the process.
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414To find out the current working directory of process 20,
415for instance, you can do this:
fea681da 416
59a40ed7 417.in +4n
fea681da 418.nf
b43a3b30 419.RB "$" " cd /proc/20/cwd; /bin/pwd"
fea681da 420.fi
59a40ed7 421.in
fea681da 422
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423Note that the
424.I pwd
e7b489f0 425command is often a shell built-in, and might
c13182ef 426not work properly.
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427In
428.BR bash (1),
429you may use
430.IR "pwd\ \-P" .
afcaf646
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431
432.\" The following was still true as at kernel 2.6.13
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433In a multithreaded process, the contents of this symbolic link
434are not available if the main thread has already terminated
afcaf646 435(typically by calling
59a40ed7 436.BR pthread_exit (3)).
fea681da 437.TP
69119dc7 438.I /proc/[pid]/environ
fea681da 439This file contains the environment for the process.
f81fb444 440The entries are separated by null bytes (\(aq\\0\(aq),
b4e9ee8f 441and there may be a null byte at the end.
fea681da 442Thus, to print out the environment of process 1, you would do:
a08ea57c 443.in +4n
fea681da 444.nf
a08ea57c 445
fea681da 446.ft CW
13912780 447.RB "$" " strings /proc/1/environ"
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448.fi
449.ft P
a08ea57c 450.in
fea681da 451.TP
69119dc7 452.I /proc/[pid]/exe
fea681da 453Under Linux 2.2 and later, this file is a symbolic link
2d7195b8 454containing the actual pathname of the executed command.
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455This symbolic link can be dereferenced normally; attempting to open
456it will open the executable.
457You can even type
69119dc7 458.I /proc/[pid]/exe
06dd061c 459to run another copy of the same executable that is being run by
69119dc7 460process [pid].
7e3c767a
GJ
461If the pathname has been unlinked, the symbolic link will contain the
462string \(aq(deleted)\(aq appended to the original pathname.
afcaf646 463.\" The following was still true as at kernel 2.6.13
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464In a multithreaded process, the contents of this symbolic link
465are not available if the main thread has already terminated
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466(typically by calling
467.BR pthread_exit (3)).
fea681da 468
eb9a0b2f 469Under Linux 2.0 and earlier,
69119dc7 470.I /proc/[pid]/exe
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471is a pointer to the binary which was executed,
472and appears as a symbolic link.
473A
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474.BR readlink (2)
475call on this file under Linux 2.0 returns a string in the format:
476
59a40ed7 477 [device]:inode
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478
479For example, [0301]:1502 would be inode 1502 on device major 03 (IDE,
480MFM, etc. drives) minor 01 (first partition on the first drive).
481
482.BR find (1)
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483with the
484.I \-inum
485option can be used to locate the file.
fea681da 486.TP
d4529654 487.I /proc/[pid]/fd/
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488This is a subdirectory containing one entry for each file which the
489process has open, named by its file descriptor, and which is a
c13182ef 490symbolic link to the actual file.
f78ed33a 491Thus, 0 is standard input, 1 standard output, 2 standard error, and so on.
fea681da 492
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493For file descriptors for pipes and sockets,
494the entries will be symbolic links whose content is the
495file type with the inode.
d4529654
MF
496A
497.BR readlink (2)
498call on this file returns a string in the format:
f75715e0 499
d4529654 500 type:[inode]
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501
502For example,
503.I socket:[2248868]
504will be a socket and its inode is 2248868.
505For sockets, that inode can be used to find more information
506in one of the files under
d4529654
MF
507.IR /proc/net/ .
508
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509For file descriptors that have no corresponding inode
510(e.g., file descriptors produced by
511.BR epoll_create (2),
512.BR eventfd (2),
513.BR inotify_init (2),
514.BR signalfd (2),
515and
516.BR timerfd (2)),
517the entry will be a symbolic link with contents of the form
518
519 anon_inode:<file-type>
520
521In some cases, the
522.I file-type
523is surrounded by square brackets.
524
525For example, an epoll file descriptor will have a symbolic link
526whose content is the string
527.IR "anon_inode:[eventpoll]" .
528
d4529654 529.\"The following was still true as at kernel 2.6.13
afcaf646 530In a multithreaded process, the contents of this directory
c13182ef 531are not available if the main thread has already terminated
afcaf646
MK
532(typically by calling
533.BR pthread_exit (3)).
534
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535Programs that will take a filename as a command-line argument,
536but will not take input from standard input if no argument is supplied,
537or that write to a file named as a command-line argument,
538but will not send their output to standard output
539if no argument is supplied, can nevertheless be made to use
540standard input or standard out using
69119dc7 541.IR /proc/[pid]/fd .
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542For example, assuming that
543.I \-i
544is the flag designating an input file and
545.I \-o
546is the flag designating an output file:
a08ea57c 547.in +4n
fea681da
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548.nf
549
b43a3b30 550.RB "$" " foobar \-i /proc/self/fd/0 \-o /proc/self/fd/1 ..."
fea681da 551.fi
a08ea57c
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552.in
553
fea681da
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554and you have a working filter.
555.\" The following is not true in my tests (MTK):
556.\" Note that this will not work for
557.\" programs that seek on their files, as the files in the fd directory
558.\" are not seekable.
559
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560.I /proc/self/fd/N
561is approximately the same as
562.I /dev/fd/N
008f1ecc 563in some UNIX and UNIX-like systems.
c13182ef 564Most Linux MAKEDEV scripts symbolically link
59a40ed7
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565.I /dev/fd
566to
567.IR /proc/self/fd ,
568in fact.
569
570Most systems provide symbolic links
571.IR /dev/stdin ,
572.IR /dev/stdout ,
573and
574.IR /dev/stderr ,
575which respectively link to the files
576.IR 0 ,
577.IR 1 ,
578and
579.IR 2
580in
581.IR /proc/self/fd .
582Thus the example command above could be written as:
583.in +4n
584.nf
585
b43a3b30 586.RB "$" " foobar \-i /dev/stdin \-o /dev/stdout ..."
59a40ed7
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587.fi
588.in
69ab425e
MK
589.\" FIXME Describe /proc/[pid]/loginuid
590.\" Added in 2.6.11; updating requires CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL
591.\" CONFIG_AUDITSYSCALL
592.TP
7e07d950 593.IR /proc/[pid]/fdinfo/ " (since Linux 2.6.22)"
69ab425e
MK
594This is a subdirectory containing one entry for each file which the
595process has open, named by its file descriptor.
0275956d 596The files in this directory are readable only by the owner of the process.
69ab425e 597The contents of each file can be read to obtain information
0275956d
MK
598about the corresponding file descriptor.
599The content depends on the type of file referred to by the
d9cb0d7d 600corresponding file descriptor.
0275956d
MK
601
602For regular files and directories, we see something like:
69ab425e
MK
603.in +4n
604.nf
605
606.RB "$" " cat /proc/12015/fdinfo/4"
607pos: 1000
608flags: 01002002
0275956d 609mnt_id: 21
69ab425e
MK
610.fi
611.in
612
9599cbb3
MK
613The fields are as follows:
614.RS
615.TP
69ab425e 616.I pos
9599cbb3
MK
617This is a decimal number showing the file offset.
618.TP
69ab425e 619.I flags
9599cbb3 620This is an octal number that displays the
69ab425e
MK
621file access mode and file status flags (see
622.BR open (2)).
d7e537ce
MK
623If the close-on-exec file descriptor flag is set, then
624.I flags
625will also include the value
626.BR O_CLOEXEC .
627
628Before Linux 3.1,
629.\" commit 1117f72ea0217ba0cc19f05adbbd8b9a397f5ab7
630this field incorrectly displayed the setting of
631.B O_CLOEXEC
632at the time the file was opened,
633rather than the current setting of the close-on-exec flag.
9599cbb3
MK
634.TP
635.I
0275956d 636.I mnt_id
9599cbb3 637This field, present since Linux 3.15,
0275956d
MK
638.\" commit 49d063cb353265c3af701bab215ac438ca7df36d
639is the ID of the mount point containing this file.
640See the description of
641.IR /proc/[pid]/mountinfo .
9599cbb3
MK
642.RE
643.IP
6e7622ee
MK
644For eventfd file descriptors (see
645.BR eventfd (2)),
b6a7fd50
MK
646we see (since Linux 3.8)
647.\" commit cbac5542d48127b546a23d816380a7926eee1c25
648the following fields:
6e7622ee
MK
649
650.in +4n
651.nf
652pos: 0
653flags: 02
654mnt_id: 10
655eventfd-count: 40
656.fi
657.in
658
659.I eventfd-count
660is the current value of the eventfd counter, in hexadecimal.
661
58d375dd
MK
662For epoll file descriptors (see
663.BR epoll (7)),
b6a7fd50
MK
664we see (since Linux 3.8)
665.\" commit 138d22b58696c506799f8de759804083ff9effae
666the following fields:
58d375dd
MK
667
668.in +4n
669.nf
670pos: 0
671flags: 02
672mnt_id: 10
673tfd: 9 events: 19 data: 74253d2500000009
674tfd: 7 events: 19 data: 74253d2500000007
675.fi
676.in
677
678Each of the lines beginning
679.I tfd
680describes one of the file descriptors being monitored via
681the epoll file descriptor (see
682.BR epoll_ctl (2)
683for some details).
684The
685.IR tfd
686field is the number of the file descriptor.
687The
688.I events
689field is a hexadecimal mask of the events being monitored for this file
690descriptor.
691The
692.I data
693field is the data value associated with this file descriptor.
694
f8a14cac
MK
695For signalfd file descriptors (see
696.BR signalfd (2)),
b6a7fd50
MK
697we see (since Linux 3.8)
698.\" commit 138d22b58696c506799f8de759804083ff9effae
699the following fields:
f8a14cac
MK
700
701.in +4n
702.nf
703pos: 0
704flags: 02
705mnt_id: 10
706sigmask: 0000000000000006
707.fi
708.in
709
710.I sigmask
711is the hexadecimal mask of signals that are accepted via this
712signalfd file descriptor.
713(In this example, bits 2 and 3 are set, corresponding to the signals
714.B SIGINT
715and
716.BR SIGQUIT ;
717see
718.BR signal (7).)
4e77145c
MK
719
720For inotify file descriptors (see
721.BR inotify (7)),
722we see (since Linux 3.8)
723the following fields:
724
725.in +4n
726.nf
727pos: 0
728flags: 00
729mnt_id: 11
730inotify wd:2 ino:7ef82a sdev:800001 mask:800afff ignored_mask:0 fhandle-bytes:8 fhandle-type:1 f_handle:2af87e00220ffd73
731inotify wd:1 ino:192627 sdev:800001 mask:800afff ignored_mask:0 fhandle-bytes:8 fhandle-type:1 f_handle:27261900802dfd73
732.fi
733.in
734
735Each of the lines beginning with "inotify" displays information about
736one file or directory that is being monitored.
737The fields in this line are as follows:
738.RS
739.TP
740.I wd
741A watch descriptor number (in decimal).
742.TP
743.I ino
744The inode number of the target file (in hexadecimal).
745.TP
746.I sdev
747The ID of the device where the target file resides (in hexadecimal).
748.TP
749.I mask
750The mask of events being monitored for the target file (in hexadecimal).
751.RE
752.IP
753If the kernel was built with exportfs support, the path to the target
754file is exposed as a file handle, via three hexadecimal fields:
755.IR fhandle-bytes ,
756.IR fhandle-type ,
757and
758.IR f_handle .
e2444bcb
MK
759
760For fanotify file descriptors (see
761.BR fanotify (7)),
762we see (since Linux 3.8)
763the following fields:
764
765.in +4n
766.nf
767pos: 0
768flags: 02
769mnt_id: 11
770fanotify flags:0 event-flags:88002
771fanotify ino:19264f sdev:800001 mflags:0 mask:1 ignored_mask:0 fhandle-bytes:8 fhandle-type:1 f_handle:4f261900a82dfd73
772.fi
773.in
774
775The fourth line displays information defined when the fanotify group
776was created via
777.BR fanotify_init (2):
778.RS
779.TP
780.I flags
781The
782.I flags
783argument given to
784.BR fanotify_init (2)
785(expressed in hexadecimal).
786.TP
787.I event-flags
788The
789.I event_f_flags
790argument given to
791.BR fanotify_init (2)
792(expressed in hexadecimal).
793.RE
794.IP
795Each additional line shown in the file contains information
796about one of the marks in the fanotify group.
797Most of these fields are as for inotify, except:
798.RS
799.TP
800.I mflags
801The flags associated with the mark
802(expressed in hexadecimal).
803.TP
804.I mask
805The events mask for this mark
806(expressed in hexadecimal).
807.TP
808.I ignored_mask
809The mask of events that are ignored for this mark
810(expressed in hexadecimal).
811.RE
812.IP
813For details on these fields, see
814.BR fanotify_mark (2).
0ca2fc4d
PS
815.TP
816.IR /proc/[pid]/io " (since kernel 2.6.20)"
68f11066
MK
817.\" commit 7c3ab7381e79dfc7db14a67c6f4f3285664e1ec2
818This file contains I/O statistics for the process, for example:
0ca2fc4d
PS
819.in +4n
820.nf
821
822.RB "#" " cat /proc/3828/io"
823rchar: 323934931
824wchar: 323929600
825syscr: 632687
826syscw: 632675
827read_bytes: 0
828write_bytes: 323932160
829cancelled_write_bytes: 0
830.fi
831.in
832
833The fields are as follows:
834.RS
68f11066
MK
835.TP
836.IR rchar ": characters read"
0ca2fc4d
PS
837The number of bytes which this task has caused to be read from storage.
838This is simply the sum of bytes which this process passed to
839.BR read (2)
68f11066 840and similar system calls.
11256884 841It includes things such as terminal I/O and
68f11066
MK
842is unaffected by whether or not actual
843physical disk I/O was required (the read might have been satisfied from
0ca2fc4d 844pagecache).
68f11066
MK
845.TP
846.IR wchar ": characters written"
0ca2fc4d
PS
847The number of bytes which this task has caused, or shall cause to be written
848to disk.
849Similar caveats apply here as with
850.IR rchar .
68f11066
MK
851.TP
852.IR syscr ": read syscalls"
853Attempt to count the number of read I/O operations\(emthat is,
854system calls such as
0ca2fc4d
PS
855.BR read (2)
856and
857.BR pread (2).
68f11066
MK
858.TP
859.IR syscw ": write syscalls"
860Attempt to count the number of write I/O operations\(emthat is,
861system calls such as
0ca2fc4d
PS
862.BR write (2)
863and
864.BR pwrite (2).
68f11066
MK
865.TP
866.IR read_bytes ": bytes read"
0ca2fc4d
PS
867Attempt to count the number of bytes which this process really did cause to
868be fetched from the storage layer.
869This is accurate for block-backed filesystems.
68f11066
MK
870.TP
871.IR write_bytes ": bytes written"
0ca2fc4d
PS
872Attempt to count the number of bytes which this process caused to be sent to
873the storage layer.
68f11066 874.TP
0ca2fc4d 875.IR cancelled_write_bytes :
0ca2fc4d
PS
876The big inaccuracy here is truncate.
877If a process writes 1MB to a file and then deletes the file,
878it will in fact perform no writeout.
879But it will have been accounted as having caused 1MB of write.
68f11066 880In other words: this field represents the number of bytes which this process
0ca2fc4d 881caused to not happen, by truncating pagecache.
68f11066 882A task can cause "negative" I/O too.
0ca2fc4d 883If this task truncates some dirty pagecache,
68f11066
MK
884some I/O which another task has been accounted for
885(in its
886.IR write_bytes )
887will not be happening.
888.RE
0ca2fc4d
PS
889.IP
890.IR Note :
68f11066 891In the current implementation, things are a bit racy on 32-bit systems:
0ca2fc4d
PS
892if process A reads process B's
893.I /proc/[pid]/io
68f11066 894while process B is updating one of these 64-bit counters,
0ca2fc4d 895process A could see an intermediate result.
f6e17121 896.TP
ccdc8958 897.IR /proc/[pid]/gid_map " (since Linux 3.5)"
d06a6170
MK
898See
899.BR user_namespaces (7).
69ab425e 900.TP
7e07d950 901.IR /proc/[pid]/limits " (since Linux 2.6.24)"
69ab425e
MK
902This file displays the soft limit, hard limit, and units of measurement
903for each of the process's resource limits (see
904.BR getrlimit (2)).
905Up to and including Linux 2.6.35,
906this file is protected to allow reading only by the real UID of the process.
907Since Linux 2.6.36,
908.\" commit 3036e7b490bf7878c6dae952eec5fb87b1106589
909this file is readable by all users on the system.
b4f89985
PE
910.TP
911.IR /proc/[pid]/map_files/ " (since kernel 3.3)
18cdd0ac
MK
912.\" commit 640708a2cff7f81e246243b0073c66e6ece7e53e
913This subdirectory contains entries corresponding to memory-mapped
b4f89985
PE
914files (see
915.BR mmap (2)).
18cdd0ac
MK
916Entries are named by memory region start and end
917address pair (expressed as hexadecimal numbers),
918and are symbolic links to the mapped files themselves.
919Here is an example, with the output wrapped and reformatted to fit on an 80-column display:
b4f89985
PE
920.in +4n
921.nf
922
f2aa4dcc 923.RB "#" " ls -l /proc/self/map_files/"
18cdd0ac
MK
924lr\-\-\-\-\-\-\-\-. 1 root root 64 Apr 16 21:31
925 3252e00000\-3252e20000 \-> /usr/lib64/ld-2.15.so
b4f89985
PE
926\&...
927.fi
928.in
929
930Although these entries are present for memory regions that were
d6a56978 931mapped with the
b4f89985 932.BR MAP_FILE
18cdd0ac 933flag, the way anonymous shared memory (regions created with the
b4f89985
PE
934.B MAP_ANON | MAP_SHARED
935flags)
936is implemented in Linux
18cdd0ac
MK
937means that such regions also appear on this directory.
938Here is an example where the target file is the deleted
939.I /dev/zero
940one:
b4f89985
PE
941.in +4n
942.nf
943
18cdd0ac
MK
944lrw\-\-\-\-\-\-\-. 1 root root 64 Apr 16 21:33
945 7fc075d2f000\-7fc075e6f000 \-> /dev/zero (deleted)
b4f89985
PE
946.fi
947.in
948
949This directory appears only if the
950.B CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE
951kernel configuration option is enabled.
f2aa4dcc
MK
952Privilege
953.RB ( CAP_SYS_ADMIN )
954.\" FIXME
955.\" This may change. See the mail thread
956.\" [RFC][PATCH v2] procfs: Always expose /proc/<pid>/map_files/ and make it readable
957.\" from Jan 2015
958is required to view the contents of this directory.
fea681da 959.TP
69119dc7 960.I /proc/[pid]/maps
fea681da
MK
961A file containing the currently mapped memory regions and their access
962permissions.
bbf9f397
MK
963See
964.BR mmap (2)
965for some further information about memory mappings.
fea681da 966
dd0c3b96 967The format of the file is:
fea681da 968
21781757 969.in -7n
fea681da
MK
970.nf
971.ft CW
fea681da 972.ft
21781757
MK
973.I "address perms offset dev inode pathname"
97400400000-00452000 r-xp 00000000 08:02 173521 /usr/bin/dbus-daemon
97500651000-00652000 r--p 00051000 08:02 173521 /usr/bin/dbus-daemon
97600652000-00655000 rw-p 00052000 08:02 173521 /usr/bin/dbus-daemon
97700e03000-00e24000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [heap]
97800e24000-011f7000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [heap]
182090db 979\&...
21781757
MK
98035b1800000-35b1820000 r-xp 00000000 08:02 135522 /usr/lib64/ld-2.15.so
98135b1a1f000-35b1a20000 r--p 0001f000 08:02 135522 /usr/lib64/ld-2.15.so
98235b1a20000-35b1a21000 rw-p 00020000 08:02 135522 /usr/lib64/ld-2.15.so
7d2e6d74 98335b1a21000-35b1a22000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0
21781757
MK
98435b1c00000-35b1dac000 r-xp 00000000 08:02 135870 /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so
98535b1dac000-35b1fac000 ---p 001ac000 08:02 135870 /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so
98635b1fac000-35b1fb0000 r--p 001ac000 08:02 135870 /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so
98735b1fb0000-35b1fb2000 rw-p 001b0000 08:02 135870 /usr/lib64/libc-2.15.so
182090db 988\&...
21781757 989f2c6ff8c000-7f2c7078c000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack:986]
182090db 990\&...
21781757
MK
9917fffb2c0d000-7fffb2c2e000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack]
9927fffb2d48000-7fffb2d49000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0 [vdso]
fea681da 993.fi
21781757 994.in
fea681da 995
7d2e6d74 996The
3eb8c588
MK
997.I address
998field is the address space in the process that the mapping occupies.
999The
1000.I perms
1001field is a set of permissions:
fea681da
MK
1002
1003.nf
1004.in +5
1005r = read
1006w = write
1007x = execute
1008s = shared
1009p = private (copy on write)
1010.fi
1011.in
1012
3eb8c588
MK
1013The
1014.I offset
b844cf04 1015field is the offset into the file/whatever;
3eb8c588
MK
1016.I dev
1017is the device
dd0c3b96 1018(major:minor);
3eb8c588
MK
1019.I inode
1020is the inode on that device.
59a40ed7 10210 indicates that no inode is associated with the memory region,
16e64bae 1022as would be the case with BSS (uninitialized data).
fea681da 1023
3eb8c588
MK
1024The
1025.I pathname
1026field will usually be the file that is backing the mapping.
491ea6f1 1027For ELF files,
3eb8c588
MK
1028you can easily coordinate with the
1029.I offset
1030field by looking at the
491ea6f1
MK
1031Offset field in the ELF program headers
1032.RI ( "readelf\ \-l" ).
37d32c38 1033
491ea6f1 1034There are additional helpful pseudo-paths:
61b0b1f4
MK
1035.RS 12
1036.TP
1037.IR [stack]
16e64bae 1038The initial process's (also known as the main thread's) stack.
61b0b1f4 1039.TP
3eb8c588 1040.IR [stack:<tid>] " (since Linux 3.4)"
a60894c5 1041.\" commit b76437579d1344b612cf1851ae610c636cec7db0
61b0b1f4 1042A thread's stack (where the
3eb8c588 1043.IR <tid>
61b0b1f4 1044is a thread ID).
491ea6f1 1045It corresponds to the
3eb8c588 1046.IR /proc/[pid]/task/[tid]/
37d32c38 1047path.
61b0b1f4 1048.TP
7d2e6d74 1049.IR [vdso]
61b0b1f4
MK
1050The virtual dynamically linked shared object.
1051.TP
7d2e6d74 1052.IR [heap]
61b0b1f4
MK
1053The process's heap.
1054.in
61b0b1f4
MK
1055.RE
1056.IP
3eb8c588
MK
1057If the
1058.I pathname
1059field is blank,
491ea6f1 1060this is an anonymous mapping as obtained via the
37d32c38 1061.BR mmap (2)
491ea6f1 1062function.
61b0b1f4
MK
1063There is no easy way to coordinate this back to a process's source,
1064short of running it through
491ea6f1
MK
1065.BR gdb (1),
1066.BR strace (1),
1067or similar.
37d32c38 1068
eb9a0b2f 1069Under Linux 2.0, there is no field giving pathname.
fea681da 1070.TP
69119dc7 1071.I /proc/[pid]/mem
fea681da
MK
1072This file can be used to access the pages of a process's memory through
1073.BR open (2),
1074.BR read (2),
1075and
ccb2bb0d 1076.BR lseek (2).
b4e9ee8f 1077.TP
69119dc7 1078.IR /proc/[pid]/mountinfo " (since Linux 2.6.26)"
b4e9ee8f 1079.\" This info adapted from Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
fb4bdaa1 1080.\" commit 2d4d4864ac08caff5c204a752bd004eed4f08760
b4e9ee8f 1081This file contains information about mount points.
fb4bdaa1
MK
1082It supplies various information
1083(e.g., propagation state, root of mount for bind mounts,
1084identifier for each mount and its parent) that is missing from the (older)
1085.IR /proc/[pid]/mounts
1086file, and fixes various other problems with that file
1087(e.g., nonextensibility,
1088failure to distinguish per-mount versus per-superblock options).
1089
1090The file contains lines of the form:
b4e9ee8f
MK
1091.nf
1092.ft CW
b4e9ee8f 1093
0f619d1f 109436 35 98:0 /mnt1 /mnt2 rw,noatime master:1 \- ext3 /dev/root rw,errors=continue
b4e9ee8f 1095(1)(2)(3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11)
b4e9ee8f
MK
1096.ft
1097.fi
1098.IP
1099The numbers in parentheses are labels for the descriptions below:
3bc960c2 1100.RS 7
b4e9ee8f
MK
1101.TP 5
1102(1)
0f619d1f 1103mount ID: a unique ID for the mount (may be reused after
b4e9ee8f
MK
1104.BR umount (2)).
1105.TP
1106(2)
0f619d1f
MK
1107parent ID: the ID of the parent mount
1108(or of self for the top of the mount tree).
b4e9ee8f
MK
1109.TP
1110(3)
0f619d1f 1111major:minor: the value of
b4e9ee8f 1112.I st_dev
0f619d1f 1113for files on this filesystem (see
b4e9ee8f
MK
1114.BR stat (2)).
1115.TP
1116(4)
0f619d1f 1117root: the pathname of the directory in the filesystem
8d857fcb 1118which forms the root of this mount.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1119.TP
1120(5)
ebdc66e2 1121mount point: the pathname of the mount point relative
0f619d1f 1122to the process's root directory.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1123.TP
1124(6)
1125mount options: per-mount options.
1126.TP
1127(7)
0f619d1f 1128optional fields: zero or more fields of the form "tag[:value]"; see below.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1129.TP
1130(8)
0f619d1f 1131separator: the end of the optional fields is marked by a single hyphen.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1132.TP
1133(9)
0f619d1f 1134filesystem type: the filesystem type in the form "type[.subtype]".
b4e9ee8f
MK
1135.TP
1136(10)
9ee4a2b6 1137mount source: filesystem-specific information or "none".
b4e9ee8f
MK
1138.TP
1139(11)
68d86eac 1140super options: per-superblock options.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1141.RE
1142.IP
34d4e61d 1143Currently, the possible optional fields are:
b4e9ee8f
MK
1144.RS 12
1145.TP 18
1146shared:X
1147mount is shared in peer group X
1148.TP
1149master:X
1150mount is slave to peer group X
1151.TP
1152propagate_from:X
1153mount is slave and receives propagation from peer group X (*)
1154.TP
1155unbindable
1156mount is unbindable
1157.RE
1158.IP
0f619d1f
MK
1159Parsers should ignore all unrecognized optional fields.
1160.IP
b4e9ee8f
MK
1161(*) X is the closest dominant peer group under the process's root.
1162If X is the immediate master of the mount,
1163or if there is no dominant peer group under the same root,
1164then only the "master:X" field is present
1165and not the "propagate_from:X" field.
1166
1167For more information on mount propagation see:
1168.I Documentation/filesystems/sharedsubtree.txt
66a9882e 1169in the Linux kernel source tree.
b4e9ee8f 1170.TP
cea61382 1171.IR /proc/[pid]/mounts " (since Linux 2.4.19)"
9ee4a2b6 1172This is a list of all the filesystems currently mounted in the
732e54dd 1173process's mount namespace.
cea61382
MK
1174The format of this file is documented in
1175.BR fstab (5).
1176Since kernel version 2.6.15, this file is pollable:
1177after opening the file for reading, a change in this file
9ee4a2b6 1178(i.e., a filesystem mount or unmount) causes
cea61382
MK
1179.BR select (2)
1180to mark the file descriptor as readable, and
1181.BR poll (2)
1182and
1183.BR epoll_wait (2)
1184mark the file as having an error condition.
357002ec
MK
1185See
1186.BR namespaces (7)
1187for more information.
cea61382 1188.TP
69119dc7 1189.IR /proc/[pid]/mountstats " (since Linux 2.6.17)"
783a6233 1190This file exports information (statistics, configuration information)
0bafc692 1191about the mount points in the process's mount namespace.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1192Lines in this file have the form:
1193.nf
1194
1195device /dev/sda7 mounted on /home with fstype ext3 [statistics]
1196( 1 ) ( 2 ) (3 ) (4)
1197.fi
1198.IP
1199The fields in each line are:
3bc960c2 1200.RS 7
b4e9ee8f
MK
1201.TP 5
1202(1)
1203The name of the mounted device
1204(or "nodevice" if there is no corresponding device).
1205.TP
1206(2)
9ee4a2b6 1207The mount point within the filesystem tree.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1208.TP
1209(3)
9ee4a2b6 1210The filesystem type.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1211.TP
1212(4)
1213Optional statistics and configuration information.
9ee4a2b6 1214Currently (as at Linux 2.6.26), only NFS filesystems export
b4e9ee8f
MK
1215information via this field.
1216.RE
1217.IP
90878f7c 1218This file is readable only by the owner of the process.
4716a1dd
MK
1219
1220See
1221.BR namespaces (7)
1222for more information.
b4e9ee8f 1223.TP
b4a185e5 1224.IR /proc/[pid]/ns/ " (since Linux 3.0)"
2c4201f0 1225.\" See commit 6b4e306aa3dc94a0545eb9279475b1ab6209a31f
b4a185e5
EB
1226This is a subdirectory containing one entry for each namespace that
1227supports being manipulated by
80e63655 1228.BR setns (2).
cf8bfe6d
MK
1229For more information, see
1230.BR namespaces (7).
b4a185e5 1231.TP
69119dc7 1232.IR /proc/[pid]/numa_maps " (since Linux 2.6.14)"
610f75cc
MK
1233See
1234.BR numa (7).
7388733a 1235.TP
69119dc7 1236.IR /proc/[pid]/oom_adj " (since Linux 2.6.11)"
b4e9ee8f 1237This file can be used to adjust the score used to select which process
0425de01 1238should be killed in an out-of-memory (OOM) situation.
b4e9ee8f
MK
1239The kernel uses this value for a bit-shift operation of the process's
1240.IR oom_score
1241value:
5b8dbfd4
MK
1242valid values are in the range \-16 to +15,
1243plus the special value \-17,
b4e9ee8f
MK
1244which disables OOM-killing altogether for this process.
1245A positive score increases the likelihood of this
1246process being killed by the OOM-killer;
1247a negative score decreases the likelihood.
de8e9cc1 1248.IP
b4e9ee8f
MK
1249The default value for this file is 0;
1250a new process inherits its parent's
1251.I oom_adj
1252setting.
1253A process must be privileged
1254.RB ( CAP_SYS_RESOURCE )
1255to update this file.
f2c8b197
MK
1256.IP
1257Since Linux 2.6.36, use of this file is deprecated in favor of
1258.IR /proc/[pid]/oom_score_adj .
b4e9ee8f 1259.TP
69119dc7 1260.IR /proc/[pid]/oom_score " (since Linux 2.6.11)"
b4e9ee8f
MK
1261.\" See mm/oom_kill.c::badness() in the 2.6.25 sources
1262This file displays the current score that the kernel gives to
1263this process for the purpose of selecting a process
1264for the OOM-killer.
1265A higher score means that the process is more likely to be
1266selected by the OOM-killer.
1267The basis for this score is the amount of memory used by the process,
1268with increases (+) or decreases (\-) for factors including:
1269.\" See mm/oom_kill.c::badness() in the 2.6.25 sources
1270.RS
1271.IP * 2
1272whether the process creates a lot of children using
1273.BR fork (2)
1274(+);
1275.IP *
1276whether the process has been running a long time,
1277or has used a lot of CPU time (\-);
1278.IP *
1279whether the process has a low nice value (i.e., > 0) (+);
1280.IP *
1281whether the process is privileged (\-); and
1282.\" More precisely, if it has CAP_SYS_ADMIN or CAP_SYS_RESOURCE
1283.IP *
1284whether the process is making direct hardware access (\-).
1285.\" More precisely, if it has CAP_SYS_RAWIO
1286.RE
1287.IP
1288The
1289.I oom_score
f2c8b197
MK
1290also reflects the adjustment specified by the
1291.I oom_score_adj
1292or
b4e9ee8f
MK
1293.I oom_adj
1294setting for the process.
f2c8b197
MK
1295.TP
1296.IR /proc/[pid]/oom_score_adj " (since Linux 2.6.36)"
1297.\" Text taken from 3.7 Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
1298This file can be used to adjust the badness heuristic used to select which
1299process gets killed in out-of-memory conditions.
1300
1301The badness heuristic assigns a value to each candidate task ranging from 0
1302(never kill) to 1000 (always kill) to determine which process is targeted.
1303The units are roughly a proportion along that range of
1304allowed memory the process may allocate from,
1305based on an estimation of its current memory and swap use.
1306For example, if a task is using all allowed memory,
1307its badness score will be 1000.
1308If it is using half of its allowed memory, its score will be 500.
1309
1310There is an additional factor included in the badness score: root
1311processes are given 3% extra memory over other tasks.
1312
1313The amount of "allowed" memory depends on the context
0633f951 1314in which the OOM-killer was called.
f2c8b197
MK
1315If it is due to the memory assigned to the allocating task's cpuset
1316being exhausted,
1317the allowed memory represents the set of mems assigned to that
1318cpuset (see
1319.BR cpuset (7)).
1320If it is due to a mempolicy's node(s) being exhausted,
1321the allowed memory represents the set of mempolicy nodes.
1322If it is due to a memory limit (or swap limit) being reached,
1323the allowed memory is that configured limit.
1324Finally, if it is due to the entire system being out of memory, the
1325allowed memory represents all allocatable resources.
1326
1327The value of
0633f951 1328.I oom_score_adj
f2c8b197
MK
1329is added to the badness score before it
1330is used to determine which task to kill.
1331Acceptable values range from \-1000
1332(OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MIN) to +1000 (OOM_SCORE_ADJ_MAX).
0633f951 1333This allows user space to control the preference for OOM-killing,
f2c8b197 1334ranging from always preferring a certain
f082ada4 1335task or completely disabling it from OOM killing.
f2c8b197 1336The lowest possible value, \-1000, is
0633f951 1337equivalent to disabling OOM-killing entirely for that task,
f2c8b197
MK
1338since it will always report a badness score of 0.
1339
1340Consequently, it is very simple for user space to define
1341the amount of memory to consider for each task.
1342Setting a
1343.I oom_score_adj
1344value of +500, for example,
1345is roughly equivalent to allowing the remainder of tasks sharing the
1346same system, cpuset, mempolicy, or memory controller resources
1347to use at least 50% more memory.
1348A value of \-500, on the other hand, would be roughly
1349equivalent to discounting 50% of the task's
1350allowed memory from being considered as scoring against the task.
1351
0633f951 1352For backward compatibility with previous kernels,
f2c8b197
MK
1353.I /proc/[pid]/oom_adj
1354can still be used to tune the badness score.
1355Its value is
9f1b9726 1356scaled linearly with
f2c8b197
MK
1357.IR oom_score_adj .
1358
1359Writing to
1360.IR /proc/[pid]/oom_score_adj
1361or
1362.IR /proc/[pid]/oom_adj
1363will change the other with its scaled value.
b0aa1e51
MK
1364.TP
1365.IR /proc/[pid]/pagemap " (since Linux 2.6.25)"
1366This file shows the mapping of each of the process's virtual pages
1367into physical page frames or swap area.
1368It contains one 64-bit value for each virtual page,
1369with the bits set as follows:
1370.RS 12
1371.TP
137263
1373If set, the page is present in RAM.
1374.TP
137562
1376If set, the page is in swap space
1377.TP
137861 (since Linux 3.5)
1379The page is a file-mapped page or a shared anonymous page.
1380.TP
138160-56 (since Linux 3.11)
1382Zero
1383.\" Not quite true; see commit 541c237c0923f567c9c4cabb8a81635baadc713f
1384.TP
138555 (Since Linux 3.11)
1386PTE is soft-dirty
1387(see the kernel source file
1388.IR Documentation/vm/soft-dirty.txt ).
1389.TP
139054-0
1391If the page is present in RAM (bit 63), then these bits
1392provide the page frame number, which can be used to index
1393.IR /proc/kpageflags
1394and
1395.IR /proc/kpagecount .
1396If the page is present in swap (bit 62),
1397then bits 4-0 give the swap type, and bits 54-5 encode the swap offset.
1398.RE
1399.IP
1400Before Linux 3.11, bits 60-55 were
1401used to encode the base-2 log of the page size.
1402.IP
1403To employ
1404.IR /proc/[pid]/pagemap
1405efficiently, use
1406.IR /proc/[pid]/maps
1407to determine which areas of memory are actually mapped and seek
1408to skip over unmapped regions.
1409.IP
1410The
1411.IR /proc/[pid]/pagemap
1412file is present only if the
1413.B CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
1414kernel configuration option is enabled.
7c2905d1
MK
1415.TP
1416.IR /proc/[pid]/personality " (since Linux 2.6.28)"
1417.\" commit 478307230810d7e2a753ed220db9066dfdf88718
1418This read-only file exposes the process's execution domain, as set by
1419.BR personality (2).
1420The value is displayed in hexadecimal notation.
fea681da 1421.TP
69119dc7 1422.I /proc/[pid]/root
008f1ecc 1423UNIX and Linux support the idea of a per-process root of the
9ee4a2b6 1424filesystem, set by the
fea681da 1425.BR chroot (2)
c13182ef
MK
1426system call.
1427This file is a symbolic link that points to the process's
14d70713
MK
1428root directory, and behaves in the same way as
1429.IR exe ,
1430and
1431.IR fd/* .
afcaf646
MK
1432
1433.\" The following was still true as at kernel 2.6.13
c13182ef
MK
1434In a multithreaded process, the contents of this symbolic link
1435are not available if the main thread has already terminated
afcaf646
MK
1436(typically by calling
1437.BR pthread_exit (3)).
f34f0182
MK
1438.\" FIXME Describe /proc/[pid]/projid_map
1439.\" Added in 3.7, commit f76d207a66c3a53defea67e7d36c3eb1b7d6d61d
69119dc7 1440.\" FIXME Describe /proc/[pid]/seccomp
6aefb6df 1441.\" Added in 2.6.12
bea08fec 1442.\"
69119dc7 1443.\" FIXME Describe /proc/[pid]/sessionid
b4e9ee8f 1444.\" Added in 2.6.25; read-only; only readable by real UID
b3fb99e8 1445.\" commit 1e0bd7550ea9cf474b1ad4c6ff5729a507f75fdc
b4e9ee8f 1446.\" CONFIG_AUDITSYSCALL
bea08fec 1447.\"
69119dc7 1448.\" FIXME Describe /proc/[pid]/sched
b4e9ee8f
MK
1449.\" Added in 2.6.23
1450.\" CONFIG_SCHED_DEBUG, and additional fields if CONFIG_SCHEDSTATS
1451.\" Displays various scheduling parameters
1452.\" This file can be written, to reset stats
ef4f4031 1453.\" The set of fields exposed by this file have changed
b3fb99e8
MK
1454.\" significantly over time.
1455.\" commit 43ae34cb4cd650d1eb4460a8253a8e747ba052ac
1456.\"
69119dc7
MK
1457.\" FIXME Describe /proc/[pid]/schedstats and
1458.\" /proc/[pid]/task/[tid]/schedstats
b4e9ee8f
MK
1459.\" Added in 2.6.9
1460.\" CONFIG_SCHEDSTATS
fea681da 1461.TP
51dea63a
MK
1462.IR /proc/[pid]/seccomp " (from Linux 2.6.12 to 2.6.22)"
1463Read/set the seccomp mode for the process.
1464If this file contains the value zero, seccomp mode is not enabled.
1465Writing the value 1 to this file (irreversibly) places the process in
1466seccomp mode: the only permitted system calls are
1467.BR read (2),
1468.BR write (2),
1469.BR _exit (2),
1470and
1471.BR sigreturn (2).
1472This file went away in Linux 2.6.23,
1473.\" commit 1d9d02feeee89e9132034d504c9a45eeaf618a3d
1474when it was replaced by a
1475.BR prctl (2)-based
1476mechanism.
1477.TP
5c92b1b7 1478.IR /proc/[pid]/setgroups " (since Linux 3.19)"
ab28dba9
MK
1479See
1480.BR user_namespaces (7).
d520465b 1481.TP
69119dc7 1482.IR /proc/[pid]/smaps " (since Linux 2.6.14)"
b07b19c4 1483This file shows memory consumption for each of the process's mappings.
859503c3
MK
1484(The
1485.BR pmap (1)
1486command displays similar information,
1487in a form that may be easier for parsing.)
1f0add28 1488For each mapping there is a series of lines such as the following:
a08ea57c 1489.in +4n
b07b19c4
MK
1490.nf
1491
1f0add28 149200400000-0048a000 r-xp 00000000 fd:03 960637 /bin/bash
95fe794d
PG
1493Size: 552 kB
1494Rss: 460 kB
1495Pss: 100 kB
1496Shared_Clean: 452 kB
1497Shared_Dirty: 0 kB
1498Private_Clean: 8 kB
1499Private_Dirty: 0 kB
1500Referenced: 460 kB
1501Anonymous: 0 kB
1502AnonHugePages: 0 kB
1503Swap: 0 kB
1504KernelPageSize: 4 kB
1505MMUPageSize: 4 kB
1506Locked: 0 kB
b07b19c4
MK
1507
1508.fi
a08ea57c 1509.in
b07b19c4
MK
1510The first of these lines shows the same information as is displayed
1511for the mapping in
69119dc7 1512.IR /proc/[pid]/maps .
b07b19c4 1513The remaining lines show the size of the mapping,
95fe794d
PG
1514the amount of the mapping that is currently resident in RAM ("Rss"),
1515the process' proportional share of this mapping ("Pss"),
1f0add28 1516the number of clean and dirty shared pages in the mapping,
c7ce200d 1517and the number of clean and dirty private pages in the mapping.
95fe794d 1518"Referenced" indicates the amount of memory currently marked as
1f0add28
MK
1519referenced or accessed.
1520"Anonymous" shows the amount of memory
1521that does not belong to any file.
1522"Swap" shows how much
95fe794d
PG
1523would-be-anonymous memory is also used, but out on swap.
1524
d6a56978 1525The "KernelPageSize" entry is the page size used by the kernel to back a VMA.
1f0add28
MK
1526This matches the size used by the MMU in the majority of cases.
1527However, one counter-example occurs on PPC64 kernels
1528whereby a kernel using 64K as a base page size may still use 4K
1529pages for the MMU on older processors.
1530To distinguish, this
1531patch reports "MMUPageSize" as the page size used by the MMU.
95fe794d
PG
1532
1533The "Locked" indicates whether the mapping is locked in memory
1534or not.
1535
1536"VmFlags" field represents the kernel flags associated with
1f0add28
MK
1537the particular virtual memory area in two letter encoded manner.
1538The codes are the following:
1539
95fe794d 1540 rd - readable
1f0add28 1541 wr - writable
95fe794d
PG
1542 ex - executable
1543 sh - shared
1544 mr - may read
1545 mw - may write
1546 me - may execute
1547 ms - may share
723e333c 1548 gd - stack segment grows down
95fe794d
PG
1549 pf - pure PFN range
1550 dw - disabled write to the mapped file
1551 lo - pages are locked in memory
1552 io - memory mapped I/O area
1553 sr - sequential read advise provided
1554 rr - random read advise provided
1555 dc - do not copy area on fork
1556 de - do not expand area on remapping
1557 ac - area is accountable
1558 nr - swap space is not reserved for the area
1559 ht - area uses huge tlb pages
1560 nl - non-linear mapping
1561 ar - architecture specific flag
1562 dd - do not include area into core dump
1563 sd - soft-dirty flag
1564 mm - mixed map area
1565 hg - huge page advise flag
1566 nh - no-huge page advise flag
b5408a0f 1567 mg - mergeable advise flag
b07b19c4 1568
e618d945
MK
1569The
1570.IR /proc/[pid]/smaps
1571file is present only if the
1572.B CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
1573kernel configuration option is enabled.
b07b19c4 1574.TP
67aac6fb
MK
1575.IR /proc/[pid]/stack " (since Linux 2.6.29)"
1576.\" 2ec220e27f5040aec1e88901c1b6ea3d135787ad
1577This file provides a symbolic trace of the function calls in this
1578process's kernel stack.
1579This file is provided only if the kernel was built with the
1580.B CONFIG_STACKTRACE
1581configuration option.
1582.TP
69119dc7 1583.I /proc/[pid]/stat
c13182ef
MK
1584Status information about the process.
1585This is used by
1586.BR ps (1).
082bf5b8
MK
1587It is defined in the kernel source file
1588.IR fs/proc/array.c "."
fea681da
MK
1589
1590The fields, in order, with their proper
1591.BR scanf (3)
1592format specifiers, are:
1593.RS
62e4a418
MK
1594.TP 10
1595(1) \fIpid\fP \ %d
1596.br
1597The process ID.
fea681da 1598.TP
62e4a418
MK
1599(2) \fIcomm\fP \ %s
1600The filename of the executable, in parentheses.
c13182ef 1601This is visible whether or not the executable is swapped out.
fea681da 1602.TP
62e4a418 1603(3) \fIstate\fP \ %c
31293f37
MK
1604One of the following characters, indicating process state:
1605.RS
1606.IP R 3
1607Running
1608.IP S
1609Sleeping in an interruptible wait
1610.IP D
1611Waiting in uninterruptible
1612disk sleep
1613.IP Z
1614Zombie
1615.IP T
1616Stopped (on a signal) or (before Linux 2.6.33) trace stopped
1617.IP t
1618.\" commit 44d90df6b757c59651ddd55f1a84f28132b50d29
1619Tracing stop (Linux 2.6.33 onward)
1620.IP W
1621Paging (only before Linux 2.6.0)
1622.IP X
ef4f4031 1623Dead (from Linux 2.6.0 onward)
31293f37
MK
1624.IP x
1625.\" commit 44d90df6b757c59651ddd55f1a84f28132b50d29
1626Dead (Linux 2.6.33 to
1627.\" commit 74e37200de8e9c4e09b70c21c3f13c2071e77457
16283.13 only)
1629.IP K
1630.\" commit 44d90df6b757c59651ddd55f1a84f28132b50d29
1631Wakekill (Linux 2.6.33 to
1632.\" commit 74e37200de8e9c4e09b70c21c3f13c2071e77457
16333.13 only)
1634.IP W
1635.\" commit 44d90df6b757c59651ddd55f1a84f28132b50d29
1636Waking (Linux 2.6.33 to
1637.\" commit 74e37200de8e9c4e09b70c21c3f13c2071e77457
16383.13 only)
1639.IP P
1640.\" commit f2530dc71cf0822f90bb63ea4600caaef33a66bb
1641Parked (Linux 3.9 to
1642.\" commit 74e37200de8e9c4e09b70c21c3f13c2071e77457
16433.13 only)
1644.RE
fea681da 1645.TP
62e4a418 1646(4) \fIppid\fP \ %d
e0fdc57c 1647The PID of the parent of this process.
fea681da 1648.TP
62e4a418
MK
1649(5) \fIpgrp\fP \ %d
1650The process group ID of the process.
fea681da 1651.TP
62e4a418
MK
1652(6) \fIsession\fP \ %d
1653The session ID of the process.
fea681da 1654.TP
62e4a418
MK
1655(7) \fItty_nr\fP \ %d
1656The controlling terminal of the process.
59a40ed7
MK
1657(The minor device number is contained in the combination of bits
165831 to 20 and 7 to 0;
b97deb97 1659the major device number is in bits 15 to 8.)
fea681da 1660.TP
62e4a418 1661(8) \fItpgid\fP \ %d
fea681da 1662.\" This field and following, up to and including wchan added 0.99.1
62e4a418 1663The ID of the foreground process group of the controlling
59a40ed7 1664terminal of the process.
fea681da 1665.TP
62e4a418
MK
1666(9) \fIflags\fP \ %u
1667The kernel flags word of the process.
c13182ef 1668For bit meanings,
66a9882e 1669see the PF_* defines in the Linux kernel source file
00702acc 1670.IR include/linux/sched.h .
fea681da 1671Details depend on the kernel version.
62e4a418
MK
1672
1673The format for this field was %lu before Linux 2.6.
fea681da 1674.TP
ee566744 1675(10) \fIminflt\fP \ %lu
62e4a418 1676The number of minor faults the process has made which have not
fea681da
MK
1677required loading a memory page from disk.
1678.TP
62e4a418
MK
1679(11) \fIcminflt\fP \ %lu
1680The number of minor faults that the process's
fea681da
MK
1681waited-for children have made.
1682.TP
62e4a418
MK
1683(12) \fImajflt\fP \ %lu
1684The number of major faults the process has made which have
fea681da
MK
1685required loading a memory page from disk.
1686.TP
62e4a418
MK
1687(13) \fIcmajflt\fP \ %lu
1688The number of major faults that the process's
fea681da
MK
1689waited-for children have made.
1690.TP
62e4a418
MK
1691(14) \fIutime\fP \ %lu
1692Amount of time that this process has been scheduled in user mode,
7a017e24 1693measured in clock ticks (divide by
67914165 1694.IR sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK) ).
a1c9dc59
MK
1695This includes guest time, \fIguest_time\fP
1696(time spent running a virtual CPU, see below),
1697so that applications that are not aware of the guest time field
1698do not lose that time from their calculations.
fea681da 1699.TP
62e4a418
MK
1700(15) \fIstime\fP \ %lu
1701Amount of time that this process has been scheduled in kernel mode,
7a017e24 1702measured in clock ticks (divide by
67914165 1703.IR sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK) ).
fea681da 1704.TP
62e4a418
MK
1705(16) \fIcutime\fP \ %ld
1706Amount of time that this process's
7a017e24
MK
1707waited-for children have been scheduled in user mode,
1708measured in clock ticks (divide by
67914165 1709.IR sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK) ).
c13182ef 1710(See also
fea681da 1711.BR times (2).)
a1c9dc59
MK
1712This includes guest time, \fIcguest_time\fP
1713(time spent running a virtual CPU, see below).
fea681da 1714.TP
62e4a418
MK
1715(17) \fIcstime\fP \ %ld
1716Amount of time that this process's
7a017e24
MK
1717waited-for children have been scheduled in kernel mode,
1718measured in clock ticks (divide by
67914165 1719.IR sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK) ).
fea681da 1720.TP
62e4a418
MK
1721(18) \fIpriority\fP \ %ld
1722(Explanation for Linux 2.6)
59a40ed7
MK
1723For processes running a real-time scheduling policy
1724.RI ( policy
1725below; see
1726.BR sched_setscheduler (2)),
1727this is the negated scheduling priority, minus one;
1728that is, a number in the range \-2 to \-100,
1729corresponding to real-time priorities 1 to 99.
1730For processes running under a non-real-time scheduling policy,
1731this is the raw nice value
1732.RB ( setpriority (2))
1733as represented in the kernel.
1734The kernel stores nice values as numbers
1735in the range 0 (high) to 39 (low),
1736corresponding to the user-visible nice range of \-20 to 19.
1737
1738Before Linux 2.6, this was a scaled value based on
1739the scheduler weighting given to this process.
1740.\" And back in kernel 1.2 days things were different again.
fea681da 1741.TP
62e4a418
MK
1742(19) \fInice\fP \ %ld
1743The nice value (see
59a40ed7
MK
1744.BR setpriority (2)),
1745a value in the range 19 (low priority) to \-20 (high priority).
1746.\" Back in kernel 1.2 days things were different.
fea681da
MK
1747.\" .TP
1748.\" \fIcounter\fP %ld
1749.\" The current maximum size in jiffies of the process's next timeslice,
1750.\" or what is currently left of its current timeslice, if it is the
1751.\" currently running process.
1752.\" .TP
1753.\" \fItimeout\fP %u
1754.\" The time in jiffies of the process's next timeout.
0e94f77b 1755.\" timeout was removed sometime around 2.1/2.2
aa610245 1756.TP
62e4a418
MK
1757(20) \fInum_threads\fP \ %ld
1758Number of threads in this process (since Linux 2.6).
bb83d1b9 1759Before kernel 2.6, this field was hard coded to 0 as a placeholder
0e94f77b 1760for an earlier removed field.
fea681da 1761.TP
62e4a418
MK
1762(21) \fIitrealvalue\fP \ %ld
1763The time in jiffies before the next
8bd58774
MK
1764.B SIGALRM
1765is sent to the process due to an interval timer.
0e94f77b
MK
1766Since kernel 2.6.17, this field is no longer maintained,
1767and is hard coded as 0.
fea681da 1768.TP
62e4a418
MK
1769(22) \fIstarttime\fP \ %llu
1770The time the process started after system boot.
055024ed
MK
1771In kernels before Linux 2.6, this value was expressed in jiffies.
1772Since Linux 2.6, the value is expressed in clock ticks (divide by
1773.IR sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK) ).
62e4a418
MK
1774
1775The format for this field was %lu before Linux 2.6.
fea681da 1776.TP
62e4a418
MK
1777(23) \fIvsize\fP \ %lu
1778Virtual memory size in bytes.
fea681da 1779.TP
62e4a418
MK
1780(24) \fIrss\fP \ %ld
1781Resident Set Size: number of pages the process has in real memory.
c13182ef 1782This is just the pages which
5fab2e7c 1783count toward text, data, or stack space.
c13182ef 1784This does not include pages
fea681da
MK
1785which have not been demand-loaded in, or which are swapped out.
1786.TP
62e4a418
MK
1787(25) \fIrsslim\fP \ %lu
1788Current soft limit in bytes on the rss of the process;
59a40ed7
MK
1789see the description of
1790.B RLIMIT_RSS
1791in
2b5407af 1792.BR getrlimit (2).
fea681da 1793.TP
62e4a418
MK
1794(26) \fIstartcode\fP \ %lu
1795The address above which program text can run.
fea681da 1796.TP
62e4a418
MK
1797(27) \fIendcode\fP \ %lu
1798The address below which program text can run.
fea681da 1799.TP
62e4a418
MK
1800(28) \fIstartstack\fP \ %lu
1801The address of the start (i.e., bottom) of the stack.
fea681da 1802.TP
62e4a418
MK
1803(29) \fIkstkesp\fP \ %lu
1804The current value of ESP (stack pointer), as found in the
fea681da
MK
1805kernel stack page for the process.
1806.TP
62e4a418
MK
1807(30) \fIkstkeip\fP \ %lu
1808The current EIP (instruction pointer).
fea681da 1809.TP
62e4a418
MK
1810(31) \fIsignal\fP \ %lu
1811The bitmap of pending signals, displayed as a decimal number.
59a40ed7 1812Obsolete, because it does not provide information on real-time signals; use
69119dc7 1813.I /proc/[pid]/status
59a40ed7 1814instead.
fea681da 1815.TP
62e4a418
MK
1816(32) \fIblocked\fP \ %lu
1817The bitmap of blocked signals, displayed as a decimal number.
59a40ed7 1818Obsolete, because it does not provide information on real-time signals; use
69119dc7 1819.I /proc/[pid]/status
59a40ed7 1820instead.
fea681da 1821.TP
62e4a418
MK
1822(33) \fIsigignore\fP \ %lu
1823The bitmap of ignored signals, displayed as a decimal number.
59a40ed7 1824Obsolete, because it does not provide information on real-time signals; use
69119dc7 1825.I /proc/[pid]/status
59a40ed7 1826instead.
fea681da 1827.TP
62e4a418
MK
1828(34) \fIsigcatch\fP \ %lu
1829The bitmap of caught signals, displayed as a decimal number.
59a40ed7 1830Obsolete, because it does not provide information on real-time signals; use
69119dc7 1831.I /proc/[pid]/status
59a40ed7 1832instead.
fea681da 1833.TP
62e4a418
MK
1834(35) \fIwchan\fP \ %lu
1835This is the "channel" in which the process is waiting.
2054f761
MK
1836It is the address of a location in the kernel where the process is sleeping.
1837The corresponding symbolic name can be found in
1838.IR /proc/[pid]/wchan .
fea681da 1839.TP
62e4a418 1840(36) \fInswap\fP \ %lu
0633f951 1841.\" nswap was added in 2.0
4d9b6984 1842Number of pages swapped (not maintained).
fea681da 1843.TP
62e4a418 1844(37) \fIcnswap\fP \ %lu
0633f951 1845.\" cnswap was added in 2.0
4d9b6984 1846Cumulative \fInswap\fP for child processes (not maintained).
fea681da 1847.TP
62e4a418
MK
1848(38) \fIexit_signal\fP \ %d \ (since Linux 2.1.22)
1849Signal to be sent to parent when we die.
fea681da 1850.TP
62e4a418
MK
1851(39) \fIprocessor\fP \ %d \ (since Linux 2.2.8)
1852CPU number last executed on.
568105c6 1853.TP
62e4a418
MK
1854(40) \fIrt_priority\fP \ %u \ (since Linux 2.5.19)
1855Real-time scheduling priority, a number in the range 1 to 99 for
59a40ed7
MK
1856processes scheduled under a real-time policy,
1857or 0, for non-real-time processes (see
568105c6
MK
1858.BR sched_setscheduler (2)).
1859.TP
62e4a418
MK
1860(41) \fIpolicy\fP \ %u \ (since Linux 2.5.19)
1861Scheduling policy (see
568105c6 1862.BR sched_setscheduler (2)).
cd60dedd 1863Decode using the SCHED_* constants in
59a40ed7 1864.IR linux/sched.h .
62e4a418
MK
1865
1866The format for this field was %lu before Linux 2.6.22.
167450d6 1867.TP
62e4a418
MK
1868(42) \fIdelayacct_blkio_ticks\fP \ %llu \ (since Linux 2.6.18)
1869Aggregated block I/O delays, measured in clock ticks (centiseconds).
14c06953 1870.TP
62e4a418
MK
1871(43) \fIguest_time\fP \ %lu \ (since Linux 2.6.24)
1872Guest time of the process (time spent running a virtual CPU
7a017e24 1873for a guest operating system), measured in clock ticks (divide by
67914165 1874.IR sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK) ).
14c06953 1875.TP
62e4a418
MK
1876(44) \fIcguest_time\fP \ %ld \ (since Linux 2.6.24)
1877Guest time of the process's children, measured in clock ticks (divide by
67914165 1878.IR sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK) ).
fea681da 1879.TP
62e4a418 1880(45) \fIstart_data\fP \ %lu \ (since Linux 3.3)
0be30a54 1881.\" commit b3f7f573a20081910e34e99cbc91831f4f02f1ff
62e4a418 1882Address above which program initialized and
426bc8d7 1883uninitialized (BSS) data are placed.
12449ae3 1884.TP
62e4a418 1885(46) \fIend_data\fP \ %lu \ (since Linux 3.3)
0be30a54 1886.\" commit b3f7f573a20081910e34e99cbc91831f4f02f1ff
62e4a418 1887Address below which program initialized and
426bc8d7 1888uninitialized (BSS) data are placed.
12449ae3 1889.TP
62e4a418 1890(47) \fIstart_brk\fP \ %lu \ (since Linux 3.3)
0be30a54 1891.\" commit b3f7f573a20081910e34e99cbc91831f4f02f1ff
62e4a418 1892Address above which program heap can be expanded with
426bc8d7 1893.BR brk (2).
12449ae3 1894.TP
62e4a418 1895(48) \fIarg_start\fP \ %lu \ (since Linux 3.5)
0be30a54 1896.\" commit 5b172087f99189416d5f47fd7ab5e6fb762a9ba3
62e4a418 1897Address above which program command-line arguments
426bc8d7
MK
1898.RI ( argv )
1899are placed.
12449ae3 1900.TP
62e4a418 1901(49) \fIarg_end\fP \ %lu \ (since Linux 3.5)
0be30a54 1902.\" commit 5b172087f99189416d5f47fd7ab5e6fb762a9ba3
62e4a418 1903Address below program command-line arguments
426bc8d7
MK
1904.RI ( argv )
1905are placed.
12449ae3 1906.TP
62e4a418 1907(50) \fIenv_start\fP \ %lu \ (since Linux 3.5)
0be30a54 1908.\" commit 5b172087f99189416d5f47fd7ab5e6fb762a9ba3
62e4a418 1909Address above which program environment is placed.
12449ae3 1910.TP
62e4a418 1911(51) \fIenv_end\fP \ %lu \ (since Linux 3.5)
0be30a54 1912.\" commit 5b172087f99189416d5f47fd7ab5e6fb762a9ba3
62e4a418 1913Address below which program environment is placed.
12449ae3 1914.TP
62e4a418 1915(52) \fIexit_code\fP \ %d \ (since Linux 3.5)
0be30a54 1916.\" commit 5b172087f99189416d5f47fd7ab5e6fb762a9ba3
62e4a418 1917The thread's exit status in the form reported by
426bc8d7 1918.BR waitpid (2).
12449ae3 1919.RE
1920.TP
69119dc7 1921.I /proc/[pid]/statm
59a40ed7 1922Provides information about memory usage, measured in pages.
c13182ef 1923The columns are:
a08ea57c
MK
1924.in +4n
1925.nf
1926
cb42fb56 1927size (1) total program size
69119dc7 1928 (same as VmSize in \fI/proc/[pid]/status\fP)
cb42fb56 1929resident (2) resident set size
69119dc7 1930 (same as VmRSS in \fI/proc/[pid]/status\fP)
cb42fb56
MK
1931share (3) shared pages (i.e., backed by a file)
1932text (4) text (code)
59a40ed7 1933.\" (not including libs; broken, includes data segment)
cb42fb56
MK
1934lib (5) library (unused in Linux 2.6)
1935data (6) data + stack
59a40ed7 1936.\" (including libs; broken, includes library text)
cb42fb56 1937dt (7) dirty pages (unused in Linux 2.6)
a08ea57c
MK
1938.fi
1939.in
fea681da 1940.TP
69119dc7 1941.I /proc/[pid]/status
fea681da 1942Provides much of the information in
69119dc7 1943.I /proc/[pid]/stat
fea681da 1944and
69119dc7 1945.I /proc/[pid]/statm
fea681da 1946in a format that's easier for humans to parse.
16b5f7ba
MK
1947Here's an example:
1948.in +4n
1949.nf
1950
b43a3b30 1951.RB "$" " cat /proc/$$/status"
16b5f7ba
MK
1952Name: bash
1953State: S (sleeping)
aac0b30f 1954Tgid: 17248
2d2dfb69 1955Ngid: 0
aac0b30f
MK
1956Pid: 17248
1957PPid: 17200
16b5f7ba
MK
1958TracerPid: 0
1959Uid: 1000 1000 1000 1000
1960Gid: 100 100 100 100
1961FDSize: 256
1962Groups: 16 33 100
aac0b30f
MK
1963NStgid: 17248
1964NSpid: 17248
1965NSpgid: 17248
1966NSsid: 17200
16b5f7ba
MK
1967VmPeak: 9136 kB
1968VmSize: 7896 kB
1969VmLck: 0 kB
15789039 1970VmPin: 0 kB
16b5f7ba
MK
1971VmHWM: 7572 kB
1972VmRSS: 6316 kB
1973VmData: 5224 kB
1974VmStk: 88 kB
1975VmExe: 572 kB
1976VmLib: 1708 kB
e28af9cd 1977VmPMD: 4 kB
16b5f7ba 1978VmPTE: 20 kB
49f6dda7 1979VmSwap: 0 kB
16b5f7ba
MK
1980Threads: 1
1981SigQ: 0/3067
1982SigPnd: 0000000000000000
1983ShdPnd: 0000000000000000
1984SigBlk: 0000000000010000
1985SigIgn: 0000000000384004
1986SigCgt: 000000004b813efb
1987CapInh: 0000000000000000
1988CapPrm: 0000000000000000
1989CapEff: 0000000000000000
1990CapBnd: ffffffffffffffff
6112ea97 1991CapAmb: 0000000000000000
039b6546 1992Seccomp: 0
16b5f7ba
MK
1993Cpus_allowed: 00000001
1994Cpus_allowed_list: 0
1995Mems_allowed: 1
1996Mems_allowed_list: 0
1997voluntary_ctxt_switches: 150
1998nonvoluntary_ctxt_switches: 545
1999.fi
2000.in
2001.IP
2002The fields are as follows:
2003.RS
2004.IP * 2
2005.IR Name :
2006Command run by this process.
2007.IP *
2008.IR State :
4175f999
MK
2009Current state of the process.
2010One of
16b5f7ba
MK
2011"R (running)",
2012"S (sleeping)",
2013"D (disk sleep)",
2014"T (stopped)",
2015"T (tracing stop)",
2016"Z (zombie)",
2017or
2018"X (dead)".
2019.IP *
2020.IR Tgid :
2021Thread group ID (i.e., Process ID).
2022.IP *
2d2dfb69
MK
2023.IR Ngid :
2024NUMA group ID (0 if none; since Linux 3.13).
2025.IP *
16b5f7ba
MK
2026.IR Pid :
2027Thread ID (see
2028.BR gettid (2)).
2029.IP *
a1bc91d5
MK
2030.IR PPid :
2031PID of parent process.
2032.IP *
16b5f7ba
MK
2033.IR TracerPid :
2034PID of process tracing this process (0 if not being traced).
2035.IP *
2036.IR Uid ", " Gid :
9ee4a2b6 2037Real, effective, saved set, and filesystem UIDs (GIDs).
16b5f7ba
MK
2038.IP *
2039.IR FDSize :
2040Number of file descriptor slots currently allocated.
2041.IP *
2042.IR Groups :
2043Supplementary group list.
2044.IP *
aac0b30f
MK
2045.I NStgid
2046Thread group ID (i.e., PID) in each of the PID namespaces of which
2047.I [pid]
2048is a member.
2049The leftmost entry shows the value with respect to the PID namespace
2050of the reading process,
2051followed by the value in successively nested inner namespaces.
2052.\" commit e4bc33245124db69b74a6d853ac76c2976f472d5
2053(Since Linux 4.1.)
2054.IP *
2055.I NSpid
2056Thread ID in each of the PID namespaces of which
2057.I [pid]
2058is a member.
2059The fields are ordered as for
2060.IR NStgid .
2061(Since Linux 4.1.)
2062.IP *
2063.I NSpgid
2064Process group ID in each of the PID namespaces of which
2065.I [pid]
2066is a member.
2067The fields are ordered as for
2068.IR NStgid .
2069(Since Linux 4.1.)
2070.IP *
2071.I NSsid
2072descendant namespace session ID hierarchy
2073Session ID in each of the PID namespaces of which
2074.I [pid]
2075is a member.
2076The fields are ordered as for
2077.IR NStgid .
2078(Since Linux 4.1.)
2079.IP *
16b5f7ba
MK
2080.IR VmPeak :
2081Peak virtual memory size.
2082.IP *
2083.IR VmSize :
2084Virtual memory size.
2085.IP *
2086.IR VmLck :
fde39195
MK
2087Locked memory size (see
2088.BR mlock (3)).
16b5f7ba 2089.IP *
15789039
TY
2090.IR VmPin :
2091Pinned memory size
2092.\" commit bc3e53f682d93df677dbd5006a404722b3adfe18
2093(since Linux 3.2).
2094These are pages that can't be moved because something needs to
2095directly access physical memory.
2096.IP *
16b5f7ba
MK
2097.IR VmHWM :
2098Peak resident set size ("high water mark").
2099.IP *
2100.IR VmRSS :
2101Resident set size.
2102.IP *
2103.IR VmData ", " VmStk ", " VmExe :
2104Size of data, stack, and text segments.
2105.IP *
2106.IR VmLib :
2107Shared library code size.
2108.IP *
2109.IR VmPTE :
2110Page table entries size (since Linux 2.6.10).
2111.IP *
e28af9cd
MK
2112.IR VmPMD :
2113.\" commit dc6c9a35b66b520cf67e05d8ca60ebecad3b0479
73b9cbe1 2114Size of second-level page tables (since Linux 4.0).
e28af9cd 2115.IP *
ac4b0eb3 2116.IR VmSwap :
1ddc1665 2117.\" commit b084d4353ff99d824d3bc5a5c2c22c70b1fba722
fce21149
MK
2118Swapped-out virtual memory size by anonymous private pages;
2119shmem swap usage is not included (since Linux 2.6.34).
49f6dda7 2120.IP *
16b5f7ba
MK
2121.IR Threads :
2122Number of threads in process containing this thread.
2123.IP *
6ee625eb
MK
2124.IR SigQ :
2125This field contains two slash-separated numbers that relate to
2126queued signals for the real user ID of this process.
2127The first of these is the number of currently queued
2128signals for this real user ID, and the second is the
2129resource limit on the number of queued signals for this process
2130(see the description of
2131.BR RLIMIT_SIGPENDING
2132in
2133.BR getrlimit (2)).
2134.IP *
16b5f7ba
MK
2135.IR SigPnd ", " ShdPnd :
2136Number of signals pending for thread and for process as a whole (see
2137.BR pthreads (7)
2138and
2139.BR signal (7)).
2140.IP *
2141.IR SigBlk ", " SigIgn ", " SigCgt :
2142Masks indicating signals being blocked, ignored, and caught (see
2143.BR signal (7)).
2144.IP *
2145.IR CapInh ", " CapPrm ", " CapEff :
2146Masks of capabilities enabled in inheritable, permitted, and effective sets
2147(see
2148.BR capabilities (7)).
2149.IP *
2150.IR CapBnd :
2151Capability Bounding set
7e07d950 2152(since Linux 2.6.26, see
16b5f7ba
MK
2153.BR capabilities (7)).
2154.IP *
6112ea97
MK
2155.IR CapAmb :
2156Ambient capability set
2157(since Linux 4.3, see
2158.BR capabilities (7)).
2159.IP *
039b6546
MK
2160.IR Seccomp :
2161.\" commit 2f4b3bf6b2318cfaa177ec5a802f4d8d6afbd816
2162Seccomp mode of the process
2163(since Linux 3.8, see
2164.BR seccomp (2)).
21650 means
2166.BR SECCOMP_MODE_DISABLED ;
21671 means
2168.BR SECCOMP_MODE_STRICT ;
21692 means
2170.BR SECCOMP_MODE_FILTER .
2171This field is provided only if the kernel was built with the
2172.BR CONFIG_SECCOMP
2173kernel configuration option enabled.
2174.IP *
16b5f7ba
MK
2175.IR Cpus_allowed :
2176Mask of CPUs on which this process may run
2177(since Linux 2.6.24, see
2178.BR cpuset (7)).
2179.IP *
2180.IR Cpus_allowed_list :
2181Same as previous, but in "list format"
2182(since Linux 2.6.26, see
2183.BR cpuset (7)).
2184.IP *
2185.IR Mems_allowed :
2186Mask of memory nodes allowed to this process
2187(since Linux 2.6.24, see
2188.BR cpuset (7)).
2189.IP *
2190.IR Mems_allowed_list :
2191Same as previous, but in "list format"
2192(since Linux 2.6.26, see
2193.BR cpuset (7)).
2194.IP *
7c82878a 2195.IR voluntary_ctxt_switches ", " nonvoluntary_ctxt_switches :
16b5f7ba
MK
2196Number of voluntary and involuntary context switches (since Linux 2.6.23).
2197.RE
afb7b014
MK
2198.TP
2199.IR /proc/[pid]/syscall " (since Linux 2.6.27)"
2200.\" commit ebcb67341fee34061430f3367f2e507e52ee051b
2201This file exposes the system call number and argument registers for the
2202system call currently being executed by the process,
2203followed by the values of the stack pointer and program counter registers.
2204The values of all six argument registers are exposed,
2205although most system calls use fewer registers.
2206
2207If the process is blocked, but not in a system call,
1fb61947 2208then the file displays \-1 in place of the system call number,
afb7b014 2209followed by just the values of the stack pointer and program counter.
64fcb6e1 2210If process is not blocked, then the file contains just the string "running".
afb7b014
MK
2211
2212This file is present only if the kernel was configured with
2213.BR CONFIG_HAVE_ARCH_TRACEHOOK .
fea681da 2214.TP
69119dc7 2215.IR /proc/[pid]/task " (since Linux 2.6.0-test6)"
afcaf646
MK
2216This is a directory that contains one subdirectory
2217for each thread in the process.
69119dc7
MK
2218The name of each subdirectory is the numerical thread ID
2219.RI ( [tid] )
2220of the thread (see
afcaf646
MK
2221.BR gettid (2)).
2222Within each of these subdirectories, there is a set of
2223files with the same names and contents as under the
69119dc7 2224.I /proc/[pid]
afcaf646
MK
2225directories.
2226For attributes that are shared by all threads, the contents for
2227each of the files under the
69119dc7 2228.I task/[tid]
afcaf646 2229subdirectories will be the same as in the corresponding
c13182ef 2230file in the parent
69119dc7 2231.I /proc/[pid]
afcaf646 2232directory
c13182ef 2233(e.g., in a multithreaded process, all of the
69119dc7 2234.I task/[tid]/cwd
c13182ef 2235files will have the same value as the
69119dc7 2236.I /proc/[pid]/cwd
c13182ef 2237file in the parent directory, since all of the threads in a process
afcaf646
MK
2238share a working directory).
2239For attributes that are distinct for each thread,
c13182ef 2240the corresponding files under
69119dc7 2241.I task/[tid]
afcaf646 2242may have different values (e.g., various fields in each of the
69119dc7 2243.I task/[tid]/status
afcaf646
MK
2244files may be different for each thread).
2245
2246.\" The following was still true as at kernel 2.6.13
2247In a multithreaded process, the contents of the
69119dc7 2248.I /proc/[pid]/task
c13182ef 2249directory are not available if the main thread has already terminated
afcaf646
MK
2250(typically by calling
2251.BR pthread_exit (3)).
2252.TP
1509ca0e
MK
2253.IR /proc/[pid]/timers " (since Linux 3.10)"
2254.\" commit 5ed67f05f66c41e39880a6d61358438a25f9fee5
2255.\" commit 48f6a7a511ef8823fdff39afee0320092d43a8a0
2256A list of the POSIX timers for this process.
93691c1e 2257Each timer is listed with a line that starts with the string "ID:".
1509ca0e
MK
2258For example:
2259
2260.in +4n
2261.nf
2262ID: 1
2263signal: 60/00007fff86e452a8
2264notify: signal/pid.2634
2265ClockID: 0
2266ID: 0
2267signal: 60/00007fff86e452a8
2268notify: signal/pid.2634
2269ClockID: 1
2270.fi
2271.in
2272
2273The lines shown for each timer have the following meanings:
2274.RS
2275.TP
2276.I ID
2277The ID for this timer.
2278This is not the same as the timer ID returned by
2279.BR timer_create (2);
2280rather, it is the same kernel-internal ID that is available via the
2281.I si_timerid
2282field of the
2283.IR siginfo_t
2284structure (see
2285.BR sigaction (2)).
2286.TP
2287.I signal
2288This is the signal number that this timer uses to deliver notifications
2289followed by a slash, and then the
7f1ea8fb 2290.I sigev_value
1509ca0e
MK
2291value supplied to the signal handler.
2292Valid only for timers that notify via a signal.
2293.TP
2294.I notify
2295The part before the slash specifies the mechanism
2296that this timer uses to deliver notifications,
2297and is one of "thread", "signal", or "none".
2298Immediately following the slash is either the string "tid" for timers
2299with
2300.B SIGEV_THREAD_ID
2301notification, or "pid" for timers that notify by other mechanisms.
dbe6f88b
MK
2302Following the "." is the PID of the process
2303(or the kernel thread ID of the thread) that will be delivered
1509ca0e
MK
2304a signal if the timer delivers notifications via a signal.
2305.TP
2306.I ClockID
2307This field identifies the clock that the timer uses for measuring time.
2308For most clocks, this is a number that matches one of the user-space
2309.BR CLOCK_*
9d54c087 2310constants exposed via
1509ca0e
MK
2311.IR <time.h> .
2312.B CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID
2313timers display with a value of -6
2314in this field.
2315.B CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID
2316timers display with a value of -2
2317in this field.
2318.RE
5734da6d
MK
2319.IP
2320This file is available only when the kernel was configured with
2321.BR CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE .
1509ca0e 2322.TP
b1aad373
MK
2323.IR /proc/[pid]/uid_map ", " /proc/[pid]/gid_map " (since Linux 3.5)"
2324See
2325.BR user_namespaces (7).
2326.TP
2327.IR /proc/[pid]/wchan " (since Linux 2.6.0)"
2328The symbolic name corresponding to the location
2329in the kernel where the process is sleeping.
2330.TP
2331.I /proc/apm
2332Advanced power management version and battery information when
2333.B CONFIG_APM
2334is defined at kernel compilation time.
2335.TP
2336.I /proc/buddyinfo
2337This file contains information which is used for diagnosing memory
2338fragmentation issues.
2339Each line starts with the identification of the node and the name
2340of the zone which together identify a memory region
2341This is then
2342followed by the count of available chunks of a certain order in
2343which these zones are split.
2344The size in bytes of a certain order is given by the formula:
2345
2346 (2^order)\ *\ PAGE_SIZE
2347
2348The binary buddy allocator algorithm inside the kernel will split
2349one chunk into two chunks of a smaller order (thus with half the
2350size) or combine two contiguous chunks into one larger chunk of
2351a higher order (thus with double the size) to satisfy allocation
2352requests and to counter memory fragmentation.
2353The order matches the column number, when starting to count at zero.
2354
2355For example on a x86_64 system:
2356
2357.in -12n
2358.nf
2359Node 0, zone DMA 1 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 1 1 3
2360Node 0, zone DMA32 65 47 4 81 52 28 13 10 5 1 404
2361Node 0, zone Normal 216 55 189 101 84 38 37 27 5 3 587
2362.fi
2363.in
2364
2365In this example, there is one node containing three zones and there
2366are 11 different chunk sizes.
2367If the page size is 4 kilobytes, then the first zone called
2368.I DMA
2369(on x86 the first 16 megabyte of memory) has 1 chunk of 4 kilobytes
2370(order 0) available and has 3 chunks of 4 megabytes (order 10) available.
2371
2372If the memory is heavily fragmented, the counters for higher
2373order chunks will be zero and allocation of large contiguous areas
2374will fail.
2375
2376Further information about the zones can be found in
2377.IR /proc/zoneinfo .
2378.TP
2379.I /proc/bus
2380Contains subdirectories for installed busses.
2381.TP
2382.I /proc/bus/pccard
2383Subdirectory for PCMCIA devices when
2384.B CONFIG_PCMCIA
2385is set at kernel compilation time.
2386.TP
fea681da
MK
2387.I /proc/bus/pccard/drivers
2388.TP
2389.I /proc/bus/pci
c13182ef 2390Contains various bus subdirectories and pseudo-files containing
59a40ed7 2391information about PCI busses, installed devices, and device
c13182ef
MK
2392drivers.
2393Some of these files are not ASCII.
fea681da
MK
2394.TP
2395.I /proc/bus/pci/devices
59a40ed7 2396Information about PCI devices.
c13182ef 2397They may be accessed through
fea681da
MK
2398.BR lspci (8)
2399and
2400.BR setpci (8).
2401.TP
12b23dfe
MK
2402.IR /proc/cgroups " (since Linux 2.6.24)"
2403See
2404.BR cgroups (7).
2405.TP
fea681da 2406.I /proc/cmdline
c13182ef
MK
2407Arguments passed to the Linux kernel at boot time.
2408Often done via a boot manager such as
59a40ed7
MK
2409.BR lilo (8)
2410or
2411.BR grub (8).
f6e524c4
MK
2412.TP
2413.IR /proc/config.gz " (since Linux 2.6)"
2414This file exposes the configuration options that were used
c3d9780d 2415to build the currently running kernel,
f6e524c4
MK
2416in the same format as they would be shown in the
2417.I .config
2418file that resulted when configuring the kernel (using
2419.IR "make xconfig" ,
2420.IR "make config" ,
2421or similar).
2422The file contents are compressed; view or search them using
f78ed33a
MK
2423.BR zcat (1)
2424and
2425.BR zgrep (1).
f6e524c4 2426As long as no changes have been made to the following file,
250e01ec
MK
2427the contents of
2428.I /proc/config.gz
2429are the same as those provided by :
f6e524c4
MK
2430.in +4n
2431.nf
2432
c3074d70 2433cat /lib/modules/$(uname \-r)/build/.config
f6e524c4
MK
2434.fi
2435.in
250e01ec
MK
2436.IP
2437.I /proc/config.gz
90878f7c 2438is provided only if the kernel is configured with
250e01ec 2439.BR CONFIG_IKCONFIG_PROC .
fea681da 2440.TP
577c0e20
MK
2441.I /proc/crypto
2442A list of the ciphers provided by the kernel crypto API.
2443For details, see the kernel
2444.I "Linux Kernel Crypto API"
2445documentation available under the kernel source directory
2446.IR Documentation/DocBook .
2447(That documentation can be built using a command such as
2448.IR "make htmldocs"
2449in the root directory of the kernel source tree.)
2450.TP
fea681da
MK
2451.I /proc/cpuinfo
2452This is a collection of CPU and system architecture dependent items,
2453for each supported architecture a different list.
2454Two common entries are \fIprocessor\fP which gives CPU number and
c13182ef
MK
2455\fIbogomips\fP; a system constant that is calculated
2456during kernel initialization.
2457SMP machines have information for
fea681da 2458each CPU.
a091f002
MK
2459The
2460.BR lscpu (1)
2461command gathers its information from this file.
fea681da
MK
2462.TP
2463.I /proc/devices
c13182ef
MK
2464Text listing of major numbers and device groups.
2465This can be used by MAKEDEV scripts for consistency with the kernel.
fea681da
MK
2466.TP
2467.IR /proc/diskstats " (since Linux 2.5.69)"
2468This file contains disk I/O statistics for each disk device.
66a9882e 2469See the Linux kernel source file
fea681da
MK
2470.I Documentation/iostats.txt
2471for further information.
2472.TP
2473.I /proc/dma
c13182ef 2474This is a list of the registered \fIISA\fP DMA (direct memory access)
fea681da
MK
2475channels in use.
2476.TP
2477.I /proc/driver
2478Empty subdirectory.
2479.TP
2480.I /proc/execdomains
2481List of the execution domains (ABI personalities).
2482.TP
2483.I /proc/fb
097585ed
MK
2484Frame buffer information when
2485.B CONFIG_FB
2486is defined during kernel compilation.
fea681da
MK
2487.TP
2488.I /proc/filesystems
9ee4a2b6
MK
2489A text listing of the filesystems which are supported by the kernel,
2490namely filesystems which were compiled into the kernel or whose kernel
6387216b
MK
2491modules are currently loaded.
2492(See also
fb477da2 2493.BR filesystems (5).)
9ee4a2b6 2494If a filesystem is marked with "nodev",
809d0164 2495this means that it does not require a block device to be mounted
9ee4a2b6 2496(e.g., virtual filesystem, network filesystem).
809d0164
MK
2497
2498Incidentally, this file may be used by
2499.BR mount (8)
9ee4a2b6
MK
2500when no filesystem is specified and it didn't manage to determine the
2501filesystem type.
2502Then filesystems contained in this file are tried
809d0164 2503(excepted those that are marked with "nodev").
fea681da
MK
2504.TP
2505.I /proc/fs
df352acc 2506.\" FIXME Much more needs to be said about /proc/fs
91085d85 2507.\"
df352acc
MK
2508Contains subdirectories that in turn contain files
2509with information about (certain) mounted filesystems.
fea681da
MK
2510.TP
2511.I /proc/ide
2512This directory
59a40ed7
MK
2513exists on systems with the IDE bus.
2514There are directories for each IDE channel and attached device.
c13182ef 2515Files include:
fea681da 2516
a08ea57c 2517.in +4n
fea681da
MK
2518.nf
2519cache buffer size in KB
2520capacity number of sectors
2521driver driver version
2522geometry physical and logical geometry
9fdfa163 2523identify in hexadecimal
fea681da
MK
2524media media type
2525model manufacturer's model number
2526settings drive settings
9fdfa163
MK
2527smart_thresholds in hexadecimal
2528smart_values in hexadecimal
fea681da 2529.fi
a08ea57c 2530.in
fea681da 2531
c13182ef 2532The
fea681da
MK
2533.BR hdparm (8)
2534utility provides access to this information in a friendly format.
2535.TP
2536.I /proc/interrupts
23ec6ff0
MK
2537This is used to record the number of interrupts per CPU per IO device.
2538Since Linux 2.6.24,
2539for the i386 and x86_64 architectures, at least, this also includes
2540interrupts internal to the system (that is, not associated with a device
2541as such), such as NMI (nonmaskable interrupt), LOC (local timer interrupt),
2542and for SMP systems, TLB (TLB flush interrupt), RES (rescheduling
2543interrupt), CAL (remote function call interrupt), and possibly others.
2544Very easy to read formatting, done in ASCII.
fea681da
MK
2545.TP
2546.I /proc/iomem
2547I/O memory map in Linux 2.4.
2548.TP
2549.I /proc/ioports
c13182ef 2550This is a list of currently registered Input-Output port regions that
fea681da
MK
2551are in use.
2552.TP
2553.IR /proc/kallsyms " (since Linux 2.5.71)"
2554This holds the kernel exported symbol definitions used by the
2555.BR modules (X)
2556tools to dynamically link and bind loadable modules.
2557In Linux 2.5.47 and earlier, a similar file with slightly different syntax
2558was named
2559.IR ksyms .
2560.TP
2561.I /proc/kcore
2562This file represents the physical memory of the system and is stored
c13182ef
MK
2563in the ELF core file format.
2564With this pseudo-file, and an unstripped
9a67332e
MK
2565kernel
2566.RI ( /usr/src/linux/vmlinux )
2567binary, GDB can be used to
fea681da
MK
2568examine the current state of any kernel data structures.
2569
2570The total length of the file is the size of physical memory (RAM) plus
25714KB.
2572.TP
2573.I /proc/kmsg
2574This file can be used instead of the
2575.BR syslog (2)
c13182ef
MK
2576system call to read kernel messages.
2577A process must have superuser
fea681da 2578privileges to read this file, and only one process should read this
c13182ef
MK
2579file.
2580This file should not be read if a syslog process is running
fea681da
MK
2581which uses the
2582.BR syslog (2)
2583system call facility to log kernel messages.
2584
2585Information in this file is retrieved with the
c4517613 2586.BR dmesg (1)
fea681da
MK
2587program.
2588.TP
ff56ac8b
MK
2589.IR /proc/kpagecount " (since Linux 2.6.25)"
2590This file contains a 64-bit count of the number of
2591times each physical page frame is mapped,
2592indexed by page frame number (see the discussion of
2593.IR /proc/[pid]/pagemap ).
2594.IP
2595The
2596.IR /proc/kpagecount
2597file is present only if the
2598.B CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
59d566a9
MK
2599kernel configuration option is enabled.
2600.TP
2601.IR /proc/kpageflags " (since Linux 2.6.25)"
ef4f4031 2602This file contains 64-bit masks corresponding to each physical page frame;
59d566a9
MK
2603it is indexed by page frame number (see the discussion of
2604.IR /proc/[pid]/pagemap ).
2605The bits are as follows:
2606
2607 0 - KPF_LOCKED
2608 1 - KPF_ERROR
2609 2 - KPF_REFERENCED
2610 3 - KPF_UPTODATE
2611 4 - KPF_DIRTY
2612 5 - KPF_LRU
2613 6 - KPF_ACTIVE
2614 7 - KPF_SLAB
2615 8 - KPF_WRITEBACK
2616 9 - KPF_RECLAIM
2617 10 - KPF_BUDDY
2618 11 - KPF_MMAP (since Linux 2.6.31)
2619 12 - KPF_ANON (since Linux 2.6.31)
2620 13 - KPF_SWAPCACHE (since Linux 2.6.31)
2621 14 - KPF_SWAPBACKED (since Linux 2.6.31)
2622 15 - KPF_COMPOUND_HEAD (since Linux 2.6.31)
2623 16 - KPF_COMPOUND_TAIL (since Linux 2.6.31)
2624 16 - KPF_HUGE (since Linux 2.6.31)
2625 18 - KPF_UNEVICTABLE (since Linux 2.6.31)
2626 19 - KPF_HWPOISON (since Linux 2.6.31)
2627 20 - KPF_NOPAGE (since Linux 2.6.31)
2628 21 - KPF_KSM (since Linux 2.6.32)
2629 22 - KPF_THP (since Linux 3.4)
2630
2631For further details on the meanings of these bits,
2632see the kernel source file
2633.IR Documentation/vm/pagemap.txt .
2634Before kernel 2.6.29,
2635.\" commit ad3bdefe877afb47480418fdb05ecd42842de65e
2636.\" commit e07a4b9217d1e97d2f3a62b6b070efdc61212110
2637.BR KPF_WRITEBACK ,
2638.BR KPF_RECLAIM ,
2639.BR KPF_BUDDY ,
2640and
2641.BR KPF_LOCKED
2642did not report correctly.
2643.IP
2644The
2645.IR /proc/kpageflags
2646file is present only if the
2647.B CONFIG_PROC_PAGE_MONITOR
ff56ac8b
MK
2648kernel configuration option is enabled.
2649.TP
fea681da
MK
2650.IR /proc/ksyms " (Linux 1.1.23-2.5.47)"
2651See
2652.IR /proc/kallsyms .
2653.TP
2654.I /proc/loadavg
6b05dc38
MK
2655The first three fields in this file are load average figures
2656giving the number of jobs in the run queue (state R)
fea681da
MK
2657or waiting for disk I/O (state D) averaged over 1, 5, and 15 minutes.
2658They are the same as the load average numbers given by
2659.BR uptime (1)
2660and other programs.
6b05dc38 2661The fourth field consists of two numbers separated by a slash (/).
78fc91ec
EDB
2662The first of these is the number of currently runnable kernel
2663scheduling entities (processes, threads).
6b05dc38
MK
2664The value after the slash is the number of kernel scheduling entities
2665that currently exist on the system.
2666The fifth field is the PID of the process that was most
2667recently created on the system.
fea681da
MK
2668.TP
2669.I /proc/locks
2670This file shows current file locks
2671.RB ( flock "(2) and " fcntl (2))
2672and leases
2673.RB ( fcntl (2)).
2674.TP
89dd5f8a 2675.IR /proc/malloc " (only up to and including Linux 2.2)"
59a40ed7 2676.\" It looks like this only ever did something back in 1.0 days
90878f7c 2677This file is present only if
89dd5f8a 2678.B CONFIG_DEBUG_MALLOC
097585ed 2679was defined during compilation.
fea681da
MK
2680.TP
2681.I /proc/meminfo
77b802ec
MK
2682This file reports statistics about memory usage on the system.
2683It is used by
fea681da
MK
2684.BR free (1)
2685to report the amount of free and used memory (both physical and swap)
2686on the system as well as the shared memory and buffers used by the
2687kernel.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2688Each line of the file consists of a parameter name, followed by a colon,
2689the value of the parameter, and an option unit of measurement (e.g., "kB").
2690The list below describes the parameter names and
2691the format specifier required to read the field value.
2692Except as noted below,
2693all of the fields have been present since at least Linux 2.6.0.
86cf87d7 2694Some fields are displayed only if the kernel was configured
3ba3d5b1
MK
2695with various options; those dependencies are noted in the list.
2696.RS
2697.TP
2698.IR MemTotal " %lu"
449dd4e2 2699Total usable RAM (i.e., physical RAM minus a few reserved
99e91586 2700bits and the kernel binary code).
3ba3d5b1
MK
2701.TP
2702.IR MemFree " %lu"
7bccb7d4
DP
2703The sum of
2704.IR LowFree + HighFree .
3ba3d5b1 2705.TP
8b4b1f68
MK
2706.IR MemAvailable " %lu (since Linux 3.14)"
2707An estimate of how much memory is available for starting new
2708applications, without swapping.
2709.TP
3ba3d5b1 2710.IR Buffers " %lu"
99e91586 2711Relatively temporary storage for raw disk blocks that
3ba3d5b1
MK
2712shouldn't get tremendously large (20MB or so).
2713.TP
2714.IR Cached " %lu"
2715In-memory cache for files read from the disk (the page cache).
2716Doesn't include
2717.IR SwapCached .
2718.TP
2719.IR SwapCached " %lu"
2720Memory that once was swapped out, is swapped back in but
2721still also is in the swap file.
fa1d2749 2722(If memory pressure is high, these pages
3ba3d5b1 2723don't need to be swapped out again because they are already
99e91586 2724in the swap file.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2725This saves I/O.)
2726.TP
2727.IR Active " %lu"
2728Memory that has been used more recently and usually not
2729reclaimed unless absolutely necessary.
2730.TP
2731.IR Inactive " %lu"
2732Memory which has been less recently used.
2733It is more eligible to be reclaimed for other purposes.
2734.TP
2735.IR Active(anon) " %lu (since Linux 2.6.28)"
2736[To be documented.]
2737.TP
2738.IR Inactive(anon) " %lu (since Linux 2.6.28)"
2739[To be documented.]
2740.TP
2741.IR Active(file) " %lu (since Linux 2.6.28)"
2742[To be documented.]
2743.TP
2744.IR Inactive(file) " %lu (since Linux 2.6.28)"
2745[To be documented.]
2746.TP
2747.IR Unevictable " %lu (since Linux 2.6.28)"
2748(From Linux 2.6.28 to 2.6.30,
2749\fBCONFIG_UNEVICTABLE_LRU\fP was required.)
2750[To be documented.]
2751.TP
46fbfc07 2752.IR Mlocked " %lu (since Linux 2.6.28)"
3ba3d5b1
MK
2753(From Linux 2.6.28 to 2.6.30,
2754\fBCONFIG_UNEVICTABLE_LRU\fP was required.)
2755[To be documented.]
2756.TP
2757.IR HighTotal " %lu"
2758(Starting with Linux 2.6.19, \fBCONFIG_HIGHMEM\fP is required.)
2759Total amount of highmem.
99e91586 2760Highmem is all memory above ~860MB of physical memory.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2761Highmem areas are for use by user-space programs,
2762or for the page cache.
2763The kernel must use tricks to access
2764this memory, making it slower to access than lowmem.
2765.TP
2766.IR HighFree " %lu
2767(Starting with Linux 2.6.19, \fBCONFIG_HIGHMEM\fP is required.)
2768Amount of free highmem.
2769.TP
2770.IR LowTotal " %lu
2771(Starting with Linux 2.6.19, \fBCONFIG_HIGHMEM\fP is required.)
2772Total amount of lowmem.
2773Lowmem is memory which can be used for everything that
2774highmem can be used for, but it is also available for the
2775kernel's use for its own data structures.
2776Among many other things,
99e91586 2777it is where everything from
7bccb7d4
DP
2778.I Slab
2779is allocated.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2780Bad things happen when you're out of lowmem.
2781.TP
2782.IR LowFree " %lu
2783(Starting with Linux 2.6.19, \fBCONFIG_HIGHMEM\fP is required.)
2784Amount of free lowmem.
2785.TP
2786.IR MmapCopy " %lu (since Linux 2.6.29)"
99e91586
DP
2787.RB ( CONFIG_MMU
2788is required.)
3ba3d5b1
MK
2789[To be documented.]
2790.TP
2791.IR SwapTotal " %lu"
2792Total amount of swap space available.
2793.TP
2794.IR SwapFree " %lu"
c16d4f25 2795Amount of swap space that is currently unused.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2796.TP
2797.IR Dirty " %lu"
2798Memory which is waiting to get written back to the disk.
2799.TP
2800.IR Writeback " %lu"
2801Memory which is actively being written back to the disk.
2802.TP
2803.IR AnonPages " %lu (since Linux 2.6.18)"
2804Non-file backed pages mapped into user-space page tables.
2805.TP
2806.IR Mapped " %lu"
fda70f5b
MK
2807Files which have been mapped into memory (with
2808.BR mmap (2)),
2809such as libraries.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2810.TP
2811.IR Shmem " %lu (since Linux 2.6.32)"
2812[To be documented.]
2813.TP
2814.IR Slab " %lu"
2815In-kernel data structures cache.
2816.TP
2817.IR SReclaimable " %lu (since Linux 2.6.19)"
7bccb7d4
DP
2818Part of
2819.IR Slab ,
2820that might be reclaimed, such as caches.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2821.TP
2822.IR SUnreclaim " %lu (since Linux 2.6.19)"
7bccb7d4
DP
2823Part of
2824.IR Slab ,
2825that cannot be reclaimed on memory pressure.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2826.TP
2827.IR KernelStack " %lu (since Linux 2.6.32)"
2828Amount of memory allocated to kernel stacks.
2829.TP
2830.IR PageTables " %lu (since Linux 2.6.18)"
2831Amount of memory dedicated to the lowest level of page tables.
2832.TP
2833.IR Quicklists " %lu (since Linux 2.6.27)"
2834(\fBCONFIG_QUICKLIST\fP is required.)
2835[To be documented.]
2836.TP
2837.IR NFS_Unstable " %lu (since Linux 2.6.18)"
2838NFS pages sent to the server, but not yet committed to stable storage.
2839.TP
2840.IR Bounce " %lu (since Linux 2.6.18)"
2841Memory used for block device "bounce buffers".
2842.TP
2843.IR WritebackTmp " %lu (since Linux 2.6.26)"
2844Memory used by FUSE for temporary writeback buffers.
2845.TP
2846.IR CommitLimit " %lu (since Linux 2.6.10)"
cd7b6c40
MK
2847This is the total amount of memory currently available to
2848be allocated on the system, expressed in kilobytes.
90878f7c
MK
2849This limit is adhered to
2850only if strict overcommit accounting is enabled (mode 2 in
cd7b6c40
MK
2851.IR /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory ).
2852The limit is calculated according to the formula described under
2853.IR /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory .
2854For further details, see the kernel source file
3ba3d5b1
MK
2855.IR Documentation/vm/overcommit-accounting .
2856.TP
2857.IR Committed_AS " %lu"
2858The amount of memory presently allocated on the system.
2859The committed memory is a sum of all of the memory which
2860has been allocated by processes, even if it has not been
2861"used" by them as of yet.
2862A process which allocates 1GB of memory (using
2863.BR malloc (3)
33a0ccb2 2864or similar), but touches only 300MB of that memory will show up
90878f7c 2865as using only 300MB of memory even if it has the address space
3ba3d5b1 2866allocated for the entire 1GB.
cd7b6c40 2867
3ba3d5b1
MK
2868This 1GB is memory which has been "committed" to by the VM
2869and can be used at any time by the allocating application.
cd7b6c40 2870With strict overcommit enabled on the system (mode 2 in
d9e0f03d 2871.IR /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory ),
3ba3d5b1
MK
2872allocations which would exceed the
2873.I CommitLimit
cd7b6c40 2874will not be permitted.
3ba3d5b1
MK
2875This is useful if one needs to guarantee that processes will not
2876fail due to lack of memory once that memory has been successfully allocated.
2877.TP
2878.IR VmallocTotal " %lu"
2879Total size of vmalloc memory area.
2880.TP
2881.IR VmallocUsed " %lu"
2882Amount of vmalloc area which is used.
2883.TP
2884.IR VmallocChunk " %lu"
2885Largest contiguous block of vmalloc area which is free.
2886.TP
2887.IR HardwareCorrupted " %lu (since Linux 2.6.32)"
2888(\fBCONFIG_MEMORY_FAILURE\fP is required.)
2889[To be documented.]
2890.TP
2891.IR AnonHugePages " %lu (since Linux 2.6.38)"
2892(\fBCONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE\fP is required.)
7fac88a9 2893Non-file backed huge pages mapped into user-space page tables.
3ba3d5b1 2894.TP
43179f55
MK
2895.IR CmaTotal " %lu (since Linux 3.1)"
2896Total CMA (Contiguous Memory Allocator) pages.
2897(\fBCONFIG_CMA\fP is required.)
2898.TP
2899.IR CmaFree " %lu (since Linux 3.1)"
2900Free CMA (Contiguous Memory Allocator) pages.
2901(\fBCONFIG_CMA\fP is required.)
2902.TP
3ba3d5b1
MK
2903.IR HugePages_Total " %lu"
2904(\fBCONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE\fP is required.)
2905The size of the pool of huge pages.
2906.TP
2907.IR HugePages_Free " %lu"
2908(\fBCONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE\fP is required.)
2909The number of huge pages in the pool that are not yet allocated.
2910.TP
2911.IR HugePages_Rsvd " %lu (since Linux 2.6.17)"
2912(\fBCONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE\fP is required.)
2913This is the number of huge pages for
2914which a commitment to allocate from the pool has been made,
2915but no allocation has yet been made.
2916These reserved huge pages
2917guarantee that an application will be able to allocate a
2918huge page from the pool of huge pages at fault time.
2919.TP
aa8a6b4f 2920.IR HugePages_Surp " %lu (since Linux 2.6.24)"
3ba3d5b1
MK
2921(\fBCONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE\fP is required.)
2922This is the number of huge pages in
2923the pool above the value in
2924.IR /proc/sys/vm/nr_hugepages .
2925The maximum number of surplus huge pages is controlled by
2926.IR /proc/sys/vm/nr_overcommit_hugepages .
2927.TP
2928.IR Hugepagesize " %lu"
2929(\fBCONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE\fP is required.)
2930The size of huge pages.
d5268de1
MK
2931.TP
2932.IR DirectMap4k " %lu (since Linux 2.6.27)"
2933Number of bytes of RAM linearly mapped by kernel in 4kB pages.
2934(x86.)
2935.TP
2936.IR DirectMap4M " %lu (since Linux 2.6.27)"
2937Number of bytes of RAM linearly mapped by kernel in 4MB pages.
2938(x86 with
2939.BR CONFIG_X86_64
2940or
2941.BR CONFIG_X86_PAE
2942enabled.)
2943.TP
2944.IR DirectMap2M " %lu (since Linux 2.6.27)"
2945Number of bytes of RAM linearly mapped by kernel in 2MB pages.
2946(x86 with neither
2947.BR CONFIG_X86_64
2948nor
2949.BR CONFIG_X86_PAE
2950enabled.)
2951.TP
2952.IR DirectMap1G " %lu (since Linux 2.6.27)"
2953(x86 with
2954.BR CONFIG_X86_64
2955and
2956.B CONFIG_X86_DIRECT_GBPAGES
2957enabled.)
3ba3d5b1 2958.RE
fea681da 2959.TP
aa341984
MK
2960.I /proc/modules
2961A text list of the modules that have been loaded by the system.
2962See also
2963.BR lsmod (8).
2964.TP
fea681da 2965.I /proc/mounts
c1eea65a 2966Before kernel 2.4.19, this file was a list
9ee4a2b6 2967of all the filesystems currently mounted on the system.
732e54dd 2968With the introduction of per-process mount namespaces in
c1eea65a
MK
2969Linux 2.4.19, this file became a link to
2970.IR /proc/self/mounts ,
732e54dd 2971which lists the mount points of the process's own mount namespace.
fea681da 2972The format of this file is documented in
31e9a9ec 2973.BR fstab (5).
fea681da 2974.TP
fea681da 2975.I /proc/mtrr
c13182ef 2976Memory Type Range Registers.
66a9882e 2977See the Linux kernel source file
cfe70b66 2978.I Documentation/mtrr.txt
fea681da
MK
2979for details.
2980.TP
2981.I /proc/net
2982various net pseudo-files, all of which give the status of some part of
c13182ef
MK
2983the networking layer.
2984These files contain ASCII structures and are,
59a40ed7
MK
2985therefore, readable with
2986.BR cat (1).
c13182ef 2987However, the standard
fea681da
MK
2988.BR netstat (8)
2989suite provides much cleaner access to these files.
2990.TP
2991.I /proc/net/arp
2992This holds an ASCII readable dump of the kernel ARP table used for
c13182ef 2993address resolutions.
01d0a447 2994It will show both dynamically learned and preprogrammed ARP entries.
c13182ef 2995The format is:
fea681da
MK
2996
2997.nf
2998.ft CW
2999.in 8n
3000IP address HW type Flags HW address Mask Device
3001192.168.0.50 0x1 0x2 00:50:BF:25:68:F3 * eth0
3002192.168.0.250 0x1 0xc 00:00:00:00:00:00 * eth0
3003.ft
3004.fi
3005.in
3006
6c04f928 3007Here "IP address" is the IPv4 address of the machine and the "HW type"
c13182ef
MK
3008is the hardware type of the address from RFC\ 826.
3009The flags are the internal
9a67332e
MK
3010flags of the ARP structure (as defined in
3011.IR /usr/include/linux/if_arp.h )
3012and
6c04f928 3013the "HW address" is the data link layer mapping for that IP address if
fea681da
MK
3014it is known.
3015.TP
3016.I /proc/net/dev
c13182ef
MK
3017The dev pseudo-file contains network device status information.
3018This gives
3019the number of received and sent packets, the number of errors and
fea681da 3020collisions
c13182ef
MK
3021and other basic statistics.
3022These are used by the
fea681da 3023.BR ifconfig (8)
c13182ef
MK
3024program to report device status.
3025The format is:
fea681da
MK
3026
3027.nf
3028.ft CW
3029.in 1n
3030Inter-| Receive | Transmit
3031 face |bytes packets errs drop fifo frame compressed multicast|bytes packets errs drop fifo colls carrier compressed
3032 lo: 2776770 11307 0 0 0 0 0 0 2776770 11307 0 0 0 0 0 0
3033 eth0: 1215645 2751 0 0 0 0 0 0 1782404 4324 0 0 0 427 0 0
3034 ppp0: 1622270 5552 1 0 0 0 0 0 354130 5669 0 0 0 0 0 0
3035 tap0: 7714 81 0 0 0 0 0 0 7714 81 0 0 0 0 0 0
3036.in
3037.ft
3038.fi
3039.\" .TP
3040.\" .I /proc/net/ipx
3041.\" No information.
3042.\" .TP
3043.\" .I /proc/net/ipx_route
3044.\" No information.
3045.TP
3046.I /proc/net/dev_mcast
3047Defined in
3048.IR /usr/src/linux/net/core/dev_mcast.c :
3049.nf
3050.in +5
9fdfa163 3051indx interface_name dmi_u dmi_g dmi_address
fea681da
MK
30522 eth0 1 0 01005e000001
30533 eth1 1 0 01005e000001
30544 eth2 1 0 01005e000001
3055.in
3056.fi
3057.TP
3058.I /proc/net/igmp
c13182ef
MK
3059Internet Group Management Protocol.
3060Defined in
fea681da
MK
3061.IR /usr/src/linux/net/core/igmp.c .
3062.TP
3063.I /proc/net/rarp
3064This file uses the same format as the
3065.I arp
3066file and contains the current reverse mapping database used to provide
3067.BR rarp (8)
c13182ef
MK
3068reverse address lookup services.
3069If RARP is not configured into the
fea681da
MK
3070kernel,
3071this file will not be present.
3072.TP
3073.I /proc/net/raw
c13182ef
MK
3074Holds a dump of the RAW socket table.
3075Much of the information is not of
fea681da 3076use
c13182ef 3077apart from debugging.
6c04f928 3078The "sl" value is the kernel hash slot for the
fea681da 3079socket,
6c04f928
MK
3080the "local_address" is the local address and protocol number pair.
3081\&"St" is
c13182ef
MK
3082the internal status of the socket.
3083The "tx_queue" and "rx_queue" are the
fea681da 3084outgoing and incoming data queue in terms of kernel memory usage.
94e9d9fe 3085The "tr", "tm\->when", and "rexmits" fields are not used by RAW.
fdc196f5
MK
3086The "uid"
3087field holds the effective UID of the creator of the socket.
fea681da
MK
3088.\" .TP
3089.\" .I /proc/net/route
3090.\" No information, but looks similar to
3091.\" .BR route (8).
3092.TP
3093.I /proc/net/snmp
c13182ef 3094This file holds the ASCII data needed for the IP, ICMP, TCP, and UDP
fea681da 3095management
763f0e47 3096information bases for an SNMP agent.
fea681da
MK
3097.TP
3098.I /proc/net/tcp
c13182ef
MK
3099Holds a dump of the TCP socket table.
3100Much of the information is not
3101of use apart from debugging.
3102The "sl" value is the kernel hash slot
6beb1671
MK
3103for the socket, the "local_address" is the local address and port number pair.
3104The "rem_address" is the remote address and port number pair
6c04f928
MK
3105(if connected).
3106\&"St" is the internal status of the socket.
3107The "tx_queue" and "rx_queue" are the
fea681da 3108outgoing and incoming data queue in terms of kernel memory usage.
94e9d9fe 3109The "tr", "tm\->when", and "rexmits" fields hold internal information of
f33774c4 3110the kernel socket state and are useful only for debugging.
fdc196f5
MK
3111The "uid"
3112field holds the effective UID of the creator of the socket.
fea681da
MK
3113.TP
3114.I /proc/net/udp
c13182ef
MK
3115Holds a dump of the UDP socket table.
3116Much of the information is not of
3117use apart from debugging.
3118The "sl" value is the kernel hash slot for the
6beb1671
MK
3119socket, the "local_address" is the local address and port number pair.
3120The "rem_address" is the remote address and port number pair
f2d607ee
MK
3121(if connected).
3122"St" is the internal status of the socket.
fea681da 3123The "tx_queue" and "rx_queue" are the outgoing and incoming data queue
c13182ef 3124in terms of kernel memory usage.
94e9d9fe 3125The "tr", "tm\->when", and "rexmits" fields
c13182ef 3126are not used by UDP.
fdc196f5
MK
3127The "uid"
3128field holds the effective UID of the creator of the socket.
fea681da
MK
3129The format is:
3130
3131.nf
3132.ft CW
3133.in 1n
94e9d9fe 3134sl local_address rem_address st tx_queue rx_queue tr rexmits tm\->when uid
fea681da
MK
3135 1: 01642C89:0201 0C642C89:03FF 01 00000000:00000001 01:000071BA 00000000 0
3136 1: 00000000:0801 00000000:0000 0A 00000000:00000000 00:00000000 6F000100 0
3137 1: 00000000:0201 00000000:0000 0A 00000000:00000000 00:00000000 00000000 0
3138.in
3139.ft
3140.fi
3141.TP
3142.I /proc/net/unix
008f1ecc 3143Lists the UNIX domain sockets present within the system and their
c13182ef
MK
3144status.
3145The format is:
fea681da
MK
3146.nf
3147.sp .5
3148.ft CW
3149Num RefCount Protocol Flags Type St Path
3150 0: 00000002 00000000 00000000 0001 03
3151 1: 00000001 00000000 00010000 0001 01 /dev/printer
3152.ft
3153.sp .5
3154.fi
3155
756f55f6
MK
3156The fields are as follows:
3157.RS
3158.TP 10
3159.IR Num :
3160the kernel table slot number.
3161.TP
3162.IR RefCount :
3163the number of users of the socket.
3164.TP
3165.IR Protocol :
3166currently always 0.
3167.TP
3168.IR Flags :
3169the internal kernel flags holding the status of the socket.
3170.TP
3171.IR Type :
a405066e
MK
3172the socket type.
3173For
3174.BR SOCK_STREAM
3175sockets, this is 0001; for
3176.BR SOCK_DGRAM
3177sockets, it is 0002; and for
3178.BR SOCK_SEQPACKET
3179sockets, it is 0005.
756f55f6
MK
3180.TP
3181.IR St :
3182the internal state of the socket.
3183.TP
3184.IR Path :
3185the bound path (if any) of the socket.
8f8a46fb
MK
3186Sockets in the abstract namespace are included in the list,
3187and are shown with a
3188.I Path
3189that commences with the character '@'.
756f55f6 3190.RE
fea681da 3191.TP
ed8de0e4
FW
3192.I /proc/net/netfilter/nfnetlink_queue
3193This file contains information about netfilter userspace queueing, if used.
f2d607ee
MK
3194Each line represents a queue.
3195Queues that have not been subscribed to
ed8de0e4
FW
3196by userspace are not shown.
3197.nf
3198
3199 1 4207 0 2 65535 0 0 0 1
3200 (1) (2) (3)(4) (5) (6) (7) (8)
3201.fi
3202.IP
3203The fields in each line are:
3204.RS 7
3205.TP 5
3206(1)
f2d607ee
MK
3207The ID of the queue.
3208This matches what is specified in the
ed8de0e4
FW
3209.B \-\-queue\-num
3210or
3211.B \-\-queue\-balance
3212options to the
3213.BR iptables (8)
f2d607ee
MK
3214NFQUEUE target.
3215See
ed8de0e4
FW
3216.BR iptables-extensions (8)
3217for more information.
3218.TP
3219(2)
7672e08e 3220The netlink port ID subscribed to the queue.
ed8de0e4
FW
3221.TP
3222(3)
3223The number of packets currently queued and waiting to be processed by
3224the application.
3225.TP
3226(4)
f2d607ee
MK
3227The copy mode of the queue.
3228It is either 1 (metadata only) or 2
ed8de0e4
FW
3229(also copy payload data to userspace).
3230.TP
3231(5)
1dea597b 3232Copy range; that is, how many bytes of packet payload should be copied to
ed8de0e4
FW
3233userspace at most.
3234.TP
3235(6)
f2d607ee
MK
3236queue dropped.
3237Number of packets that had to be dropped by the kernel because
ed8de0e4
FW
3238too many packets are already waiting for userspace to send back the mandatory
3239accept/drop verdicts.
3240.TP
3241(7)
f2d607ee
MK
3242queue user dropped.
3243Number of packets that were dropped within the netlink
3244subsystem.
3245Such drops usually happen when the corresponding socket buffer is
1dea597b 3246full; that is, userspace is not able to read messages fast enough.
ed8de0e4
FW
3247.TP
3248(8)
f2d607ee
MK
3249sequence number.
3250Every queued packet is associated with a (32-bit)
ed8de0e4
FW
3251monotonically-increasing sequence number.
3252This shows the ID of the most recent packet queued.
3253.RE
3254.IP
f33774c4 3255The last number exists only for compatibility reasons and is always 1.
ed8de0e4 3256.TP
fea681da 3257.I /proc/partitions
f042d149
MK
3258Contains the major and minor numbers of each partition as well as the number
3259of 1024-byte blocks and the partition name.
fea681da
MK
3260.TP
3261.I /proc/pci
3262This is a listing of all PCI devices found during kernel initialization
3263and their configuration.
2990d781 3264
59a40ed7
MK
3265This file has been deprecated in favor of a new
3266.I /proc
2990d781
MK
3267interface for PCI
3268.RI ( /proc/bus/pci ).
3269It became optional in Linux 2.2 (available with
3270.B CONFIG_PCI_OLD_PROC
3271set at kernel compilation).
24b74457 3272It became once more nonoptionally enabled in Linux 2.4.
2990d781
MK
3273Next, it was deprecated in Linux 2.6 (still available with
3274.B CONFIG_PCI_LEGACY_PROC
3275set), and finally removed altogether since Linux 2.6.17.
bea08fec
MK
3276.\" FIXME Document /proc/sched_debug
3277.\"
b4e9ee8f
MK
3278.\" .TP
3279.\" .IR /proc/sched_debug " (since Linux 2.6.23)"
69119dc7 3280.\" See also /proc/[pid]/sched
caea7868
MK
3281.TP
3282.IR /proc/profile " (since Linux 2.4)"
3283This file is present only if the kernel was booted with the
3284.I profile=1
3285command-line option.
3286It exposes kernel profiling information in a binary format for use by
3287.BR readprofile (1).
3288Writing (e.g., an empty string) to this file resets the profiling counters;
3289on some architectures,
3290writing a binary integer "profiling multiplier" of size
3291.IR sizeof(int)
8a3ac89a 3292sets the profiling interrupt frequency.
fea681da
MK
3293.TP
3294.I /proc/scsi
59a40ed7
MK
3295A directory with the
3296.I scsi
3297mid-level pseudo-file and various SCSI low-level
2990d781
MK
3298driver directories,
3299which contain a file for each SCSI host in this system, all of
c13182ef
MK
3300which give the status of some part of the SCSI IO subsystem.
3301These files contain ASCII structures and are, therefore, readable with
2990d781 3302.BR cat (1).
fea681da 3303
c13182ef 3304You can also write to some of the files to reconfigure the subsystem or
59a40ed7 3305switch certain features on or off.
fea681da
MK
3306.TP
3307.I /proc/scsi/scsi
c13182ef 3308This is a listing of all SCSI devices known to the kernel.
59a40ed7 3309The listing is similar to the one seen during bootup.
c13182ef 3310scsi currently supports only the \fIadd-single-device\fP command which
59a40ed7
MK
3311allows root to add a hotplugged device to the list of known devices.
3312
3313The command
3314.in +4n
3315.nf
3316
3317echo \(aqscsi add-single-device 1 0 5 0\(aq > /proc/scsi/scsi
fea681da 3318
59a40ed7
MK
3319.fi
3320.in
c13182ef
MK
3321will cause
3322host scsi1 to scan on SCSI channel 0 for a device on ID 5 LUN 0.
3323If there
fea681da
MK
3324is already a device known on this address or the address is invalid, an
3325error will be returned.
3326.TP
3327.I /proc/scsi/[drivername]
c13182ef
MK
3328\fI[drivername]\fP can currently be NCR53c7xx, aha152x, aha1542, aha1740,
3329aic7xxx, buslogic, eata_dma, eata_pio, fdomain, in2000, pas16, qlogic,
3330scsi_debug, seagate, t128, u15-24f, ultrastore, or wd7000.
3331These directories show up for all drivers that registered at least one
59a40ed7 3332SCSI HBA.
c13182ef 3333Every directory contains one file per registered host.
59a40ed7 3334Every host-file is named after the number the host was assigned during
c13182ef 3335initialization.
fea681da 3336
c13182ef 3337Reading these files will usually show driver and host configuration,
f78ed33a 3338statistics, and so on.
fea681da
MK
3339
3340Writing to these files allows different things on different hosts.
3341For example, with the \fIlatency\fP and \fInolatency\fP commands,
3342root can switch on and off command latency measurement code in the
c13182ef
MK
3343eata_dma driver.
3344With the \fIlockup\fP and \fIunlock\fP commands,
3345root can control bus lockups simulated by the scsi_debug driver.
fea681da
MK
3346.TP
3347.I /proc/self
59a40ed7
MK
3348This directory refers to the process accessing the
3349.I /proc
9ee4a2b6 3350filesystem,
59a40ed7
MK
3351and is identical to the
3352.I /proc
3353directory named by the process ID of the same process.
fea681da
MK
3354.TP
3355.I /proc/slabinfo
c13182ef 3356Information about kernel caches.
90878f7c 3357Since Linux 2.6.16 this file is present only if the
821643a8
MK
3358.B CONFIG_SLAB
3359kernel configuration option is enabled.
350038ff 3360The columns in
38f76cd2 3361.I /proc/slabinfo
350038ff 3362are:
a08ea57c 3363.in +4n
fea681da 3364.nf
a08ea57c 3365
fea681da
MK
3366cache-name
3367num-active-objs
3368total-objs
3369object-size
3370num-active-slabs
3371total-slabs
3372num-pages-per-slab
3373.fi
a08ea57c
MK
3374.in
3375
c13182ef 3376See
fea681da
MK
3377.BR slabinfo (5)
3378for details.
3379.TP
3380.I /proc/stat
c13182ef
MK
3381kernel/system statistics.
3382Varies with architecture.
3383Common
fea681da
MK
3384entries include:
3385.RS
3386.TP
3387\fIcpu 3357 0 4313 1362393\fP
bfbfcd18 3388The amount of time, measured in units of
268f000b
MK
3389USER_HZ (1/100ths of a second on most architectures, use
3390.IR sysconf(_SC_CLK_TCK)
3391to obtain the right value),
b81087ab 3392.\" 1024 on Alpha and ia64
ae3b8047
MK
3393that the system spent in various states:
3394.RS
3395.TP
3396.I user
ea0841f6 3397(1) Time spent in user mode.
ae3b8047
MK
3398.TP
3399.I nice
0633f951 3400(2) Time spent in user mode with low priority (nice).
9f1b9726 3401.TP
ae3b8047 3402.I system
0633f951 3403(3) Time spent in system mode.
ae3b8047
MK
3404.TP
3405.I idle
ea0841f6 3406(4) Time spent in the idle task.
bea08fec 3407.\" FIXME . Actually, the following info about the /proc/stat 'cpu' field
e04a1f93
MK
3408.\" does not seem to be quite right (at least in 2.6.12 or 3.6):
3409.\" the idle time in /proc/uptime does not quite match this value
3410This value should be USER_HZ times the
4cb1deb7
MK
3411second entry in the
3412.I /proc/uptime
3413pseudo-file.
ae3b8047
MK
3414.TP
3415.IR iowait " (since Linux 2.5.41)"
ea0841f6 3416(5) Time waiting for I/O to complete.
ae3b8047
MK
3417.TP
3418.IR irq " (since Linux 2.6.0-test4)"
ea0841f6 3419(6) Time servicing interrupts.
ae3b8047 3420.TP
0633f951 3421.IR softirq " (since Linux 2.6.0-test4)"
ea0841f6 3422(7) Time servicing softirqs.
ae3b8047
MK
3423.TP
3424.IR steal " (since Linux 2.6.11)"
ea0841f6 3425(8) Stolen time, which is the time spent in other operating systems when
9de1f6cc 3426running in a virtualized environment
ae3b8047
MK
3427.TP
3428.IR guest " (since Linux 2.6.24)"
0633f951 3429(9) Time spent running a virtual CPU for guest
afef1764 3430operating systems under the control of the Linux kernel.
14c06953 3431.\" See Changelog entry for 5e84cfde51cf303d368fcb48f22059f37b3872de
d4fd4120
MK
3432.TP
3433.IR guest_nice " (since Linux 2.6.33)"
3434.\" commit ce0e7b28fb75cb003cfc8d0238613aaf1c55e797
3435(10) Time spent running a niced guest (virtual CPU for guest
3436operating systems under the control of the Linux kernel).
ae3b8047 3437.RE
fea681da
MK
3438.TP
3439\fIpage 5741 1808\fP
3440The number of pages the system paged in and the number that were paged
3441out (from disk).
3442.TP
3443\fIswap 1 0\fP
3444The number of swap pages that have been brought in and out.
3445.TP
bea08fec 3446.\" FIXME . The following is not the full picture for the 'intr' of
777f5a9e 3447.\" /proc/stat on 2.6:
fea681da 3448\fIintr 1462898\fP
bfbfcd18
MK
3449This line shows counts of interrupts serviced since boot time,
3450for each of the possible system interrupts.
d63ff76e 3451The first column is the total of all interrupts serviced
d6a56978
MK
3452including unnumbered architecture specific interrupts;
3453each subsequent column is the total for that particular numbered interrupt.
d63ff76e 3454Unnumbered interrupts are not shown, only summed into the total.
fea681da
MK
3455.TP
3456\fIdisk_io: (2,0):(31,30,5764,1,2) (3,0):\fP...
636297e9 3457(major,disk_idx):(noinfo, read_io_ops, blks_read, write_io_ops, blks_written)
bfbfcd18
MK
3458.br
3459(Linux 2.4 only)
fea681da
MK
3460.TP
3461\fIctxt 115315\fP
3462The number of context switches that the system underwent.
3463.TP
3464\fIbtime 769041601\fP
f49c451a 3465boot time, in seconds since the Epoch, 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 (UTC).
fea681da
MK
3466.TP
3467\fIprocesses 86031\fP
3468Number of forks since boot.
bfbfcd18
MK
3469.TP
3470\fIprocs_running 6\fP
3471Number of processes in runnable state.
5fab2e7c 3472(Linux 2.5.45 onward.)
bfbfcd18
MK
3473.TP
3474\fIprocs_blocked 2\fP
3475Number of processes blocked waiting for I/O to complete.
5fab2e7c 3476(Linux 2.5.45 onward.)
fea681da
MK
3477.RE
3478.TP
3479.I /proc/swaps
c13182ef
MK
3480Swap areas in use.
3481See also
fea681da
MK
3482.BR swapon (8).
3483.TP
3484.I /proc/sys
3485This directory (present since 1.3.57) contains a number of files
3486and subdirectories corresponding to kernel variables.
3487These variables can be read and sometimes modified using
9ee4a2b6 3488the \fI/proc\fP filesystem, and the (deprecated)
fea681da 3489.BR sysctl (2)
c13182ef 3490system call.
84ff8c1e 3491
e8aa7100 3492String values may be terminated by either \(aq\\0\(aq or \(aq\\n\(aq.
84ff8c1e
HS
3493
3494Integer and long values may be written either in decimal or in
3495hexadecimal notation (e.g. 0x3FFF).
e8aa7100
MK
3496When writing multiple integer or long values, these may be separated
3497by any of the following whitespace characters:
3498\(aq\ \(aq, \(aq\\t\(aq, or \(aq\\n\(aq.
3499Using other separators leads to the error
84ff8c1e 3500.BR EINVAL .
fea681da 3501.TP
6ab7c0aa 3502.IR /proc/sys/abi " (since Linux 2.4.10)"
fea681da 3503This directory may contain files with application binary information.
6ab7c0aa 3504.\" On some systems, it is not present.
66a9882e 3505See the Linux kernel source file
6ab7c0aa
MK
3506.I Documentation/sysctl/abi.txt
3507for more information.
fea681da
MK
3508.TP
3509.I /proc/sys/debug
3510This directory may be empty.
3511.TP
3512.I /proc/sys/dev
e2badfdf 3513This directory contains device-specific information (e.g.,
9a67332e 3514.IR dev/cdrom/info ).
fea681da
MK
3515On
3516some systems, it may be empty.
3517.TP
3518.I /proc/sys/fs
49236d3c 3519This directory contains the files and subdirectories for kernel variables
9ee4a2b6 3520related to filesystems.
fea681da
MK
3521.TP
3522.I /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc
c13182ef 3523Documentation for files in this directory can be found
66a9882e 3524in the Linux kernel sources in
fea681da
MK
3525.IR Documentation/binfmt_misc.txt .
3526.TP
59a40ed7
MK
3527.IR /proc/sys/fs/dentry-state " (since Linux 2.2)"
3528This file contains information about the status of the
3529directory cache (dcache).
3530The file contains six numbers,
c13182ef 3531.IR nr_dentry ", " nr_unused ", " age_limit " (age in seconds), "
59a40ed7 3532.I want_pages
fea681da 3533(pages requested by system) and two dummy values.
59a40ed7
MK
3534.RS
3535.IP * 2
3536.I nr_dentry
3537is the number of allocated dentries (dcache entries).
3538This field is unused in Linux 2.2.
3539.IP *
3540.I nr_unused
3541is the number of unused dentries.
3542.IP *
3543.I age_limit
3544.\" looks like this is unused in kernels 2.2 to 2.6
3545is the age in seconds after which dcache entries
3546can be reclaimed when memory is short.
3547.IP *
3548.I want_pages
3549.\" looks like this is unused in kernels 2.2 to 2.6
c7094399 3550is nonzero when the kernel has called shrink_dcache_pages() and the
fea681da 3551dcache isn't pruned yet.
59a40ed7 3552.RE
fea681da
MK
3553.TP
3554.I /proc/sys/fs/dir-notify-enable
3555This file can be used to disable or enable the
3556.I dnotify
3557interface described in
3558.BR fcntl (2)
3559on a system-wide basis.
3560A value of 0 in this file disables the interface,
3561and a value of 1 enables it.
3562.TP
3563.I /proc/sys/fs/dquot-max
3564This file shows the maximum number of cached disk quota entries.
3565On some (2.4) systems, it is not present.
3566If the number of free cached disk quota entries is very low and
3567you have some awesome number of simultaneous system users,
3568you might want to raise the limit.
3569.TP
3570.I /proc/sys/fs/dquot-nr
3571This file shows the number of allocated disk quota
3572entries and the number of free disk quota entries.
3573.TP
24cb4a4b 3574.IR /proc/sys/fs/epoll " (since Linux 2.6.28)"
242b46af
MK
3575This directory contains the file
3576.IR max_user_watches ,
24cb4a4b
MK
3577which can be used to limit the amount of kernel memory consumed by the
3578.I epoll
3579interface.
3580For further details, see