14

Given a PID, how can I get the memory currently used by a process ? Specifically I am looking for:

  • The private physical memory (RAM) used by the process
  • The swap space used by the process

But I am not interested in mapped files and shared memory. In short, I would like to determine how much memory (RAM and swap) would be freed by terminating the PID.

2
  • Have a look at stackoverflow.com/questions/131303/… Commented Aug 23, 2013 at 8:58
  • Thank you, but this article refers to tools that aren't available on mac (/proc, pmap, smem, htop, gcore) or to things such as valgrind which aren't an option. I am mainly looking for a way of finding the memory (RAM) and SWAP used by a process, programatically. PS could work, but it does not report that. I should have tagged objective-c instead of cocoa. But It would not be better. C/c++ calls are good as well as long as they can be placed on a MAC OS platform.
    – user2205231
    Commented Aug 26, 2013 at 17:58

2 Answers 2

9

Would this be useful? You can use the ps command with various options to get at least some of those things:

ps -o rss -o vsz -o pid

will give you the resident set size, the virtual size, and the process ID. I see from the man page that -o paddr gives the swap address, but I don't see which option gives you the swap size.

3
  • Thank you for your reply. I believe this command will return the address space size ? Does RSS include the shared / mapped memory as well ? (note: -p pid).
    – user2205231
    Commented Aug 26, 2013 at 18:12
  • 4
    Or even simpler: ps -o rss,vsz,pid.
    – kenorb
    Commented Aug 25, 2015 at 10:35
  • As a note if you're using this to get memory programmatically, shelling out to ps is extremely expensive github.com/schneems/get_process_mem/issues/31
    – Schneems
    Commented Jul 4, 2019 at 18:15
8

You can use Mach's task_info call to find this information. Here is code which works on OS X v10.9, and which gets the virtual process size of the current process:

#include <mach/mach.h>
#include <mach/message.h>  // for mach_msg_type_number_t
#include <mach/kern_return.h>  // for kern_return_t
#include <mach/task_info.h>
#include <stdio.h>

int main(void) {
  kern_return_t error;
  mach_msg_type_number_t outCount;
  mach_task_basic_info_data_t taskinfo;

  taskinfo.virtual_size = 0;
  outCount = MACH_TASK_BASIC_INFO_COUNT;
  error = task_info(mach_task_self(), MACH_TASK_BASIC_INFO, (task_info_t)&taskinfo, &outCount);
  if (error == KERN_SUCCESS) {
    // type is mach_vm_size_t
    printf("vsize = %llu\n", (unsigned long long)taskinfo.virtual_size);
    return 0;
  } else {
    printf("error %d\n", (int)error);
    return 1;
  }
}

I think that this excludes shared memory segments, but I'm not sure.

1
  • 1
    Thanks a ton for this! The code here returns info for the current process. Do you know how to retrieve the resident set size for a different PID on mac?
    – Schneems
    Commented Aug 25, 2020 at 17:16

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.