How can I list all Java processes in bash?
I need an command line. I know there is command ps
but I don't know what parameters I need to use.
18 Answers
Recent Java comes with Java Virtual Machine Process Status Tool "jps"
http://download.oracle.com/javase/1.5.0/docs/tooldocs/share/jps.html
For example,
[nsushkin@fulton support]$ jps -m
2120 Main --userdir /home/nsushkin/.netbeans/7.0 --branding nb
26546 charles.jar
17600 Jps -m
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2Just a note: jps only ships with the JDK, not the JRE. Machines with plain ol' Java runtimes on them won't have this tool.– jakeJun 17, 2015 at 17:43
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I've been utilizing this for years, however it only shows current user's processes. Not all processes on the machine. Admin user and normal user processes might be different. Dec 15, 2020 at 15:08
jps -lV
is most useful. Prints just pid and qualified main class name:
2472 com.intellij.idea.Main
11111 sun.tools.jps.Jps
9030 play.server.Server
2752 org.jetbrains.idea.maven.server.RemoteMavenServer
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1That works great in a container with limited packages. For example if
ps
is missing. Aug 31, 2021 at 8:02
Starting from Java 7, the simplest way and less error prone is to simply use the command jcmd
that is part of the JDK such that it will work the same way on all OS.
Example:
> jcmd
5485 sun.tools.jcmd.JCmd
2125 MyProgram
jcmd
allows to send diagnostic command requests to a running Java Virtual Machine (JVM).
More details about how to use jcmd
.
See also the jcmd
Utility
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1
You can use single command pgrep as well (doesn't require you to use pipes and multiple commands):
pgrep -fl java
For better output format check this command:
ps -fC java
This will return all the running java processes in linux environment. Then you can kill the process using the process ID.
ps -e|grep java
pgrep -l java
ps -ef | grep java
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5Thank you for this code snippet, which may provide some immediate help. A proper explanation would greatly improve its educational value by showing why this is a good solution to the problem, and would make it more useful to future readers with similar, but not identical, questions. Please edit your answer to add explanation, and give an indication of what limitations and assumptions apply. In particular, why doesn't the second of those show the
grep
process? Aug 1, 2017 at 11:33
ps axuwww | grep java | grep -v grep
The above will
- show you all processes with long lines (arg: www)
- filter (grep) only lines what contain the word java, and
- filter out the line "grep java" :)
(btw, this example is not the effective one, but simple to remember) ;)
you can pipe the above to another commands, for example:
ps axuwww | grep java | grep -v grep | sed '.....' | while read something
do
something_another $something
done
etc...
When I want to know if a certain Java class is getting executed, I use the following command line:
ps ww -f -C java | grep "fully.qualified.name.of.class"
From the OS side view, the process's command name is "java". The "ww" option widens the colum's maximum characters, so it's possible to grep the FQN of the related class.
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This is what I was looking for -
$ top
just gives "java" as the command which isn't all that helpful when trying to figure out which process is hogging the cpu.$ ps ww -fC java
provides the missing pieces of the puzzle. Jul 16, 2019 at 21:59
jps & jcmd wasn't showing me any results when I tried it using using openjdk-1.8 on redhat linux. But even if it did it only shows processes under the current user which doesn't work in my case. Using the ps|grep is what I ended up doing but the class path for some java apps can be extremely long which makes results illegible so I used sed to remove it. This is a bit rough still but removes everything except: PID, User, java-class/jar, args.
ps -o pid,user,cmd -C java | sed -e 's/\([0-9]\+ *[^ ]*\) *[^ ]* *\([^$]*\)/\1 \2/' -e 's/-c[^ ]* [^ ]* \|-[^ ]* //g'
Results look something like:
PID USER CMD
11251 userb org.apache.zookeeper.server.quorum.QuorumPeerMain ../config/zookeeper.properties
19574 userb com.intellij.idea.Main
28807 root org.apache.nifi.bootstrap.RunNiFi run
28829 root org.apache.nifi.NiFi
An alternative on windows to list all processes is:
WMIC path win32_process where "Caption='java.exe'" get ProcessId,Commandline
But that is going to need some parsing to make it more legible.
There's a lot of ways of doing this. You can use java.lang.ProcessBuilder
and "pgrep" to get the process id (PID) with something like: pgrep -fl java | awk {'print $1'}
. Or, if you are running under Linux, you can query the /proc
directory.
I know, this seems horrible, and non portable, and even poorly implemented, I agree. But because Java actually runs in a VM, for some absurd reason that I can't really figure out after more then 15 years working the JDK, is why it isn't possible to see things outside the JVM space, it's really ridiculous with you think about it. You can do everything else, even fork
and join
child processes (those were an horrible way of multitasking when the world didn't know about threads or pthreads, what a hell! what's going in on with Java?! :).
This will give an immense discussion I know, but anyways, there's a very good API that I already used in my projects and it's stable enough (it's OSS so you still need to stress test every version you use before really trusting the API): https://github.com/jezhumble/javasysmon
JavaDoc: http://jezhumble.github.io/javasysmon/, search for the class com.jezhumble.javasysmon.OsProcess
, she will do the trick. Hope it helped, best of luck.
ps -eaf | grep [j]ava
It's better since it will only show you the active processes not including this command that also got java string the []
does the trick
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1@vaquarkhan dude just try to run both yours and mine suggestions and see whats the difference, they both will work Jul 31, 2017 at 19:49
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I use this (good on Debian 8):
alias psj='ps --no-headers -ww -C java -o pid,user,start_time,command'
The following commands will return only Java ProcessIDs. These commands are very useful especially whenever you want to feed another process by these return values (java PIDs).
sudo netstat -nlpt | awk '/java/ {print $7}' | tr '/java' ' '
sudo netstat -nlpt | awk '/java/ {print $7}' | sed 's/\/java/ /g'
But if you remove the latest pipe, you will be noticed these are java process
sudo netstat -nlpt | awk '/java/ {print $7}'
sudo netstat -nlpt | awk '/java/ {print $7}'
ps
then first tryman ps
,info ps
and learn about it in the Internet.