.\" -*- nroff -*- .\" Copyright © 2010 INRIA. All rights reserved. .\" Copyright © 2009-2010 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. .\" See COPYING in top-level directory. .TH HWLOC-PS "1" "#HWLOC_DATE#" "#PACKAGE_VERSION#" "#PACKAGE_NAME#" .SH NAME hwloc-ps \- List currently-running processes that are bound. . .\" ************************** .\" Synopsis Section .\" ************************** .SH SYNOPSIS . .B hwloc-ps [\fIoptions\fR] . .\" ************************** .\" Options Section .\" ************************** .SH OPTIONS . .TP 10 \fB\-a\fR list all processes, even those that are not bound to any specific part of the machine. .TP \fB\-p\fR \fB\-\-physical\fR report OS/physical indexes instead of logical indexes .TP \fB\-l\fR \fB\-\-logical\fR report logical indexes instead of physical/OS indexes (default) .TP \fB\-c\fR \fB\-\-cpuset\fR show process bindings as cpusets instead of objects. . .\" ************************** .\" Description Section .\" ************************** .SH DESCRIPTION . By default, hwloc-ps lists only those currently-running processes that are bound; it displays their their identifier, command-line and binding. The binding may be reported as objects or cpusets. . Process bindings are restricted to the currently available topology. If some processes are bound to processors that are not available to the current process, they are ignored. . The output is a plain list. If you wish to annotate the hierarchical topology with processes so as to see how they are actual distributed on the machine, you might want to use lstopo --ps instead (which also only shows processes that are bound). . .PP The .I -a switch can be used to show .I all processes, if desired. . .\" ************************** .\" See also section .\" ************************** .SH SEE ALSO . .ft R hwloc(7), lstopo(1), hwloc-calc(1), hwloc-distrib(1) .sp