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man pages section 1: User Commands

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Updated: July 2017
 
 

pargs(1)

Name

pargs - print process arguments, environment variables, or auxiliary vector

Synopsis

pargs [-acCeFlLx] [pid | core]...

Description

The pargs utility examines a target process or process core file and prints arguments, environment variables and values, or the process auxiliary vector.

pargs outputs unprintable characters as escaped octal in the format \xxx, unless the character is one of the characters specified in the “Escape Sequences” section of formats(5), in which case the character is printed as specified in that section.

pargs attempts to be sensitive to the locale of the target process. If the target process and the pargs process do not share a common character encoding, pargs attempts to employ the iconv(3C) facility to generate a printable version of the extracted strings. In the event that such a conversion is impossible, strings are displayed as 7-bit ASCII.

Options

The following options are supported:

–a

Prints process arguments as contained in argv[] (default).

–c

Treats strings in the target process as though they were encoded in 7-bit ASCII, regardless of the locale of the target. The use of iconv(3C) is suppressed.

–e

Prints process environment variables and values as pointed at by the _environ symbol or by pr_envp in /proc/pid/psinfo.

–F

Force. Grabs the target process even if another process has control.

–l

Displays the arguments as a single command line. The command line is printed in a manner suitable for interpretation by /bin/sh. If the arguments contain unprintable characters, or if the target process is in a different locale, a warning message is displayed. The resulting command line might not be interpreted correctly by /bin/sh.

–x

Prints process auxiliary vector.

–C

Current. When applied to the –a or –e flags, get the current values corresponding to those flags. Fallbacks to lite mode and prints a message to stderr if unable to access current data.

–L

Lite. When applied to the –a or –e flags, gets the values corresponding to those flags at the point the process executed (default).

The –C or –L flag can only be used once on the command line.

Operands

The following operands are supported:

pid

Process ID list.

core

Process core file.

Usage

Caution should be exercised when using the –F flag. Imposing two controlling processes on one victim process can lead to chaos. Safety is assured only if the primary controlling process, typically a debugger, has stopped the victim process and the primary controlling process is doing nothing at the moment of application of the proc tool in question.

Exit Status

The following exit values are returned:

0

Successful operation.

non-zero

An error has occurred (such as no such process, permission denied, or invalid option).

Files

/proc/pid/*

Process information and control files.

Attributes

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE
ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Availability
system/core-os
Interface Stability
Committed

See Also

proc(1), iconv(3C), proc(4), ascii(5), attributes(5), environ(5), formats(5)