This is neat but the examples comparing the tool against piping grep seem to counter the argument to me. A couple of pipes to grep seems much easier to remember and type, especially with all the quotes needed for psc. For scripts where you need exact output this looks great.
I’m the opposite - I much prefer a structured query language (ahem) for this type of thing. If I’m looking at someone’s (ie my own 6 months later) script I much prefer to see the explicit structure being queried vs “why are we feeling for foo or grabbing the 5th field based on squashed spaces as the separater”.
Thanks for including so many examples! Perhaps include one example output. Other than mention of the optional '--tree' parameter, it's unclear if the default result would be a list, table, JSON, etc.
> psc uses eBPF iterators to read process and file descriptor information directly from kernel data structures. This bypasses the /proc filesystem entirely, providing visibility that cannot be subverted by userland rootkits or LD_PRELOAD tricks.
The commands in their example are not equivalent. The ps | grep thing searches the full command line including argument while ps -C (and, presumably, the psc thing) just returns the process name.
Should you for some reason want to do the former, this is easiest done using:
pgrep -u root -f nginx
which exists on almost all platforms, with the notable exception of AIX.
Their other slightly convoluted example is:
psc 'socket.state == established && socket.dstPort == uint(443)'
Nice use of CEL too. Neat all around.
Is there a trade off here?
Should you for some reason want to do the former, this is easiest done using:
which exists on almost all platforms, with the notable exception of AIX.Their other slightly convoluted example is:
which is much more succinct with: