procenv (1) Linux Manual Page
NAME
procenv – display process environment details
SYNOPSIS
procenv [OPTION]
DESCRIPTION
Display details of the process environment in a parseable format.
OPTIONS
Options shown with a bracketed asterisk ‘(*)’ are non-display options and must preceed any other (display) options.
-a,–meta- Display meta details.
-A,–arguments- Display program arguments.
-b,–libs- Display details of linked libraries. See
dl_iterate_phdr(3). -B,–libc- Display standard library details. See
feature_test_macros(7) (Linux). -c,–cgroups- Display cgroup details (Linux only). See
proc(5). -C,–cpu- Display CPU and scheduler details. See
kvm_getprocs(3) (BSD),pthread_getaffinity_np(3),sched_getcpu(3) (Linux). –crumb-separator=str (*)- Specify string str as alternate delimiter for crumb format output (default=’:’).
-d,–compiler- Display compiler details. See
cpp(1),cc(1) andfeature_test_macros(7) (Linux). -e,–environment- Display environment variables. See
environ(7). -E,–semaphores- Display semaphore details (not queryable on BSD). See
semctl(2). –exec(*)- Treat non-option arguments as program to execute after running
procenv. Seeexec(3). -f,–fds- Display file descriptor details. Under FreeBSD, file descriptor capabilities will also be displayed assuming the kernel has Capsicum support. See
cap_getmode(2) (BSD),cap_rights_get(2) (BSD),cap_rights_is_set(3) (BSD),fcntl(2),isatty(5). -F,–namespaces- Display namespace details (Linux only). See
proc(5). –file=FILE (*)- Send output to file FILE (implies
–output=file).
–format=FORMAT (*)- Specify output format. FORMAT may be one of:
-
- •
- crumb ("breadcrumbs").
- •
- json (JavaScript Object Notation).
- •
- text (plain ASCII text) [default].
- •
- xml (Extensible Markup Language).
-g,–sizeof- Display sizes of data types.
-h,–help- This help text.
-i,–misc- Display miscellaneous details. See
umask(P),getcwd(3),personality(2) (Linux),proc(5),prctl(2),aa_getcon(2) (Linux),getpidcon(3) (Linux),sysconf(3),kvm_getprocs(3) (BSD),getpriority(2). –indent(*)- Number of indent characters to use for each indent (default=2).
–indent-char=c (*)- Use character c for indenting (default=’ ‘ (space)).
-j,–uname- Display uname details. See
uname(2). -k,–clocks- Display clock details. See
clock_getres(2). -l,–limits- Display limits. See
getrlimit(2). -L,–locale- Display locale details. See
setlocale(3) andlocale(7). -m,–mounts- Display mount details. See
getmntent(3) andstatfs(2) (Linux), andgetmntinfo(3) (BSD).
-M,–message-queues- Display message queue details (not queryable on BSD). See
msgctl(2). -n,–confstr- Display confstr details. See
confstr(5).
-N,–network- Display network details. See
getifaddrs(3),getnameinfo(3), andioctl(2)(Linux).
-o,–oom- Display out-of-memory manager details (Linux only). See
proc(5).
–output=TYPE (*)- Send output to alternative location. TYPE can be one of:
-
- •
- file (send output to a file).
- •
- stderr (write to standard error).
- •
- stdout (write to standard output (default)).
- •
- syslog (write to the system log file).
- •
- terminal (write to terminal).
-p,–process- Display process details. See
getpid(2),getppid(2),getresuid(2),getresgid(2),getuid(2),geteuid(2),getgid(2),getegid(2),getsid(2),getlogin(3),getpgrp(2),ctermid(3),tcgetpgrp(3),tcgetsid(3),getpwuid(3) andgetgroups(2).
-P,–platform- Display platform details.
-q,–time- Display time details. See
clock_gettime(2),localtime(3) andasctime(3).
-r,–ranges- Display range of data types. See
limits.h(P).
-s,–signals- Display signal details. See
sigaction(2).
-S,–shared-memory- Display shared memory details (not queryable on BSD). See
shmctl(2).
–separator=str (*)- Specify string str as alternate delimiter for text format output (default=’: ‘).
-t,–tty- Display terminal details. On Linux, will also show if any attributes are locked when running as root. See
tcgetattr(3) andtty_ioctl(4) (Linux).
-T,–threads- Display thread details. See
pthread_attr_getstacksize(3),pthread_attr_getstacksize(3) andpthread_attr_getguardsize(3).
-u,–stat- Display stat details. See
stat(2).
-U,–rusage- Display rusage details. See
getrusage(2).
-v,–version- Display version details.
-w,–capabilities- Display Linux capability details. For FreeBSD file descriptor capabilities, see
–file-descriptors. Seeprctl(2) (Linux),libcap(3) (Linux).
-x,–pathconf- Display pathconf details. See
pathconf(3).
-y,–sysconf- Display sysconf details. See
sysconf(3) andposixoptions(7) (Linux).
-Y,–memory- Display memory details. See
getpagesize(2),numa(3) (Linux) andnuma(7) (Linux).
-z,–timezone- Display timezone details. See
tzset(3).
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables may be used as aliases to their command-line counterparts:
PROCENV_CRUMB_SEPARATOR- Alternative to
–crumb-separator.
PROCENV_EXEC- Alternative to
–exec.
PROCENV_FILE- Alternative to
–file.
PROCENV_FORMAT- Alternative to
–format.
PROCENV_INDENT- Alternative to
–indent.
PROCENV_INDENT_CHAR- Alternative to
–indent-char.
PROCENV_SEPARATOR- Alternative to
–separator.
PROCENV_OUTPUT- Alternative to
–output.
NOTES
- •
- Options are considered in order, so
–outputshould precede any other option. - •
- If no display option is specified, all details are displayed.
- •
- Only one display option may be specified.
- •
- Command-line options take priority over environment variables.
- •
- All values for
–indent-charare literal except ‘ ’ which can be used to specify a tab character. The same is true for–separator-charand–crumb-separatorbut only if it is the first character specified. - •
- Specifying a visible indent-char is only (vaguely) meaningful for text output.
- •
- If
–execis specified, atleast one non-option argument must also be specified. - •
- Any long option name may be shortened as long as it remains unique.
- •
- The crumb output format is designed for easy parsing: it displays the data in a flattened format with each value on a separate line preceded by all appropriate headings which are separated by the current separator.
- •
- The
–message-queues,–semaphoresand–shared-memoryoptions are not available on BSD since although the values are queryable, there is no documented method to do so.
EXAMPLES
#Show limits
procenv - l
#Send compiler information to syslog(note the order of the options).
procenv-- output = syslog-- compiler
#Write compiler details direct to the terminal
procenv-- output = terminal-- compiler
#Run a command('mycmd --arg1 --foo=bar') without creating a new
#process, but have procenv run first and log its output to a
#regular file.
exec procenv-- file = / tmp / procenv.log-- exec-- mycmd-- arg1-- foo = bar
#The following kernel command - line snippet will cause procenv to
#write output to first serial tty device and then execute init(8)
#in debug mode to allow early boot environment to be examined.
init = / usr / bin / procenv PROCENV_FILE = / dev / ttyS0 PROCENV_EXEC = "/sbin/init --debug"
#Display all data in JSON format using an indent of 4 spaces
procenv-- format = json-- indent = 4
#Display all data in XML format using tabs for indents
procenv-- format = xml-- indent - char = " "
#Display signal details in XML format
procenv-- format = xml-- signals
#Display resource limits in easily - parseable format
procenv-- format = crumb-- limits
#Produce output suitable for importing into a spreadsheet
procenv-- format = crumb-- crumb - separator = ',' --separator = ',' --limits
#Produce stylised output
procenv-- format = crumb-- crumb - separator = ' 92 ' --separator = '='
LIMITATIONS
- •
- Spaces within the value of
PROCENV_EXECare treated as delimiters meaning that any spaces within a string argument for example will result in incorrect behaviour. - •
- The separator character must be chosen carefully since no check is performed on the data to see if it itself contains instances of the separator character.
AUTHORS
Written by James Hunt <jamesodhunt [at] ubuntu.com> and Kees Cook <kees [at] ubuntu.com>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 2012-2014 James Hunt <jamesodhunt [at] ubuntu.com> and Kees Cook <kees [at] ubuntu.com>.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
LICENSE
GNU GPL version 3 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.
SEE ALSO
capabilities(7) (Linux), capsicum(4) (BSD), cc(1), credentials(7), date(1), env(1), exec(P), getconf(1), groups(1), ifconfig(8), ip(9), ipcs(1), kill(1), ldd(1), locale(1), ls(1), mount(1), proc(5), ps(1), rights(4)(BSD), sh(1), stat(1), stty(1), umask(P), uname(1)
