18

I use a specific ps command namely

ps -p <pid> -o %cpu, %mem

which gives me a result like

 %CPU %MEM
 15.1 10.0

All i want to do is to just print these numbers like 15.1 and 10.0 without the headers. I tried to use the 'cut' . But it seems to work on every line.

i.e

echo "$(ps -p 747 -o %cpu,%mem)" | cut -c 1-5

gives something like

 %CPU
  8.0

How to get just the numbers without the headers ?

2
  • 2
    Use sed 1d instead of cut; it deletes the first line (and passes the rest through unchanged). Jul 17, 2012 at 23:29
  • cut manipulates columns, not lines. Feb 19, 2016 at 21:20

6 Answers 6

31

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
6
  • 1
    This should be the accepted answer. Actually tells you how to do it with ps. Mar 22, 2015 at 19:21
  • 1
    @VivinPaliath: Thanks--but it's certainly at least worth having the other answers. Besides generally providing information that's useful for the OP to learn, some of them give you a solution that will work portably across BSD, GNU, and some legacy userlands, which might be helpful to other searchers.
    – abarnert
    Mar 23, 2015 at 22:04
  • that's good point (regarding other *nixes). The other answers are certainly useful; it's just that I prefer answers that tell you how to do it using the tool rather than having to munge output. :) Mar 23, 2015 at 22:24
  • @VivinPaliath: Well, obviously I agree (or I wouldn't have written this answer), I just want to make sure nobody downvotes the other useful answers or anything like that.
    – abarnert
    Mar 25, 2015 at 3:44
  • On Solaris you have to use more than on -o option: ps -e -o pid= -o ppid= -o args=
    – ceving
    Jan 27, 2016 at 13:08
8

Using awk:

ps -p 747 -o %cpu,%mem | awk 'NR>1'

Using sed:

ps -p 747 -o %cpu,%mem | sed 1d
15
  • 1
    Why do sed '1d' instead of just tail +2, and why echo "$(…)" instead of just the ? And why ask ps %cpu,%mem and then awk one of the columns away instead of just ps %cpu or ps %mem? But, most of all, why ask ps to print headers just to strip them, when you can just ask it to not print them?
    – abarnert
    Jul 18, 2012 at 0:11
  • 2
    @abarnert: On Mac OS X, the BSD-based ps (which is different from the GNU ps) does not have a documented mechanism to suppress the header line. The question of columns is valid. What's wrong with sed 1d compared to tail +2; they're approximately equivalent, and sed 1d has a longer pedigree than tail +2 (by many years). Jul 18, 2012 at 0:13
  • 1
    @JonathanLeffler: Yes it does have a mechanism to suppress the header line. See my answer. Also, what's wrong with using complicated/general commands like sed, awk, etc. instead of simple commands like tail is that they don't bring up questions like the OP's "What exactly does NR>1 mean" (which would take him a lot of effort to figure out via the manpage).
    – abarnert
    Jul 18, 2012 at 0:18
  • 1
    @abarnert: OK - I looked for an option 'suppress header line' and not for 40-odd words ending 'and if the moon is in the right phase and the planets are aligned properly then ps will omit the headers'. My bad! (Actually, I take that back. It isn't my bad; that is horribly circuitous and hard to use. It is ludicrous, in fact.) Jul 18, 2012 at 0:44
  • 1
    But the format wasn't the same. The OP is doing echo "$(…)" | foo, while you're doing echo "$(… | foo)", which is very different. (Although since they're just different no-ops, it turns out not to matter here.) This is why keeping things simple is important—because even talented and experienced coders (you obviously know your stuff) can and do make transformations like that without realizing it.
    – abarnert
    Jul 18, 2012 at 18:43
8

Use ps --no-headers:

--no-headers print no header line at all

or use:

ps | tail -n +2
2
  • 4
    That might work on Linux; it does not work on Mac OS X which uses a BSD implementation of ps, not the GNU version. Jul 18, 2012 at 0:11
  • Specified for a Mac. Macs don't take the --no-header parameter
    – David W.
    Jul 18, 2012 at 0:13
4

Already picked the winner. Drats...

If you're already using the -o parameter, you can specify the headings for the particular columns you want to print by putting an equal sign after the name, and the column name. If you put a null string, it'll print no headings:

With standard headings (as you had):

$ ps -p $pid -o%cpu,%mem
 %CPU %MEM
  0.0  0.0

With custom headings (just to show you how it works):

$  ps -p $pid -o%cpu=FOO,%mem=BAR
  FOO  BAR
  0.0  0.0

With null headings (Notice it doesn't even print a blank line):

$ ps -p $pid -o%cpu="",%mem=""
 0.0   0.0
3
  • You don't need the quotes; you can just do -o%cpu=,%mem= (as I showed in my answer).
    – abarnert
    Jul 18, 2012 at 0:21
  • @abarnert I saw your answer after I did mine. I never tried it without the quotes before, but it does work.
    – David W.
    Jul 18, 2012 at 12:51
  • 1
    Yeah, it never hurts to put in the quotes, and if I were improvising at the command line I'd probably add them too… (You'll notice that I have a different set of unnecessary quotes—theoretically, some sh-derived shell might give a special meaning to %cpu, but I don't believe any actual shell treats % specially unless followed by a digit, so I'm just being pointlessly paranoid.) So, that's not a criticism, just a comment that might one day save you a few keystrokes.
    – abarnert
    Jul 18, 2012 at 18:40
0

You can use below command and you don't need to add pcpu="", it worked for me:

ps -Ao pcpu=

0

Use $ps - | grep -v <header_name>

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