table of contents
PMAP(1) | Linux User's Manual | PMAP(1) |
NAME¶
pmap - report memory map of a process
SYNOPSIS¶
pmap [ -x | -d ] [ -q ] pids... pmap -V
DESCRIPTION¶
The pmap command reports the memory map of a process or processes.
GENERAL OPTIONS¶
-x | extended | Show the extended format. |
-d | device | Show the device format. |
-q | quiet | Do not display some header/footer lines. |
-V | show version | Displays version of program. |
EXTENDED AND DEVICE FORMAT FIELDS¶
Address: | start address of map |
Kbytes: | size of map in kilobytes |
RSS: | resident set size in kilobytes |
Dirty: | dirty pages (both shared and private) in kilobytes |
Mode: | permissions on map: read, write, execute, shared, private (copy on write) |
Mapping: | file backing the map, or '[ anon ]' for allocated memory, or '[ stack ]' for the program stack |
Offset: | offset into the file |
Device: | device name (major:minor) |
SEE ALSO¶
STANDARDS¶
No standards apply, but pmap looks an awful lot like a SunOS command.
AUTHOR¶
Albert Cahalan <albert@users.sf.net> wrote pmap in 2002, and is the current maintainer of the procps collection. Please send bug reports to <procps-feedback@lists.sf.net>.
June 1, 2010 | Linux |