23

I'm trying to split the cmdline of a process on Linux but it seems I cannot rely on it to be separated by '\0' characters. Do you know why sometimes the '\0' character is used as separator and sometimes it is a regular space?

Do you know any other ways of retrieving the executable name and the path to it? I have been trying to get this information with 'ps' but it always returns the full command line and the executable name is truncated.

Thanks.

8 Answers 8

25

use strings

$ cat /proc/self/cmdline | strings -1
cat
/proc/self/cmdline
2
  • 1
    For busybox users: cat /proc/self/cmdline | strings -n 1
    – dubbaluga
    May 31, 2021 at 10:24
  • This is my preferred way too, but while most distros come with strings by default, almost no Docker base-images do. So, YMMV.
    – conny
    Sep 21, 2023 at 4:19
20

The /proc/PID/cmdline is always separated by NUL characters.

To understand spaces, execute this command:

cat -v /proc/self/cmdline "a b" "c d e"

EDIT: If you really see spaces where there shouldn't be any, perhaps your executable (intentionally or inadvertently) writes to argv[], or is using setproctitle()?

When the process is started by the kernel, cmdline is NUL-separated, and the kernel code simply copies the range of memory where argv[] was at process startup into the output buffer when you read /proc/PID/cmdline.

6
  • As I said above, while I was explaining the "solution" to a coworker, I realized his cmdlines wasn't behave like I was expecting. We both are using Ubuntu, so I don't know if this is a behavior that can be configured or depends on the Kernel used. Oct 18, 2009 at 21:26
  • This is wrong. Sometimes there are spaces separating the arguments - i.e. it's all in argv[0]. I know this because I have see this.
    – camh
    Oct 18, 2009 at 22:23
  • The mutability of the argument vector by the program is why I objected to your statement. If you hadn't said "always" and emphasised it, I wouldn't have commented.
    – camh
    Oct 19, 2009 at 0:50
  • Uhm, interesting. I have to check but I believed it happened for all of the processes. I don't remember which was the process I checked. Thanks for the update :) Oct 19, 2009 at 0:58
  • I always believed they'd be NUL separated until I found a process where it wasn't. That was postgrey - a perl program using Net::Server which rewrites the command line, all in one argument.
    – camh
    Oct 19, 2009 at 1:02
17

Use

tr "\0" " " /proc/2634/cmdline

to get the args separated by blanks, as you would see it on a command line.

Beware though that printing it this way there is not way to distinguish an argument with space in it ("a b") from two separate arguments ("a" "b").

2
  • 4
    No need to use "cat+tr" when "tr" alone can do it, see @hek2mgl answer. Feb 23, 2018 at 11:49
  • Pipe to tr "\0" "\n" if you want each argument on a separate line, which is sometimes useful for readability w/ complex command lines. Jun 17, 2022 at 8:37
17

The command line arguments in /proc/PID/cmdline are terminated by null bytes. You can use tr to replace them by new lines:

tr '\0' '\n' < /proc/"$PID"/cmdline
1
  • 3
    vendor boxes don't always have 'strings', they often have 'tr'.
    – jouell
    Jun 28, 2019 at 14:44
4

A shot in the dark, but is it possible that \0 is separating terms and spaces are separating words within a term? For example,

myprog "foo bar" baz

might appear in /proc/pid/cmdline as...

/usr/bin/myprog\0foo bar\0baz

Complete guess here, I can't seem to find any spaces on one of my Linux boxes.

1
  • 1
    Hi. As you mention, spaces are used to separate words in the same term, this was what I was expecting, but I have access to a machine which is using spaces to separate terms too. It was an Ubuntu, don't know which release. Oct 18, 2009 at 21:21
3

Super-simple (but for only one process, not bulk parsing, etc):

$ cat /proc/self/cmdline "a b" "cd e" | xargs -0

How it works: by default, xargs just echo'es its input, and switch -0 allows it to read null-separated lines rather than newline-separated ones.

2

Have a look at my answer here. It covers what I found when trying to do this myself.

Edit: Have a look at this thread on debian-user for a bash script that tries its best to do what you want (look for version 3 of the script in that thread).

2
  • Hi. I'm already doing something similar to track processes by its path, reading the exe symlink, but the big issue is to get the executable name in the cmd. I mean, usually, when you refer to a process executable you say: "I want the PID of emacs" so you expect to find "emacs", not "/usr/bin/emacs22-gtk" as the exe points to. What I haven't taken into account is the '(Deleted)' string reported by readlink. If I could properly split the information in cmdline I could mix its information with the one provided by the 'exe'. In any case, it seems there is not an evident way :). Thanks! Oct 18, 2009 at 22:55
  • I added a link to a thread where I posted a script that contains my implementation. It wont handle an executable name with a space in it, but they're rare (so rare that I've never seen one)
    – camh
    Oct 18, 2009 at 23:23
1

Executable name:

cat /proc/${pid}/comm

Executable path:

readlink -f /proc/${pid}/exe

If you have a recent bash, you can use mapfile to split the command line into its arguments and put them in an array "command_line" like this:

mapfile -d '' -t command_line < "/proc/${pid}/cmdline"

Much more about /proc/ here: proc(5) — Linux manual page

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