![]() Happy to provide more details if required. In hindsight I should have done tail -f to see if the program was running. The year 1960 is a leap year, with 366 days in total. Local holidays are not listed, holidays on past calendars might not be correct. I was anticipating a very large output, and I wanted to count the number of lines so I piped the output of foo to wc -l. Some holidays and dates are color-coded: Red Federal Holidays and Sundays.It seems to me the TIME values returned by ps, 1184016092-19:52:29 (from ps -e) and 24322737:01 (from ps aux), are impossibly large.Ps aux | grep foo USER PID %CPU %MEM VSZ RSS TTY STAT START TIME COMMANDīilbo 32734 15602 0.0 17816 3380 pts/16 R+ 2012 24322737:01 foo ON this date and American U2 spy-plane took pictures of a nuclear missile base being built in Cuba. Ps -eF | grep foo UID PID PPID C SZ RSS PSR STIME TTY TIME CMDīilbo 32734 203pts/16 1184016092-19:52:29 foo Running ps gives me the following output.However I am still seeing one of the processors being utilised at near 100% capacity.In the above table foo is at the top, but the %CPU it is being shown to use is 15583.The Top 10 cpu intensive process (according to ps) are:. ![]() ![]() Now it is nowhere near the top of CPU usage (top shows 0%). ![]()
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