Resolved before asked: cat /proc/1111/status | grep PPid
10 Answers
Command line:
ps -o ppid= -p 1111 Function:
ppid () { ps -p ${1:-$$} -o ppid=; } Alias (a function is preferable):
alias ppid='ps -o ppid= -p' Script:
#!/bin/sh pid=$1 if [ -z $pid ] then read -p "PID: " pid fi ps -p ${pid:-$$} -o ppid= If no PID is supplied to the function or the script, they default to show the PPID of the current process.
To use the alias, a PID must be supplied.
3To print parent ids (PPID) of all the processes, use this command:
ps j For the single process, just pass the PID, like: ps j 1234.
To extract only the value, filter output by awk, like:
ps j | awk 'NR>1 {print $3}' # BSD ps ps j | awk 'NR>1 {print $1}' # GNU ps To list PIDs of all parents, use pstree (install it if you don't have it):
$ pstree -sg 1234 systemd(1)───sshd(1036)───bash(2383)───pstree(3007) To get parent PID of the current process, use echo $$.
This is one of those things I learn, forget, relearn, repeat. But it's useful. The pstree command's ‘s’ flag shows a tree with a leaf at N:
pstree -sA $(pgrep badblocks) systemd---sudo---mkfs.ext4---badblocks 2Parent pid is in shell variable PPID, so
echo $PPID 2Read /proc/$PID/status. Can be easily scripted:
#!/bin/sh P=$1 if [ -z "$P" ]; then read P fi cat /proc/"$P"/status | grep PPid: | grep -o "[0-9]*"6
On Linux:
ps hoppid $thatprocess $ ps -p $(ps -p $(echo $$) -o ppid=) -o comm= tmux A little bit more complex example that checks the command of a parent that started current process Change comm= to cmd= to see full command
2Run top with whatever options you want, like -u username and -p PID.
And while top is working press f, it shows a list of options you want to display in top output, and the displayed parameters will be shown in CAPITAL letters and the parameters which or not displaying will be shown in small letters.
So by entering the letter before the parameter you can enable or disable it. For parent process ID you have to enter b and then press Enter, it'll display the PPID in top output.
1Here is a quick solution that should also work:
ps $$ 1all parent processes of a pid
I came here when I was trying to find "all parent processes of a pid". I ended up making my own recursive function to do it.
pid_lineage.sh
#!/bin/bash -eu main(){ ps --pid ${1:-$$} --no-headers --format pid,ppid,args | \ ( read pid ppid args echo -e "$pid\t$args" [[ $pid -gt 1 ]] && main $ppid ) } main "$@" 1