16 дек. 2010 г. · Your starting point should be auditd. Try something like this: apt-get install auditd auditctl -a task,always ausearch -i -sc execve. |
2 дек. 2021 г. · You can use atop. When installed it will start to automatically account processes and their resource usage and write the data to log files. |
9 февр. 2019 г. · You can try to make a cron task that extract new process and log it to a file. For example a command executing every minutes doing a ps wich ... |
6 мар. 2018 г. · You could use the auditd subsystem to log the commands run on your system. It's hooked into the kernel, so it's very reliable to log ... |
29 авг. 2017 г. · How can I get the following information for a running Linux process: shell environment variables; working directory; command line options. linux. |
14 окт. 2014 г. · I have seen from the logs/kernel messages that a termination signal has been sent to a process with PID say 1234. |
25 окт. 2018 г. · The standard commands are ps (perhaps in combination with grep ) and top , like it was already mentioned. I found htop quite useful. |
26 февр. 2015 г. · A more direct approach to check the PPid of a specific process would be to check the PPid in /proc/<processid>/status , like this: grep PPid / ... |
20 дек. 2017 г. · To get a live view for "by process" I would recommend: sudo iotop -a -o -P '-a' accumulates the data read/written '-o' shows only the processes with I/O. |
1 февр. 2010 г. · The quick answer is to use ps with options or the /proc filesystem info. That will usually work, but is not guaranteed. In general, there is no ... |
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