The BSD (and more generally POSIX) equivalent of GNU's ps --no-headers
is a bit annoying, but, from the man page:
-o Display information associated with the space or comma sepa-
rated list of keywords specified. Multiple keywords may also
be given in the form of more than one -o option. Keywords may
be appended with an equals (`=') sign and a string. This
causes the printed header to use the specified string instead
of the standard header. If all keywords have empty header
texts, no header line is written.
So:
ps -p 747 -o '%cpu=,%mem='
That's it.
If you ever do need the remove the first line from an arbitrary command, tail makes that easy:
ps -p 747 -o '%cpu,%mem' | tail +2
Or, if you want to be completely portable:
ps -p 747 -o '%cpu,%mem' | tail -n +2
The cut
command is sort of the column-based equivalent of the simpler row-based commands head
and tail
. (If you really do want to cut columns, it works… but in this case, you probably don't; it's much simpler to pass the -o
params you want to ps in the first place, than to pass extras and try to snip them out.)
Meanwhile, I'm not sure why you think you need to eval something as the argument to echo, when that has the same effect as running it directly, and just makes things more complicated. For example, the following two lines are equivalent:
echo "$(ps -p 747 -o %cpu,%mem)" | cut -c 1-5
ps -p 747 -o %cpu,%mem | cut -c 1-5
sed 1d
instead ofcut
; it deletes the first line (and passes the rest through unchanged).cut
manipulates columns, not lines.