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732

answers:

1

I want to get other process' argv like ps.

I'm using Mac OS X 10.4.11 running on Intel or PowerPC.

First, I read code of ps and man kvm, then I wrote some C code.

#include <kvm.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <paths.h>

int
main(void) {
    char errbuf[1024];
    kvm_t *kd = kvm_openfiles(_PATH_DEVNULL, NULL, _PATH_DEVNULL, O_RDONLY, errbuf);
    int num_procs;
    if (!kd) { fprintf(stderr, "kvm_openfiles failed : %s\n", errbuf); return 0; }
    struct kinfo_proc *proc_table = kvm_getprocs(kd, KERN_PROC_ALL, 0, &num_procs);

    for (int i = 0; i < num_procs; i++) {
     struct kinfo_proc *pproc = &proc_table[i];
     char **proc_argv = kvm_getargv(kd, pproc, 0);
     printf("%p\n", proc_argv);
    }

    kvm_close(kd);
    return 0;
}

When ran on PowerPC, kvm_getargv() always returned NULL. When ran on Intel, kvm_openfiles() failed with error /dev/mem: No such file or directory.

Of cource, I know about permission.

Second, I tried sysctl.

#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#define pid_of(pproc) pproc->kp_proc.p_pid

int
main(void) {

   int mib[4] = { CTL_KERN, KERN_PROC, KERN_PROC_ALL, 0 };
   int buffer_size;
   sysctl(mib, 4, NULL, &buffer_size, NULL, 0);

   struct kinfo_proc *result = malloc(buffer_size);
   sysctl(mib, 4, result, &buffer_size, NULL, 0);

   int num_procs = buffer_size / sizeof(struct kinfo_proc);
   for (int i = 0; i < num_procs; i++) {
       struct kinfo_proc *pproc = result + i;
       int mib[3] = { CTL_KERN, KERN_PROCARGS, pid_of(pproc) }; // KERN_PROC_ARGS is not defined
       char *proc_argv;
       int argv_len;
       sysctl(mib, 3, NULL, &argv_len, NULL, 0);
       proc_argv = malloc(sizeof(char) * argv_len);
       sysctl(mib, 3, proc_argv, &argv_len, NULL, 0);
       fwrite(proc_argv, sizeof(char), argv_len, stdout);
       printf("\n");
       free(proc_argv);
   }

   return 0;
}

By fwrite, I got argv[0] but argv[1..] are not (environment variables are printed out.)

There is no more way to do it?

+3  A: 

I've actually been needing the same thing for a Python library I'm writing, and in my searching I came across another Python lib (PSI) that implements this in C code. It's part of the python module code for listing processes and includes listing the arguments for each process as well. You could take a look at the source code for that for a working example:

macosx_process.c - scroll down to getcmdargs() for the relevant code

Note: the site is really slow so you'll have to be a bit patient while it loads.

Jay
Thanks, Jay. I tried again with browsing and copying your code, I got argv!
nwn
That link is broken; the file no longer exists. I spent a while browsing around the project's source, and what it boils down to is that they're using 'sysctl'. The current location of that code is in src/arch/darwin_process.c. Hope that helps anyone else who comes across this question.
DNS