Command line and full screen utilities for browsing procfs, a "pseudo" file system dynamically generated by Linux to provide information about the status of entries in its process table.
b51ca2a1f8
This is one of the worst issues that we found: if the strlen() of one of the cmdline arguments is greater than INT_MAX (it is possible), then the "int bytes" could wrap around completely, back to a very large positive int, and the next strncat() would be called with a huge number of destination bytes (a stack-based buffer overflow). Fortunately, every distribution that we checked compiles its procps utilities with FORTIFY, and the fortified strncat() detects and aborts the buffer overflow before it occurs. This patch also fixes a secondary issue: the old "--bytes;" meant that cmdline[sizeof (cmdline) - 2] was never written to if the while loop was never entered; in the example below, "ff" is the uninitialized byte: ((exec -ca `python3 -c 'print("A" * 131000)'` /usr/bin/cat < /dev/zero) | sleep 60) & pgrep -a -P "$!" 2>/dev/null | hexdump -C 00000000 31 32 34 36 30 20 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 |12460 AAAAAAAAAA| 00000010 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 41 |AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA| * 00001000 41 41 41 41 ff 0a 31 32 34 36 32 20 73 6c 65 65 |AAAA..12462 slee| 00001010 70 20 36 30 0a |p 60.| |
||
---|---|---|
contrib | ||
Documentation | ||
include | ||
lib | ||
man-po | ||
misc | ||
po | ||
proc | ||
ps | ||
testsuite | ||
top | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitlab-ci.yml | ||
AUTHORS | ||
autogen.sh | ||
ChangeLog | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
COPYING.LIB | ||
create-man-pot.sh | ||
free.1 | ||
free.c | ||
INSTALL.md | ||
kill.1 | ||
Makefile.am | ||
NEWS | ||
pgrep.1 | ||
pgrep.c | ||
pidof.1 | ||
pidof.c | ||
pkill.1 | ||
pmap.1 | ||
pmap.c | ||
procio.c | ||
pwdx.1 | ||
pwdx.c | ||
README.md | ||
skill.1 | ||
skill.c | ||
slabtop.1 | ||
slabtop.c | ||
snice.1 | ||
sysctl.8 | ||
sysctl.c | ||
sysctl.conf | ||
sysctl.conf.5 | ||
tload.1 | ||
tload.c | ||
translate-man.sh | ||
uptime.1 | ||
uptime.c | ||
vmstat.8 | ||
vmstat.c | ||
w.1 | ||
w.c | ||
watch.1 | ||
watch.c |
procps
procps is a set of command line and full-screen utilities that provide information out of the pseudo-filesystem most commonly located at /proc. This filesystem provides a simple interface to the kernel data structures. The programs of procps generally concentrate on the structures that describe the processess running on the system.
The following programs are found in procps:
- free - Report the amount of free and used memory in the system
- kill - Send a signal to a process based on PID
- pgrep - List processes based on name or other attributes
- pkill - Send a signal to a process based on name or other attributes
- pmap - Report memory map of a process
- ps - Report information of processes
- pwdx - Report current directory of a process
- skill - Obsolete version of pgrep/pkill
- slabtop - Display kernel slab cache information in real time
- snice - Renice a process
- sysctl - Read or Write kernel parameters at run-time
- tload - Graphical representation of system load average
- top - Dynamic real-time view of running processes
- uptime - Display how long the system has been running
- vmstat - Report virtual memory statistics
- w - Report logged in users and what they are doing
- watch - Execute a program periodically, showing output fullscreen
Reporting Bugs
There are a few ways of reporting bugs or feature requests:
- Your distributions bug reporter. If you are using a distribution your first port of call is their bug tracker. This is because each distribution has their own patches and way of dealing with bugs. Also bug reporting often does not need any subscription to websites.
- GitLab Issues - To the left of this page is the issue tracker. You can report bugs here.
- Email list - We have an email list (see below) where you can report bugs. The problem with this method is bug reports often get lost and cannot be tracked. This is especially a big problem when its something that will take time to resolve.
If you need to report bugs, there is more details on the Bug Reporting page.
Email List
The email list for the developers and users of procps is found at http://www.freelists.org/archive/procps/ This email list discusses the development of procps and is used by distributions to also forward or discuss bugs.