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z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

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Environment Variables<br />

ps uses the following environment variable:<br />

Localization<br />

Exit Values<br />

Portability<br />

Related Information<br />

jobs, kill<br />

COLUMNS<br />

Contains the maximum number of columns to display on one line.<br />

ps uses the following localization environment variables:<br />

v LANG<br />

v LC_ALL<br />

v LC_CTYPE<br />

v LC_MESSAGES<br />

v LC_TIME<br />

v NLSPATH<br />

See Appendix F for more information.<br />

0 Successful completion<br />

1 Failure due to the inability to open the process table<br />

2 Failure due to any of the following:<br />

v Unknown command-line option<br />

v Missing format string after –o<br />

v Missing lists after other options<br />

v Too many arguments on the command line<br />

P<strong>OS</strong>IX.2 User Portability Extension, X/Open Portability Guide.<br />

The –c, –d, –e, –f, –g, –j, –l, –m, –n, –s, and –u options are extensions of the<br />

P<strong>OS</strong>IX standard.<br />

pwd — Return the working directory name<br />

Format<br />

Description<br />

Usage Note<br />

pwd<br />

pwd displays the absolute path name of the working directory to standard output.<br />

If the current working directory is a symbolic link to another directory, the pathname<br />

displayed depends on the setting of the shell’s logical flag. See set for more<br />

information.<br />

pwd is a built-in shell command and is also a separate utility.<br />

ps<br />

Chapter 2. Shell command descriptions 523

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