# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# Copyright (c) 2009, Giampaolo Rodola'. All rights reserved.
# Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
# found in the LICENSE file.
"""psutil is a cross-platform library for retrieving information on
running processes and system utilization (CPU, memory, disks, network,
sensors) in Python. Supported platforms:
- Linux
- Windows
- macOS
- FreeBSD
- OpenBSD
- NetBSD
- Sun Solaris
- AIX
Works with Python versions 2.7 and 3.4+.
"""
from __future__ import division
import collections
import contextlib
import datetime
import functools
import os
import signal
import subprocess
import sys
import threading
import time
try:
import pwd
except ImportError:
pwd = None
from . import _common
from ._common import AIX
from ._common import BSD
from ._common import CONN_CLOSE
from ._common import CONN_CLOSE_WAIT
from ._common import CONN_CLOSING
from ._common import CONN_ESTABLISHED
from ._common import CONN_FIN_WAIT1
from ._common import CONN_FIN_WAIT2
from ._common import CONN_LAST_ACK
from ._common import CONN_LISTEN
from ._common import CONN_NONE
from ._common import CONN_SYN_RECV
from ._common import CONN_SYN_SENT
from ._common import CONN_TIME_WAIT
from ._common import FREEBSD # NOQA
from ._common import LINUX
from ._common import MACOS
from ._common import NETBSD # NOQA
from ._common import NIC_DUPLEX_FULL
from ._common import NIC_DUPLEX_HALF
from ._common import NIC_DUPLEX_UNKNOWN
from ._common import OPENBSD # NOQA
from ._common import OSX # deprecated alias
from ._common import POSIX # NOQA
from ._common import POWER_TIME_UNKNOWN
from ._common import POWER_TIME_UNLIMITED
from ._common import STATUS_DEAD
from ._common import STATUS_DISK_SLEEP
from ._common import STATUS_IDLE
from ._common import STATUS_LOCKED
from ._common import STATUS_PARKED
from ._common import STATUS_RUNNING
from ._common import STATUS_SLEEPING
from ._common import STATUS_STOPPED
from ._common import STATUS_TRACING_STOP
from ._common import STATUS_WAITING
from ._common import STATUS_WAKING
from ._common import STATUS_ZOMBIE
from ._common import SUNOS
from ._common import WINDOWS
from ._common import AccessDenied
from ._common import Error
from ._common import NoSuchProcess
from ._common import TimeoutExpired
from ._common import ZombieProcess
from ._common import memoize_when_activated
from ._common import wrap_numbers as _wrap_numbers
from ._compat import PY3 as _PY3
from ._compat import PermissionError
from ._compat import ProcessLookupError
from ._compat import SubprocessTimeoutExpired as _SubprocessTimeoutExpired
from ._compat import long
if LINUX:
# This is public API and it will be retrieved from _pslinux.py
# via sys.modules.
PROCFS_PATH = "/proc"
from . import _pslinux as _psplatform
from ._pslinux import IOPRIO_CLASS_BE # NOQA
from ._pslinux import IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE # NOQA
from ._pslinux import IOPRIO_CLASS_NONE # NOQA
from ._pslinux import IOPRIO_CLASS_RT # NOQA
elif WINDOWS:
from . import _pswindows as _psplatform
from ._psutil_windows import ABOVE_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS # NOQA
from ._psutil_windows import BELOW_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS # NOQA
from ._psutil_windows import HIGH_PRIORITY_CLASS # NOQA
from ._psutil_windows import IDLE_PRIORITY_CLASS # NOQA
from ._psutil_windows import NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS # NOQA
from ._psutil_windows import REALTIME_PRIORITY_CLASS # NOQA
from ._pswindows import CONN_DELETE_TCB # NOQA
from ._pswindows import IOPRIO_HIGH # NOQA
from ._pswindows import IOPRIO_LOW # NOQA
from ._pswindows import IOPRIO_NORMAL # NOQA
from ._pswindows import IOPRIO_VERYLOW # NOQA
elif MACOS:
from . import _psosx as _psplatform
elif BSD:
from . import _psbsd as _psplatform
elif SUNOS:
from . import _pssunos as _psplatform
from ._pssunos import CONN_BOUND # NOQA
from ._pssunos import CONN_IDLE # NOQA
# This is public writable API which is read from _pslinux.py and
# _pssunos.py via sys.modules.
PROCFS_PATH = "/proc"
elif AIX:
from . import _psaix as _psplatform
# This is public API and it will be retrieved from _pslinux.py
# via sys.modules.
PROCFS_PATH = "/proc"
else: # pragma: no cover
raise NotImplementedError('platform %s is not supported' % sys.platform)
__all__ = [
# exceptions
"Error", "NoSuchProcess", "ZombieProcess", "AccessDenied",
"TimeoutExpired",
# constants
"version_info", "__version__",
"STATUS_RUNNING", "STATUS_IDLE", "STATUS_SLEEPING", "STATUS_DISK_SLEEP",
"STATUS_STOPPED", "STATUS_TRACING_STOP", "STATUS_ZOMBIE", "STATUS_DEAD",
"STATUS_WAKING", "STATUS_LOCKED", "STATUS_WAITING", "STATUS_LOCKED",
"STATUS_PARKED",
"CONN_ESTABLISHED", "CONN_SYN_SENT", "CONN_SYN_RECV", "CONN_FIN_WAIT1",
"CONN_FIN_WAIT2", "CONN_TIME_WAIT", "CONN_CLOSE", "CONN_CLOSE_WAIT",
"CONN_LAST_ACK", "CONN_LISTEN", "CONN_CLOSING", "CONN_NONE",
# "CONN_IDLE", "CONN_BOUND",
"AF_LINK",
"NIC_DUPLEX_FULL", "NIC_DUPLEX_HALF", "NIC_DUPLEX_UNKNOWN",
"POWER_TIME_UNKNOWN", "POWER_TIME_UNLIMITED",
"BSD", "FREEBSD", "LINUX", "NETBSD", "OPENBSD", "MACOS", "OSX", "POSIX",
"SUNOS", "WINDOWS", "AIX",
# "RLIM_INFINITY", "RLIMIT_AS", "RLIMIT_CORE", "RLIMIT_CPU", "RLIMIT_DATA",
# "RLIMIT_FSIZE", "RLIMIT_LOCKS", "RLIMIT_MEMLOCK", "RLIMIT_NOFILE",
# "RLIMIT_NPROC", "RLIMIT_RSS", "RLIMIT_STACK", "RLIMIT_MSGQUEUE",
# "RLIMIT_NICE", "RLIMIT_RTPRIO", "RLIMIT_RTTIME", "RLIMIT_SIGPENDING",
# classes
"Process", "Popen",
# functions
"pid_exists", "pids", "process_iter", "wait_procs", # proc
"virtual_memory", "swap_memory", # memory
"cpu_times", "cpu_percent", "cpu_times_percent", "cpu_count", # cpu
"cpu_stats", # "cpu_freq", "getloadavg"
"net_io_counters", "net_connections", "net_if_addrs", # network
"net_if_stats",
"disk_io_counters", "disk_partitions", "disk_usage", # disk
# "sensors_temperatures", "sensors_battery", "sensors_fans" # sensors
"users", "boot_time", # others
]
__all__.extend(_psplatform.__extra__all__)
# Linux, FreeBSD
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "rlimit"):
# Populate global namespace with RLIM* constants.
from . import _psutil_posix
_globals = globals()
_name = None
for _name in dir(_psutil_posix):
if _name.startswith('RLIM') and _name.isupper():
_globals[_name] = getattr(_psutil_posix, _name)
__all__.append(_name)
del _globals, _name
AF_LINK = _psplatform.AF_LINK
__author__ = "Giampaolo Rodola'"
__version__ = "5.9.5"
version_info = tuple([int(num) for num in __version__.split('.')])
_timer = getattr(time, 'monotonic', time.time)
_TOTAL_PHYMEM = None
_LOWEST_PID = None
_SENTINEL = object()
# Sanity check in case the user messed up with psutil installation
# or did something weird with sys.path. In this case we might end
# up importing a python module using a C extension module which
# was compiled for a different version of psutil.
# We want to prevent that by failing sooner rather than later.
# See: https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/564
if (int(__version__.replace('.', '')) !=
getattr(_psplatform.cext, 'version', None)):
msg = "version conflict: %r C extension module was built for another " \
"version of psutil" % _psplatform.cext.__file__
if hasattr(_psplatform.cext, 'version'):
msg += " (%s instead of %s)" % (
'.'.join([x for x in str(_psplatform.cext.version)]), __version__)
else:
msg += " (different than %s)" % __version__
msg += "; you may try to 'pip uninstall psutil', manually remove %s" % (
getattr(_psplatform.cext, "__file__",
"the existing psutil install directory"))
msg += " or clean the virtual env somehow, then reinstall"
raise ImportError(msg)
# =====================================================================
# --- Utils
# =====================================================================
if hasattr(_psplatform, 'ppid_map'):
# Faster version (Windows and Linux).
_ppid_map = _psplatform.ppid_map
else: # pragma: no cover
def _ppid_map():
"""Return a {pid: ppid, ...} dict for all running processes in
one shot. Used to speed up Process.children().
"""
ret = {}
for pid in pids():
try:
ret[pid] = _psplatform.Process(pid).ppid()
except (NoSuchProcess, ZombieProcess):
pass
return ret
def _assert_pid_not_reused(fun):
"""Decorator which raises NoSuchProcess in case a process is no
longer running or its PID has been reused.
"""
@functools.wraps(fun)
def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
if not self.is_running():
if self._pid_reused:
msg = "process no longer exists and its PID has been reused"
else:
msg = None
raise NoSuchProcess(self.pid, self._name, msg=msg)
return fun(self, *args, **kwargs)
return wrapper
def _pprint_secs(secs):
"""Format seconds in a human readable form."""
now = time.time()
secs_ago = int(now - secs)
if secs_ago < 60 * 60 * 24:
fmt = "%H:%M:%S"
else:
fmt = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"
return datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(secs).strftime(fmt)
# =====================================================================
# --- Process class
# =====================================================================
class Process(object):
"""Represents an OS process with the given PID.
If PID is omitted current process PID (os.getpid()) is used.
Raise NoSuchProcess if PID does not exist.
Note that most of the methods of this class do not make sure
the PID of the process being queried has been reused over time.
That means you might end up retrieving an information referring
to another process in case the original one this instance
refers to is gone in the meantime.
The only exceptions for which process identity is pre-emptively
checked and guaranteed are:
- parent()
- children()
- nice() (set)
- ionice() (set)
- rlimit() (set)
- cpu_affinity (set)
- suspend()
- resume()
- send_signal()
- terminate()
- kill()
To prevent this problem for all other methods you can:
- use is_running() before querying the process
- if you're continuously iterating over a set of Process
instances use process_iter() which pre-emptively checks
process identity for every yielded instance
"""
def __init__(self, pid=None):
self._init(pid)
def _init(self, pid, _ignore_nsp=False):
if pid is None:
pid = os.getpid()
else:
if not _PY3 and not isinstance(pid, (int, long)):
raise TypeError('pid must be an integer (got %r)' % pid)
if pid < 0:
raise ValueError('pid must be a positive integer (got %s)'
% pid)
self._pid = pid
self._name = None
self._exe = None
self._create_time = None
self._gone = False
self._pid_reused = False
self._hash = None
self._lock = threading.RLock()
# used for caching on Windows only (on POSIX ppid may change)
self._ppid = None
# platform-specific modules define an _psplatform.Process
# implementation class
self._proc = _psplatform.Process(pid)
self._last_sys_cpu_times = None
self._last_proc_cpu_times = None
self._exitcode = _SENTINEL
# cache creation time for later use in is_running() method
try:
self.create_time()
except AccessDenied:
# We should never get here as AFAIK we're able to get
# process creation time on all platforms even as a
# limited user.
pass
except ZombieProcess:
# Zombies can still be queried by this class (although
# not always) and pids() return them so just go on.
pass
except NoSuchProcess:
if not _ignore_nsp:
raise NoSuchProcess(pid, msg='process PID not found')
else:
self._gone = True
# This pair is supposed to identify a Process instance
# univocally over time (the PID alone is not enough as
# it might refer to a process whose PID has been reused).
# This will be used later in __eq__() and is_running().
self._ident = (self.pid, self._create_time)
def __str__(self):
info = collections.OrderedDict()
info["pid"] = self.pid
if self._name:
info['name'] = self._name
with self.oneshot():
try:
info["name"] = self.name()
info["status"] = self.status()
except ZombieProcess:
info["status"] = "zombie"
except NoSuchProcess:
info["status"] = "terminated"
except AccessDenied:
pass
if self._exitcode not in (_SENTINEL, None):
info["exitcode"] = self._exitcode
if self._create_time:
info['started'] = _pprint_secs(self._create_time)
return "%s.%s(%s)" % (
self.__class__.__module__,
self.__class__.__name__,
", ".join(["%s=%r" % (k, v) for k, v in info.items()]))
__repr__ = __str__
def __eq__(self, other):
# Test for equality with another Process object based
# on PID and creation time.
if not isinstance(other, Process):
return NotImplemented
return self._ident == other._ident
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
def __hash__(self):
if self._hash is None:
self._hash = hash(self._ident)
return self._hash
@property
def pid(self):
"""The process PID."""
return self._pid
# --- utility methods
@contextlib.contextmanager
def oneshot(self):
"""Utility context manager which considerably speeds up the
retrieval of multiple process information at the same time.
Internally different process info (e.g. name, ppid, uids,
gids, ...) may be fetched by using the same routine, but
only one information is returned and the others are discarded.
When using this context manager the internal routine is
executed once (in the example below on name()) and the
other info are cached.
The cache is cleared when exiting the context manager block.
The advice is to use this every time you retrieve more than
one information about the process. If you're lucky, you'll
get a hell of a speedup.
>>> import psutil
>>> p = psutil.Process()
>>> with p.oneshot():
... p.name() # collect multiple info
... p.cpu_times() # return cached value
... p.cpu_percent() # return cached value
... p.create_time() # return cached value
...
>>>
"""
with self._lock:
if hasattr(self, "_cache"):
# NOOP: this covers the use case where the user enters the
# context twice:
#
# >>> with p.oneshot():
# ... with p.oneshot():
# ...
#
# Also, since as_dict() internally uses oneshot()
# I expect that the code below will be a pretty common
# "mistake" that the user will make, so let's guard
# against that:
#
# >>> with p.oneshot():
# ... p.as_dict()
# ...
yield
else:
try:
# cached in case cpu_percent() is used
self.cpu_times.cache_activate(self)
# cached in case memory_percent() is used
self.memory_info.cache_activate(self)
# cached in case parent() is used
self.ppid.cache_activate(self)
# cached in case username() is used
if POSIX:
self.uids.cache_activate(self)
# specific implementation cache
self._proc.oneshot_enter()
yield
finally:
self.cpu_times.cache_deactivate(self)
self.memory_info.cache_deactivate(self)
self.ppid.cache_deactivate(self)
if POSIX:
self.uids.cache_deactivate(self)
self._proc.oneshot_exit()
def as_dict(self, attrs=None, ad_value=None):
"""Utility method returning process information as a
hashable dictionary.
If *attrs* is specified it must be a list of strings
reflecting available Process class' attribute names
(e.g. ['cpu_times', 'name']) else all public (read
only) attributes are assumed.
*ad_value* is the value which gets assigned in case
AccessDenied or ZombieProcess exception is raised when
retrieving that particular process information.
"""
valid_names = _as_dict_attrnames
if attrs is not None:
if not isinstance(attrs, (list, tuple, set, frozenset)):
raise TypeError("invalid attrs type %s" % type(attrs))
attrs = set(attrs)
invalid_names = attrs - valid_names
if invalid_names:
raise ValueError("invalid attr name%s %s" % (
"s" if len(invalid_names) > 1 else "",
", ".join(map(repr, invalid_names))))
retdict = {}
ls = attrs or valid_names
with self.oneshot():
for name in ls:
try:
if name == 'pid':
ret = self.pid
else:
meth = getattr(self, name)
ret = meth()
except (AccessDenied, ZombieProcess):
ret = ad_value
except NotImplementedError:
# in case of not implemented functionality (may happen
# on old or exotic systems) we want to crash only if
# the user explicitly asked for that particular attr
if attrs:
raise
continue
retdict[name] = ret
return retdict
def parent(self):
"""Return the parent process as a Process object pre-emptively
checking whether PID has been reused.
If no parent is known return None.
"""
lowest_pid = _LOWEST_PID if _LOWEST_PID is not None else pids()[0]
if self.pid == lowest_pid:
return None
ppid = self.ppid()
if ppid is not None:
ctime = self.create_time()
try:
parent = Process(ppid)
if parent.create_time() <= ctime:
return parent
# ...else ppid has been reused by another process
except NoSuchProcess:
pass
def parents(self):
"""Return the parents of this process as a list of Process
instances. If no parents are known return an empty list.
"""
parents = []
proc = self.parent()
while proc is not None:
parents.append(proc)
proc = proc.parent()
return parents
def is_running(self):
"""Return whether this process is running.
It also checks if PID has been reused by another process in
which case return False.
"""
if self._gone or self._pid_reused:
return False
try:
# Checking if PID is alive is not enough as the PID might
# have been reused by another process: we also want to
# verify process identity.
# Process identity / uniqueness over time is guaranteed by
# (PID + creation time) and that is verified in __eq__.
self._pid_reused = self != Process(self.pid)
return not self._pid_reused
except ZombieProcess:
# We should never get here as it's already handled in
# Process.__init__; here just for extra safety.
return True
except NoSuchProcess:
self._gone = True
return False
# --- actual API
@memoize_when_activated
def ppid(self):
"""The process parent PID.
On Windows the return value is cached after first call.
"""
# On POSIX we don't want to cache the ppid as it may unexpectedly
# change to 1 (init) in case this process turns into a zombie:
# https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/321
# http://stackoverflow.com/questions/356722/
# XXX should we check creation time here rather than in
# Process.parent()?
if POSIX:
return self._proc.ppid()
else: # pragma: no cover
self._ppid = self._ppid or self._proc.ppid()
return self._ppid
def name(self):
"""The process name. The return value is cached after first call."""
# Process name is only cached on Windows as on POSIX it may
# change, see:
# https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/692
if WINDOWS and self._name is not None:
return self._name
name = self._proc.name()
if POSIX and len(name) >= 15:
# On UNIX the name gets truncated to the first 15 characters.
# If it matches the first part of the cmdline we return that
# one instead because it's usually more explicative.
# Examples are "gnome-keyring-d" vs. "gnome-keyring-daemon".
try:
cmdline = self.cmdline()
except (AccessDenied, ZombieProcess):
# Just pass and return the truncated name: it's better
# than nothing. Note: there are actual cases where a
# zombie process can return a name() but not a
# cmdline(), see:
# https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/2239
pass
else:
if cmdline:
extended_name = os.path.basename(cmdline[0])
if extended_name.startswith(name):
name = extended_name
self._name = name
self._proc._name = name
return name
def exe(self):
"""The process executable as an absolute path.
May also be an empty string.
The return value is cached after first call.
"""
def guess_it(fallback):
# try to guess exe from cmdline[0] in absence of a native
# exe representation
cmdline = self.cmdline()
if cmdline and hasattr(os, 'access') and hasattr(os, 'X_OK'):
exe = cmdline[0] # the possible exe
# Attempt to guess only in case of an absolute path.
# It is not safe otherwise as the process might have
# changed cwd.
if (os.path.isabs(exe) and
os.path.isfile(exe) and
os.access(exe, os.X_OK)):
return exe
if isinstance(fallback, AccessDenied):
raise fallback
return fallback
if self._exe is None:
try:
exe = self._proc.exe()
except AccessDenied as err:
return guess_it(fallback=err)
else:
if not exe:
# underlying implementation can legitimately return an
# empty string; if that's the case we don't want to
# raise AD while guessing from the cmdline
try:
exe = guess_it(fallback=exe)
except AccessDenied:
pass
self._exe = exe
return self._exe
def cmdline(self):
"""The command line this process has been called with."""
return self._proc.cmdline()
def status(self):
"""The process current status as a STATUS_* constant."""
try:
return self._proc.status()
except ZombieProcess:
return STATUS_ZOMBIE
def username(self):
"""The name of the user that owns the process.
On UNIX this is calculated by using *real* process uid.
"""
if POSIX:
if pwd is None:
# might happen if python was installed from sources
raise ImportError(
"requires pwd module shipped with standard python")
real_uid = self.uids().real
try:
return pwd.getpwuid(real_uid).pw_name
except KeyError:
# the uid can't be resolved by the system
return str(real_uid)
else:
return self._proc.username()
def create_time(self):
"""The process creation time as a floating point number
expressed in seconds since the epoch.
The return value is cached after first call.
"""
if self._create_time is None:
self._create_time = self._proc.create_time()
return self._create_time
def cwd(self):
"""Process current working directory as an absolute path."""
return self._proc.cwd()
def nice(self, value=None):
"""Get or set process niceness (priority)."""
if value is None:
return self._proc.nice_get()
else:
if not self.is_running():
raise NoSuchProcess(self.pid, self._name)
self._proc.nice_set(value)
if POSIX:
@memoize_when_activated
def uids(self):
"""Return process UIDs as a (real, effective, saved)
namedtuple.
"""
return self._proc.uids()
def gids(self):
"""Return process GIDs as a (real, effective, saved)
namedtuple.
"""
return self._proc.gids()
def terminal(self):
"""The terminal associated with this process, if any,
else None.
"""
return self._proc.terminal()
def num_fds(self):
"""Return the number of file descriptors opened by this
process (POSIX only).
"""
return self._proc.num_fds()
# Linux, BSD, AIX and Windows only
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "io_counters"):
def io_counters(self):
"""Return process I/O statistics as a
(read_count, write_count, read_bytes, write_bytes)
namedtuple.
Those are the number of read/write calls performed and the
amount of bytes read and written by the process.
"""
return self._proc.io_counters()
# Linux and Windows
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "ionice_get"):
def ionice(self, ioclass=None, value=None):
"""Get or set process I/O niceness (priority).
On Linux *ioclass* is one of the IOPRIO_CLASS_* constants.
*value* is a number which goes from 0 to 7. The higher the
value, the lower the I/O priority of the process.
On Windows only *ioclass* is used and it can be set to 2
(normal), 1 (low) or 0 (very low).
Available on Linux and Windows > Vista only.
"""
if ioclass is None:
if value is not None:
raise ValueError("'ioclass' argument must be specified")
return self._proc.ionice_get()
else:
return self._proc.ionice_set(ioclass, value)
# Linux / FreeBSD only
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "rlimit"):
def rlimit(self, resource, limits=None):
"""Get or set process resource limits as a (soft, hard)
tuple.
*resource* is one of the RLIMIT_* constants.
*limits* is supposed to be a (soft, hard) tuple.
See "man prlimit" for further info.
Available on Linux and FreeBSD only.
"""
return self._proc.rlimit(resource, limits)
# Windows, Linux and FreeBSD only
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "cpu_affinity_get"):
def cpu_affinity(self, cpus=None):
"""Get or set process CPU affinity.
If specified, *cpus* must be a list of CPUs for which you
want to set the affinity (e.g. [0, 1]).
If an empty list is passed, all egible CPUs are assumed
(and set).
(Windows, Linux and BSD only).
"""
if cpus is None:
return sorted(set(self._proc.cpu_affinity_get()))
else:
if not cpus:
if hasattr(self._proc, "_get_eligible_cpus"):
cpus = self._proc._get_eligible_cpus()
else:
cpus = tuple(range(len(cpu_times(percpu=True))))
self._proc.cpu_affinity_set(list(set(cpus)))
# Linux, FreeBSD, SunOS
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "cpu_num"):
def cpu_num(self):
"""Return what CPU this process is currently running on.
The returned number should be <= psutil.cpu_count()
and <= len(psutil.cpu_percent(percpu=True)).
It may be used in conjunction with
psutil.cpu_percent(percpu=True) to observe the system
workload distributed across CPUs.
"""
return self._proc.cpu_num()
# All platforms has it, but maybe not in the future.
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "environ"):
def environ(self):
"""The environment variables of the process as a dict. Note: this
might not reflect changes made after the process started. """
return self._proc.environ()
if WINDOWS:
def num_handles(self):
"""Return the number of handles opened by this process
(Windows only).
"""
return self._proc.num_handles()
def num_ctx_switches(self):
"""Return the number of voluntary and involuntary context
switches performed by this process.
"""
return self._proc.num_ctx_switches()
def num_threads(self):
"""Return the number of threads used by this process."""
return self._proc.num_threads()
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "threads"):
def threads(self):
"""Return threads opened by process as a list of
(id, user_time, system_time) namedtuples representing
thread id and thread CPU times (user/system).
On OpenBSD this method requires root access.
"""
return self._proc.threads()
@_assert_pid_not_reused
def children(self, recursive=False):
"""Return the children of this process as a list of Process
instances, pre-emptively checking whether PID has been reused.
If *recursive* is True return all the parent descendants.
Example (A == this process):
A ─┐
│
├─ B (child) ─┐
│ └─ X (grandchild) ─┐
│ └─ Y (great grandchild)
├─ C (child)
└─ D (child)
>>> import psutil
>>> p = psutil.Process()
>>> p.children()
B, C, D
>>> p.children(recursive=True)
B, X, Y, C, D
Note that in the example above if process X disappears
process Y won't be listed as the reference to process A
is lost.
"""
ppid_map = _ppid_map()
ret = []
if not recursive:
for pid, ppid in ppid_map.items():
if ppid == self.pid:
try:
child = Process(pid)
# if child happens to be older than its parent
# (self) it means child's PID has been reused
if self.create_time() <= child.create_time():
ret.append(child)
except (NoSuchProcess, ZombieProcess):
pass
else:
# Construct a {pid: [child pids]} dict
reverse_ppid_map = collections.defaultdict(list)
for pid, ppid in ppid_map.items():
reverse_ppid_map[ppid].append(pid)
# Recursively traverse that dict, starting from self.pid,
# such that we only call Process() on actual children
seen = set()
stack = [self.pid]
while stack:
pid = stack.pop()
if pid in seen:
# Since pids can be reused while the ppid_map is
# constructed, there may be rare instances where
# there's a cycle in the recorded process "tree".
continue
seen.add(pid)
for child_pid in reverse_ppid_map[pid]:
try:
child = Process(child_pid)
# if child happens to be older than its parent
# (self) it means child's PID has been reused
intime = self.create_time() <= child.create_time()
if intime:
ret.append(child)
stack.append(child_pid)
except (NoSuchProcess, ZombieProcess):
pass
return ret
def cpu_percent(self, interval=None):
"""Return a float representing the current process CPU
utilization as a percentage.
When *interval* is 0.0 or None (default) compares process times
to system CPU times elapsed since last call, returning
immediately (non-blocking). That means that the first time
this is called it will return a meaningful 0.0 value.
When *interval* is > 0.0 compares process times to system CPU
times elapsed before and after the interval (blocking).
In this case is recommended for accuracy that this function
be called with at least 0.1 seconds between calls.
A value > 100.0 can be returned in case of processes running
multiple threads on different CPU cores.
The returned value is explicitly NOT split evenly between
all available logical CPUs. This means that a busy loop process
running on a system with 2 logical CPUs will be reported as
having 100% CPU utilization instead of 50%.
Examples:
>>> import psutil
>>> p = psutil.Process(os.getpid())
>>> # blocking
>>> p.cpu_percent(interval=1)
2.0
>>> # non-blocking (percentage since last call)
>>> p.cpu_percent(interval=None)
2.9
>>>
"""
blocking = interval is not None and interval > 0.0
if interval is not None and interval < 0:
raise ValueError("interval is not positive (got %r)" % interval)
num_cpus = cpu_count() or 1
def timer():
return _timer() * num_cpus
if blocking:
st1 = timer()
pt1 = self._proc.cpu_times()
time.sleep(interval)
st2 = timer()
pt2 = self._proc.cpu_times()
else:
st1 = self._last_sys_cpu_times
pt1 = self._last_proc_cpu_times
st2 = timer()
pt2 = self._proc.cpu_times()
if st1 is None or pt1 is None:
self._last_sys_cpu_times = st2
self._last_proc_cpu_times = pt2
return 0.0
delta_proc = (pt2.user - pt1.user) + (pt2.system - pt1.system)
delta_time = st2 - st1
# reset values for next call in case of interval == None
self._last_sys_cpu_times = st2
self._last_proc_cpu_times = pt2
try:
# This is the utilization split evenly between all CPUs.
# E.g. a busy loop process on a 2-CPU-cores system at this
# point is reported as 50% instead of 100%.
overall_cpus_percent = ((delta_proc / delta_time) * 100)
except ZeroDivisionError:
# interval was too low
return 0.0
else:
# Note 1:
# in order to emulate "top" we multiply the value for the num
# of CPU cores. This way the busy process will be reported as
# having 100% (or more) usage.
#
# Note 2:
# taskmgr.exe on Windows differs in that it will show 50%
# instead.
#
# Note 3:
# a percentage > 100 is legitimate as it can result from a
# process with multiple threads running on different CPU
# cores (top does the same), see:
# http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1032357
# https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/474
single_cpu_percent = overall_cpus_percent * num_cpus
return round(single_cpu_percent, 1)
@memoize_when_activated
def cpu_times(self):
"""Return a (user, system, children_user, children_system)
namedtuple representing the accumulated process time, in
seconds.
This is similar to os.times() but per-process.
On macOS and Windows children_user and children_system are
always set to 0.
"""
return self._proc.cpu_times()
@memoize_when_activated
def memory_info(self):
"""Return a namedtuple with variable fields depending on the
platform, representing memory information about the process.
The "portable" fields available on all platforms are `rss` and `vms`.
All numbers are expressed in bytes.
"""
return self._proc.memory_info()
@_common.deprecated_method(replacement="memory_info")
def memory_info_ex(self):
return self.memory_info()
def memory_full_info(self):
"""This method returns the same information as memory_info(),
plus, on some platform (Linux, macOS, Windows), also provides
additional metrics (USS, PSS and swap).
The additional metrics provide a better representation of actual
process memory usage.
Namely USS is the memory which is unique to a process and which
would be freed if the process was terminated right now.
It does so by passing through the whole process address.
As such it usually requires higher user privileges than
memory_info() and is considerably slower.
"""
return self._proc.memory_full_info()
def memory_percent(self, memtype="rss"):
"""Compare process memory to total physical system memory and
calculate process memory utilization as a percentage.
*memtype* argument is a string that dictates what type of
process memory you want to compare against (defaults to "rss").
The list of available strings can be obtained like this:
>>> psutil.Process().memory_info()._fields
('rss', 'vms', 'shared', 'text', 'lib', 'data', 'dirty', 'uss', 'pss')
"""
valid_types = list(_psplatform.pfullmem._fields)
if memtype not in valid_types:
raise ValueError("invalid memtype %r; valid types are %r" % (
memtype, tuple(valid_types)))
fun = self.memory_info if memtype in _psplatform.pmem._fields else \
self.memory_full_info
metrics = fun()
value = getattr(metrics, memtype)
# use cached value if available
total_phymem = _TOTAL_PHYMEM or virtual_memory().total
if not total_phymem > 0:
# we should never get here
raise ValueError(
"can't calculate process memory percent because "
"total physical system memory is not positive (%r)"
% total_phymem)
return (value / float(total_phymem)) * 100
if hasattr(_psplatform.Process, "memory_maps"):
def memory_maps(self, grouped=True):
"""Return process' mapped memory regions as a list of namedtuples
whose fields are variable depending on the platform.
If *grouped* is True the mapped regions with the same 'path'
are grouped together and the different memory fields are summed.
If *grouped* is False every mapped region is shown as a single
entity and the namedtuple will also include the mapped region's
address space ('addr') and permission set ('perms').
"""
it = self._proc.memory_maps()
if grouped:
d = {}
for tupl in it:
path = tupl[2]
nums = tupl[3:]
try:
d[path] = map(lambda x, y: x + y, d[path], nums)
except KeyError:
d[path] = nums
nt = _psplatform.pmmap_grouped
return [nt(path, *d[path]) for path in d] # NOQA
else:
nt = _psplatform.pmmap_ext
return [nt(*x) for x in it]
def open_files(self):
"""Return files opened by process as a list of
(path, fd) namedtuples including the absolute file name
and file descriptor number.
"""
return self._proc.open_files()
def connections(self, kind='inet'):
"""Return socket connections opened by process as a list of
(fd, family, type, laddr, raddr, status) namedtuples.
The *kind* parameter filters for connections that match the
following criteria:
+------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| Kind Value | Connections using |
+------------+----------------------------------------------------+
| inet | IPv4 and IPv6 |
| inet4 | IPv4 |
| inet6 | IPv6 |
| tcp | TCP |
| tcp4 | TCP over IPv4 |
| tcp6 | TCP over IPv6 |
| udp | UDP |
| udp4 | UDP over IPv4 |
| udp6 | UDP over IPv6 |
| unix | UNIX socket (both UDP and TCP protocols) |
| all | the sum of all the possible families and protocols |
+------------+----------------------------------------------------+
"""
return self._proc.connections(kind)
# --- signals
if POSIX:
def _send_signal(self, sig):
assert not self.pid < 0, self.pid
if self.pid == 0:
# see "man 2 kill"
raise ValueError(
"preventing sending signal to process with PID 0 as it "
"would affect every process in the process group of the "
"calling process (os.getpid()) instead of PID 0")
try:
os.kill(self.pid, sig)
except ProcessLookupError:
if OPENBSD and pid_exists(self.pid):
# We do this because os.kill() lies in case of
# zombie processes.
raise ZombieProcess(self.pid, self._name, self._ppid)
else:
self._gone = True
raise NoSuchProcess(self.pid, self._name)
except PermissionError:
raise AccessDenied(self.pid, self._name)
@_assert_pid_not_reused
def send_signal(self, sig):
"""Send a signal *sig* to process pre-emptively checking
whether PID has been reused (see signal module constants) .
On Windows only SIGTERM is valid and is treated as an alias
for kill().
"""
if POSIX:
self._send_signal(sig)
else: # pragma: no cover
self._proc.send_signal(sig)
@_assert_pid_not_reused
def suspend(self):
"""Suspend process execution with SIGSTOP pre-emptively checking
whether PID has been reused.
On Windows this has the effect of suspending all process threads.
"""
if POSIX:
self._send_signal(signal.SIGSTOP)
else: # pragma: no cover
self._proc.suspend()
@_assert_pid_not_reused
def resume(self):
"""Resume process execution with SIGCONT pre-emptively checking
whether PID has been reused.
On Windows this has the effect of resuming all process threads.
"""
if POSIX:
self._send_signal(signal.SIGCONT)
else: # pragma: no cover
self._proc.resume()
@_assert_pid_not_reused
def terminate(self):
"""Terminate the process with SIGTERM pre-emptively checking
whether PID has been reused.
On Windows this is an alias for kill().
"""
if POSIX:
self._send_signal(signal.SIGTERM)
else: # pragma: no cover
self._proc.kill()
@_assert_pid_not_reused
def kill(self):
"""Kill the current process with SIGKILL pre-emptively checking
whether PID has been reused.
"""
if POSIX:
self._send_signal(signal.SIGKILL)
else: # pragma: no cover
self._proc.kill()
def wait(self, timeout=None):
"""Wait for process to terminate and, if process is a children
of os.getpid(), also return its exit code, else None.
On Windows there's no such limitation (exit code is always
returned).
If the process is already terminated immediately return None
instead of raising NoSuchProcess.
If *timeout* (in seconds) is specified and process is still
alive raise TimeoutExpired.
To wait for multiple Process(es) use psutil.wait_procs().
"""
if timeout is not None and not timeout >= 0:
raise ValueError("timeout must be a positive integer")
if self._exitcode is not _SENTINEL:
return self._exitcode
self._exitcode = self._proc.wait(timeout)
return self._exitcode
# The valid attr names which can be processed by Process.as_dict().
_as_dict_attrnames = set(
[x for x in dir(Process) if not x.startswith('_') and x not in
['send_signal', 'suspend', 'resume', 'terminate', 'kill', 'wait',
'is_running', 'as_dict', 'parent', 'parents', 'children', 'rlimit',
'memory_info_ex', 'oneshot']])
# =====================================================================
# --- Popen class
# =====================================================================
class Popen(Process):
"""Same as subprocess.Popen, but in addition it provides all
psutil.Process methods in a single class.
For the following methods which are common to both classes, psutil
implementation takes precedence:
* send_signal()
* terminate()
* kill()
This is done in order to avoid killing another process in case its
PID has been reused, fixing BPO-6973.
>>> import psutil
>>> from subprocess import PIPE
>>> p = psutil.Popen(["python", "-c", "print 'hi'"], stdout=PIPE)
>>> p.name()
'python'
>>> p.uids()
user(real=1000, effective=1000, saved=1000)
>>> p.username()
'giampaolo'
>>> p.communicate()
('hi\n', None)
>>> p.terminate()
>>> p.wait(timeout=2)
0
>>>
"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
# Explicitly avoid to raise NoSuchProcess in case the process
# spawned by subprocess.Popen terminates too quickly, see:
# https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/193
self.__subproc = subprocess.Popen(*args, **kwargs)
self._init(self.__subproc.pid, _ignore_nsp=True)
def __dir__(self):
return sorted(set(dir(Popen) + dir(subprocess.Popen)))
def __enter__(self):
if hasattr(self.__subproc, '__enter__'):
self.__subproc.__enter__()
return self
def __exit__(self, *args, **kwargs):
if hasattr(self.__subproc, '__exit__'):
return self.__subproc.__exit__(*args, **kwargs)
else:
if self.stdout:
self.stdout.close()
if self.stderr:
self.stderr.close()
try:
# Flushing a BufferedWriter may raise an error.
if self.stdin:
self.stdin.close()
finally:
# Wait for the process to terminate, to avoid zombies.
self.wait()
def __getattribute__(self, name):
try:
return object.__getattribute__(self, name)
except AttributeError:
try:
return object.__getattribute__(self.__subproc, name)
except AttributeError:
raise AttributeError("%s instance has no attribute '%s'"
% (self.__class__.__name__, name))
def wait(self, timeout=None):
if self.__subproc.returncode is not None:
return self.__subproc.returncode
ret = super(Popen, self).wait(timeout)
self.__subproc.returncode = ret
return ret
# =====================================================================
# --- system processes related functions
# =====================================================================
def pids():
"""Return a list of current running PIDs."""
global _LOWEST_PID
ret = sorted(_psplatform.pids())
_LOWEST_PID = ret[0]
return ret
def pid_exists(pid):
"""Return True if given PID exists in the current process list.
This is faster than doing "pid in psutil.pids()" and
should be preferred.
"""
if pid < 0:
return False
elif pid == 0 and POSIX:
# On POSIX we use os.kill() to determine PID existence.
# According to "man 2 kill" PID 0 has a special meaning
# though: it refers to <