427

How do I get the id of my Java process?

I know there are several platform-dependent hacks, but I would prefer a more generic solution.

4

22 Answers 22

422

There exists no platform-independent way that can be guaranteed to work in all jvm implementations. ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getName() looks like the best (closest) solution, and typically includes the PID. It's short, and probably works in every implementation in wide use.

On linux+windows it returns a value like "12345@hostname" (12345 being the process id). Beware though that according to the docs, there are no guarantees about this value:

Returns the name representing the running Java virtual machine. The returned name string can be any arbitrary string and a Java virtual machine implementation can choose to embed platform-specific useful information in the returned name string. Each running virtual machine could have a different name.

In Java 9 the new process API can be used:

long pid = ProcessHandle.current().pid();
3
132

You could use JNA. Unfortunately there is no common JNA API to get the current process ID yet, but each platform is pretty simple:

Windows

Make sure you have jna-platform.jar then:

int pid = Kernel32.INSTANCE.GetCurrentProcessId();

Unix

Declare:

private interface CLibrary extends Library {
    CLibrary INSTANCE = (CLibrary) Native.loadLibrary("c", CLibrary.class);   
    int getpid ();
}

Then:

int pid = CLibrary.INSTANCE.getpid();

Java 9

Under Java 9 the new process API can be used to get the current process ID. First you grab a handle to the current process, then query the PID:

long pid = ProcessHandle.current().pid();
3
  • 4
    +1 But I'm afraid that in a security constrained environment it should not work (tomcat, WebLogic, etc.).
    – ATorras
    Feb 20, 2013 at 17:29
  • 1
    The getpid() solution also works for OS X, with a JNA call to the "System" library. May 17, 2016 at 6:58
  • However, I get error: cannot find symbol for jdk9
    – skytree
    Sep 16, 2017 at 19:25
63

Here's a backdoor method which might not work with all VMs but should work on both linux and windows (original example here):

java.lang.management.RuntimeMXBean runtime = 
    java.lang.management.ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean();
java.lang.reflect.Field jvm = runtime.getClass().getDeclaredField("jvm");
jvm.setAccessible(true);
sun.management.VMManagement mgmt =  
    (sun.management.VMManagement) jvm.get(runtime);
java.lang.reflect.Method pid_method =  
    mgmt.getClass().getDeclaredMethod("getProcessId");
pid_method.setAccessible(true);

int pid = (Integer) pid_method.invoke(mgmt);
5
  • 2
    very nice, just verified that it works both on the JRockit as well as the Hotspot JVMs. Sep 11, 2012 at 20:04
  • 1
    Nice workaround. I'm going to assume there is a good reason why this method (and others in the class) aren't public and easily accessible, and I'm curious to know what it is.
    – fragorl
    Feb 4, 2014 at 4:09
  • 2
    Oracle Java team have announced that they intend to hide all non-java packages (i.e. sun.*) I believe starting with Java 10 (scheduled for 2018 - maybe Java 9). If you have a similar implementation as the one above, you may want to figure out an alternative so that your code don't break.
    – hfontanez
    Oct 29, 2014 at 20:55
  • Doesn't work for me either as the sun.* packages are probably removed or inaccessible (VMManagement cannot be resolved to a type). Nov 6, 2015 at 17:30
  • 1
    Due to the way reflection works, access to sun.management.* is not needed. Just perform the getDeclaredMethod on the Object returned by jvm.get(runtime). Feb 27, 2019 at 22:13
36

Try Sigar . very extensive APIs. Apache 2 license.

private Sigar sigar;

public synchronized Sigar getSigar() {
    if (sigar == null) {
        sigar = new Sigar();
    }
    return sigar;
}

public synchronized void forceRelease() {
    if (sigar != null) {
        sigar.close();
        sigar = null;
    }
}

public long getPid() {
    return getSigar().getPid();
}
3
  • 6
    You'd have a lot more upvotes if you explained how to use SIGAR for this
    – Brad Mace
    Aug 22, 2012 at 4:44
  • 1
    Link is broken. You give an example of how to use this, but is there a maven dependency for it?
    – Jules
    Sep 4, 2017 at 20:25
  • 3
    github.com/hyperic/sigar seems to be a usable location; this also shows that it's native code with Java bindings, which may make it less of a solution for many contexts.
    – Zastai
    Oct 16, 2018 at 11:39
30

The following method tries to extract the PID from java.lang.management.ManagementFactory:

private static String getProcessId(final String fallback) {
    // Note: may fail in some JVM implementations
    // therefore fallback has to be provided

    // something like '<pid>@<hostname>', at least in SUN / Oracle JVMs
    final String jvmName = ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getName();
    final int index = jvmName.indexOf('@');

    if (index < 1) {
        // part before '@' empty (index = 0) / '@' not found (index = -1)
        return fallback;
    }

    try {
        return Long.toString(Long.parseLong(jvmName.substring(0, index)));
    } catch (NumberFormatException e) {
        // ignore
    }
    return fallback;
}

Just call getProcessId("<PID>"), for instance.

2
  • 8
    VisualVM uses similar code to get self PID, check com.sun.tools.visualvm.application.jvm.Jvm#ApplicationSupport#createCurrentApplication(). They are the experts, so it looks like dependable, cross platform solution.
    – Espinosa
    Jul 1, 2013 at 14:22
  • @Espinosa VisualVM only supportes running on a OpenJDK/Oracle/GraalVM JVM (as of 2020). This mean they can make assumptions accordingly. If you do the same, you become vendor dependent and your code may break if running on for instance J9. Apr 10, 2020 at 15:49
25

For older JVM, in linux...

private static String getPid() throws IOException {
    byte[] bo = new byte[256];
    InputStream is = new FileInputStream("/proc/self/stat");
    is.read(bo);
    for (int i = 0; i < bo.length; i++) {
        if ((bo[i] < '0') || (bo[i] > '9')) {
            return new String(bo, 0, i);
        }
    }
    return "-1";
}
4
  • 58
    If you're going to do that, then just do int pid = Integer.parseInt(new File("/proc/self").getCanonicalFile().getName());. Why the extra gyrations? Aug 15, 2011 at 4:31
  • 2
    For the curious, the trick in @David 's comment actually works. Can someone say why? Some sort of magic in the getCanonicalFile() method that converts "self" to the PID?
    – GreenGiant
    Oct 2, 2012 at 16:36
  • 9
    getCanonicalFile() resolves the symlink /proc/self/ -> /proc/1234, try ls -al /proc/self
    – Michael
    Oct 8, 2012 at 19:20
  • 2
    @DavidCitron +1! you are right, I did not think in getCanonicalFile :-)
    – ggrandes
    Jan 6, 2013 at 23:10
24

Since Java 9 there is a method Process.pid() which returns the native ID of a process:

public abstract class Process {

    ...

    public long pid();
}

To get the process ID of the current Java process one can use the ProcessHandle interface:

System.out.println(ProcessHandle.current().pid());
2
  • 2
    Can you explain how to get a Process instance for the current running process in Java 9?
    – Augusto
    Oct 7, 2015 at 20:32
  • Great answer for using Java 9 in 2016! Can you add a link to the javadocs? thanks
    – crazyGuy
    Feb 27, 2016 at 11:37
18

You can check out my project: JavaSysMon on GitHub. It provides process id and a bunch of other stuff (CPU usage, memory usage) cross-platform (presently Windows, Mac OSX, Linux and Solaris)

1
  • Is it possible to get the PID of a Process started by Java? Or start a Process "your way" to fix this issue?
    – Panayotis
    May 17, 2016 at 17:25
12
java.lang.management.ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getName().split("@")[0]
10

In Scala:

import sys.process._
val pid: Long = Seq("sh", "-c", "echo $PPID").!!.trim.toLong

This should give you a workaround on Unix systems until Java 9 will be released. (I know, the question was about Java, but since there is no equivalent question for Scala, I wanted to leave this for Scala users who might stumble into the same question.)

2
  • (looks good for Linux and macOS, but I don't know if it would work on Windows)
    – Seth Tisue
    Nov 16, 2020 at 23:57
  • Starting an entire new subprocess just to get the PID which is already available in the process itself is pretty overblown. Also, this won't work on Windows since it has no "sh" command (usually).
    – toolforger
    May 25, 2022 at 14:51
9

For completeness there is a wrapper in Spring Boot for the

String jvmName = ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getName();
return jvmName.split("@")[0];

solution. If an integer is required, then this can be summed up to the one-liner:

int pid = Integer.parseInt(ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getName().split("@")[0]);

If someone uses Spring boot already, she/he might use org.springframework.boot.ApplicationPid

ApplicationPid pid = new ApplicationPid();
pid.toString();

The toString() method prints the pid or '???'.

Caveats using the ManagementFactory are discussed in other answers already.

0
7
public static long getPID() {
    String processName = java.lang.management.ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean().getName();
    if (processName != null && processName.length() > 0) {
        try {
            return Long.parseLong(processName.split("@")[0]);
        }
        catch (Exception e) {
            return 0;
        }
    }

    return 0;
}
7

With Java 10, to get process id

final RuntimeMXBean runtime = ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean();
final long pid = runtime.getPid();
out.println("Process ID is '" + pid);
5

The latest I have found is that there is a system property called sun.java.launcher.pid that is available at least on linux. My plan is to use that and if it is not found to use the JMX bean.

1
  • In my case with Ubuntu 16.04 and Java 8, it returns null Apr 13, 2017 at 7:18
4

It depends on where you are looking for the information from.

If you are looking for the information from the console you can use the jps command. The command gives output similar to the Unix ps command and comes with the JDK since I believe 1.5

If you are looking from the process the RuntimeMXBean (as said by Wouter Coekaerts) is probably your best choice. The output from getName() on Windows using Sun JDK 1.6 u7 is in the form [PROCESS_ID]@[MACHINE_NAME]. You could however try to execute jps and parse the result from that:

String jps = [JDK HOME] + "\\bin\\jps.exe";
Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(jps);

If run with no options the output should be the process id followed by the name.

1
4

This is the code JConsole, and potentially jps and VisualVM uses. It utilizes classes from sun.jvmstat.monitor.* package, from tool.jar.

package my.code.a003.process;

import sun.jvmstat.monitor.HostIdentifier;
import sun.jvmstat.monitor.MonitorException;
import sun.jvmstat.monitor.MonitoredHost;
import sun.jvmstat.monitor.MonitoredVm;
import sun.jvmstat.monitor.MonitoredVmUtil;
import sun.jvmstat.monitor.VmIdentifier;


public class GetOwnPid {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        new GetOwnPid().run();
    }

    public void run() {
        System.out.println(getPid(this.getClass()));
    }

    public Integer getPid(Class<?> mainClass) {
        MonitoredHost monitoredHost;
        Set<Integer> activeVmPids;
        try {
            monitoredHost = MonitoredHost.getMonitoredHost(new HostIdentifier((String) null));
            activeVmPids = monitoredHost.activeVms();
            MonitoredVm mvm = null;
            for (Integer vmPid : activeVmPids) {
                try {
                    mvm = monitoredHost.getMonitoredVm(new VmIdentifier(vmPid.toString()));
                    String mvmMainClass = MonitoredVmUtil.mainClass(mvm, true);
                    if (mainClass.getName().equals(mvmMainClass)) {
                        return vmPid;
                    }
                } finally {
                    if (mvm != null) {
                        mvm.detach();
                    }
                }
            }
        } catch (java.net.URISyntaxException e) {
            throw new InternalError(e.getMessage());
        } catch (MonitorException e) {
            throw new InternalError(e.getMessage());
        }
        return null;
    }
}

There are few catches:

  • The tool.jar is a library distributed with Oracle JDK but not JRE!
  • You cannot get tool.jar from Maven repo; configure it with Maven is a bit tricky
  • The tool.jar probably contains platform dependent (native?) code so it is not easily distributable
  • It runs under assumption that all (local) running JVM apps are "monitorable". It looks like that from Java 6 all apps generally are (unless you actively configure opposite)
  • It probably works only for Java 6+
  • Eclipse does not publish main class, so you will not get Eclipse PID easily Bug in MonitoredVmUtil?

UPDATE: I have just double checked that JPS uses this way, that is Jvmstat library (part of tool.jar). So there is no need to call JPS as external process, call Jvmstat library directly as my example shows. You can aslo get list of all JVMs runnin on localhost this way. See JPS source code:

1
  • if mainClass.getName() does not work try to use mainClass.getCanonicalName(); Dec 8, 2016 at 22:20
2

I know this is an old thread, but I wanted to call out that API for getting the PID (as well as other manipulation of the Java process at runtime) is being added to the Process class in JDK 9: http://openjdk.java.net/jeps/102

1
  • 11
    Wow, that was fast. It only took about seven years! 😃 Jun 24, 2015 at 21:50
2

Based on Ashwin Jayaprakash's answer (+1) about the Apache 2.0 licensed SIGAR, here is how I use it to get only the PID of the current process:

import org.hyperic.sigar.Sigar;

Sigar sigar = new Sigar();
long pid = sigar.getPid();
sigar.close();

Even though it does not work on all platforms, it does work on Linux, Windows, OS X and various Unix platforms as listed here.

0
1

You can try getpid() in JNR-Posix.

It has a Windows POSIX wrapper that calls getpid() off of libc.

0

I found a solution that may be a bit of an edge case and I didn't try it on other OS than Windows 10, but I think it's worth noticing.

If you find yourself working with J2V8 and nodejs, you can run a simple javascript function returning you the pid of the java process.

Here is an example:

public static void main(String[] args) {
    NodeJS nodeJS = NodeJS.createNodeJS();
    int pid = nodeJS.getRuntime().executeIntegerScript("process.pid;\n");
    System.out.println(pid);
    nodeJS.release();
}
-1

Here is my solution:

public static boolean isPIDInUse(int pid) {

        try {

            String s = null;
            int java_pid;

            RuntimeMXBean rt = ManagementFactory.getRuntimeMXBean();
            java_pid = Integer.parseInt(rt.getName().substring(0, rt.getName().indexOf("@")));

            if (java_pid == pid) {
                System.out.println("In Use\n");
                return true;
            }
        } catch (Exception e) {
            System.out.println("Exception:  " + e.getMessage());
        }
        return false;
    }
2
  • This does not check if pid is in use, but if pid equals current process pid
    – c0der
    Sep 21, 2016 at 14:29
  • What is the correct solution so i can update my code? Oct 25, 2016 at 16:45
-6

This is what I used when I had similar requirement. This determines the PID of the Java process correctly. Let your java code spawn a server on a pre-defined port number and then execute OS commands to find out the PID listening on the port. For Linux

netstat -tupln | grep portNumber
1
  • 3
    If you're calling shell scripts, you might as well do something simpler like bash -c 'echo $PPID' or the /proc answers above
    – Rich
    Apr 7, 2014 at 14:05

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.