Content added Content deleted
imported>Took m (...wie ging dat nochmal mit dem template fürs stubs?) |
imported>mutante mNo edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Stub}}
is a shell built-in, see [[Bash]]▼
▲'jobs' is a shell built-in command, see [[Bash]]
jobs displays the current background jobs/tasks in a [[Bash]] shell, standard shell on many [[Unix]] based systems like [[GNU/Linux]] and [[BSD]] derivates.
bash> help jobs
jobs: jobs [-lnprs] [jobspec ...] or jobs -x command [args]
Lists the active jobs. The -l option lists process id's in addition
to the normal information; the -p option lists process id's only.
If -n is given, only processes that have changed status since the last
notification are printed. JOBSPEC restricts output to that job. The
-r and -s options restrict output to running and stopped jobs only,
respectively. Without options, the status of all active jobs is
printed. If -x is given, COMMAND is run after all job specifications
that appear in ARGS have been replaced with the process ID of that job's
process group leader.
[[Category:Bash]]
|
Latest revision as of 18:31, 27 September 2006
Template loop detected: Template:Stub
'jobs' is a shell built-in command, see Bash
jobs displays the current background jobs/tasks in a Bash shell, standard shell on many Unix based systems like GNU/Linux and BSD derivates.
bash> help jobs
jobs: jobs [-lnprs] [jobspec ...] or jobs -x command [args]
Lists the active jobs. The -l option lists process id's in addition to the normal information; the -p option lists process id's only. If -n is given, only processes that have changed status since the last notification are printed. JOBSPEC restricts output to that job. The -r and -s options restrict output to running and stopped jobs only, respectively. Without options, the status of all active jobs is printed. If -x is given, COMMAND is run after all job specifications that appear in ARGS have been replaced with the process ID of that job's process group leader.