FWIW, Linux' /proc is very different from pretty much all other *ix's. I like Linux' design better, but it might be good to put the Linux /proc assumption in one place, in case you need to port to another *ix someday.
On Thu, Feb 10, 2011 at 4:26 PM, bsergean <bserg...@gmail.com> wrote: > If you're on Linux you should > > * Have a look at the /proc/ filesystem, there's probably what you want > there. > > Here's a small script that print all the pid/cmd from the process ran > with your user. > > #!/usr/local/bin/python > > import os > import re > import stat > from os.path import join > > for pid in (pid for pid in os.listdir('/proc') if re.match('\d', > pid)): > cmdline_fn = join('/proc', pid, 'cmdline') > cmdline = open(cmdline_fn).read() > uid = os.stat(cmdline_fn)[stat.ST_UID] > > if os.getuid() == uid: > print pid, cmdline > > > For a more cross-platform solution there's a module that does that (I > forgot it's name but with some googling you might find it) > > > > > On Feb 9, 1:34 pm, Dan Stromberg <drsali...@gmail.com> wrote: >> On Wed, Feb 9, 2011 at 11:15 AM, Emile van Sebille <em...@fenx.com> wrote: >> >> > On 2/9/2011 10:58 AM octopusgrabbus said... >> >> >> I have Python 2.6.6. I would like to get this output >> >> >> ps -ef | grep 'fglgo csm' >> >> >> into a list. What is the best way to do that? I've been reading the >> >> documentation, and am lost. >> >> >> Thank you. >> >> cmn >> >> > commands.getoutput >> >> > Emile >> >> Also, consider using "ps -eo pid,comm" (or similar) instead of ps -ef >> - it should be easier to parse that way. > > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list