From: Pavic, Aleksander (Aleksander.Pavic@telekom.de)
Date: Thu Mar 03 2005 - 09:43:17 EST
There are at least two solutions.
One solution is to read the ps manpage more carefully:
--snip
% ps -eo pid,etime,args
...
% man ps
...
etime In the POSIX locale, the elapsed time since the pro-
cess was started, in the form:
[[dd-]hh:]mm:ss
where
dd is the number of days
hh is the number of hours
mm is the number of minutes
ss is the number of seconds
The dd field will be a decimal integer. The hh, mm and ss
fields will be two-digit decimal integers padded on the left
with zeros.
...
--snip
The other solution is attached.
Thanks to John and Petri!
Aleks
-----Urspr|ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: JULIAN, JOHN C (AIT) [mailto:jj2195@sbc.com]
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 3. Mdrz 2005 15:17
An: Pavic, Aleksander
Betreff: RE: determine a process start time
Get the process pid and check the timestamp in /proc
ie: ls -ld /proc/<pid>
John Julian
ASI, SBC
29777 Telegraph Rd. Suite 1200
Southfield, MI 48034
phone: 248-386-1741
pager: 800-621-4951
cell: 248-376-6364
-----Original Message-----
From: sunmanagers-bounces@sunmanagers.org
[mailto:sunmanagers-bounces@sunmanagers.org] On Behalf Of Pavic,
Aleksander
Sent: Thursday, March 03, 2005 9:03 AM
To: sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org
Subject: determine a process start time
Hello all,
is there a possibility to determine the time a process@Solaris8 was
started?
ps -ef prints the day, but not the exact time. Have checked the ps
manpage without a positiv result.
Ideas?
tia,
Aleks
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