61

Several processes with the same name are running on host. What is the cross-platform way to get PIDs of those processes by name using python or jython?

  1. I want something like pidof but in python. (I don't have pidof anyway.)
  2. I can't parse /proc because it might be unavailable (on HP-UX).
  3. I do not want to run os.popen('ps') and parse the output because I think it is ugly (field sequence may be different in different OS).
  4. Target platforms are Solaris, HP-UX, and maybe others.

9 Answers 9

84

You can use psutil (https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil), which works on Windows and UNIX:

import psutil

PROCNAME = "python.exe"

for proc in psutil.process_iter():
    if proc.name() == PROCNAME:
        print(proc)

On my machine it prints:

<psutil.Process(pid=3881, name='python.exe') at 140192133873040>

EDIT 2017-04-27 - here's a more advanced utility function which checks the name against processes' name(), cmdline() and exe():

import os
import psutil

def find_procs_by_name(name):
    "Return a list of processes matching 'name'."
    assert name, name
    ls = []
    for p in psutil.process_iter():
        name_, exe, cmdline = "", "", []
        try:
            name_ = p.name()
            cmdline = p.cmdline()
            exe = p.exe()
        except (psutil.AccessDenied, psutil.ZombieProcess):
            pass
        except psutil.NoSuchProcess:
            continue
        if name == name_ or cmdline[0] == name or os.path.basename(exe) == name:
            ls.append(p)
    return ls
11
  • 1
    Unfortunately OS X does not allow you to access many attributes of a process (name, exe, cmdline), even if you only try to access those processes that are created by you. Unless you run the interpreter/script with sudo, that is.
    – John
    Commented Sep 20, 2011 at 23:40
  • 1
    Yes, that's a limitation of OSX (and it's the only platform behaving like that). There's nothing you can do about it except using sudo/setuid. Commented Feb 3, 2012 at 9:17
  • 1
    Update - this is now fixed for different methods, see: code.google.com/p/psutil/issues/detail?id=297 Commented Mar 7, 2013 at 0:25
  • In my environment .name was a method, not a property. Commented Feb 6, 2015 at 17:57
  • so how would this identify my process from among multiple python processes?
    – n611x007
    Commented Feb 20, 2015 at 13:33
14

There's no single cross-platform API, you'll have to check for OS. For posix based use /proc. For Windows use following code to get list of all pids with coresponding process names

from win32com.client import GetObject
WMI = GetObject('winmgmts:')
processes = WMI.InstancesOf('Win32_Process')
process_list = [(p.Properties_("ProcessID").Value, p.Properties_("Name").Value) for p in processes]

You can then easily filter out processes you need. For more info on available properties of Win32_Process check out Win32_Process Class

2
  • 1
    This library doesn't come standard with Python, at least not with 2.7. Didn't check the other versions. Commented Oct 11, 2012 at 9:25
  • 2
    @ZoranPavlovic yes and it is the pywin32 package with builds sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/files/pywin32 the answer should have included this
    – n611x007
    Commented Feb 20, 2015 at 13:36
13
import psutil

process = filter(lambda p: p.name() == "YourProcess.exe", psutil.process_iter())
for i in process:
  print i.name,i.pid

Give all pids of "YourProcess.exe"

1
  • 5
    I hold no stake either way; I often hear people rant that List Comprehension is always the best way to filter a list because its faster. eg process = [proc for proc in psutil.process_iter() if proc.name == "YourProcess.exe"]. Commented Feb 6, 2015 at 17:57
5

A note on ThorSummoner's comment

process = [proc for proc in psutil.process_iter() if proc.name == "YourProcess.exe"].

I have tried it on Debian with Python 3, I think it has to be proc.name() instead of proc.name.

3

First, Windows (in all it's incarnations) is a non-standard OS.

Linux (and most proprietary unixen) are POSIX-compliant standard operating systems.

The C libraries reflect this dichotomy. Python reflects the C libraries.

There is no "cross-platform" way to do this. You have to hack up something with ctypes for a particular release of Windows (XP or Vista)

0
1

I don't think you will be able to find a purely python-based, portable solution without using /proc or command line utilities, at least not in python itself. Parsing os.system is not ugly - someone has to deal with the multiple platforms, be it you or someone else. Implementing it for the OS you are interested in should be fairly easy, honestly.

1

For jython, if Java 5 is used, then you can get the Java process id as following:

from java.lang.management import ManagementFactory

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

print(pid)

This snippet will print your PID (in my case 23968)

1
  • that works, but I want to get PID of another process (like pidof do but without using pidof) Commented Apr 15, 2009 at 20:46
0

There isn't, I'm afraid. Processes are uniquely identified by pid not by name. If you really must find a pid by name, then you will have use something like you have suggested, but it won't be portable and probably will not work in all cases.

If you only have to find the pids for a certain application and you have control over this application, then I'd suggest changing this app to store its pid in files in some location where your script can find it.

0

Just use:

def get_process_by_name(name):
    import re, psutil
    ls = list()
    for p in psutil.process_iter():
        if hasattr(p, 'name'):
            if re.match(".*" + name + ".*", p.name()):
                ls.append(p)
    return ls

returns Process object

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