When you run \"top\" and see all running processes, I\'ve always wanted to know just what everything actually means. e.g. all the various single-letter state codes for a runnin
Programs like top
and ps
takes these values from the kernel itself. You can find its definitions in the source code here:
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/3950e975431bc914f7e81b8f2a2dbdf2064acb0f/fs/proc/array.c#L129-L143
static const char * const task_state_array[] = {
/* states in TASK_REPORT: */
"R (running)", /* 0x00 */
"S (sleeping)", /* 0x01 */
"D (disk sleep)", /* 0x02 */
"T (stopped)", /* 0x04 */
"t (tracing stop)", /* 0x08 */
"X (dead)", /* 0x10 */
"Z (zombie)", /* 0x20 */
"P (parked)", /* 0x40 */
/* states beyond TASK_REPORT: */
"I (idle)", /* 0x80 */
};
For more info see this question: https://unix.stackexchange.com/q/462098/79648
The man page says what the state codes are mapped to, but not what they actually mean. From the top man page:
'D' = uninterruptible sleep
'R' = running
'S' = sleeping
'T' = traced or stopped
'Z' = zombie
'R' is the easiest; the process is ready to run, and will run whenever its turn to use the CPU comes.
'S' and 'D' are two sleep states, where the process is waiting for something to happen. The difference is that 'S' can be interrupted by a signal, while 'D' cannot (it is usually seen when the process is waiting for the disk).
'T' is a state where the process is stopped, usually via SIGSTOP
or SIGTSTP
. It can also be stopped by a debugger (ptrace
). When you see that state, it usually is because you used Ctrl-Z to put a command on the background.
'Z' is a state where the process is dead (it has finished its execution), and the only thing left is the structure describing it on the kernel. It is waiting for its parent process to retrieve its exit code, and not much more. After its parent process is finished with it, it will disappear.
You can use the command man top