watch - execute a program periodically, showing output fullscreen
watch [options
] command
watch runs command
repeatedly, displaying
its output and errors (the first screenfull). This allows you to watch
the program output change over time. By default, command
is run
every 2 seconds and watch will run until
interrupted.
Beep if command has a non-zero exit.
Interpret ANSI color and style sequences.
Do not interpret ANSI color and style sequences.
permanent
]Highlight the differences between successive updates. If the optional
permanent
argument is specified then watch
will show all changes since the first iteration.
Freeze updates on command error, and exit after a key press.
Exit when the output of command
changes.
seconds
Specify update interval. The command will not allow quicker than 0.1 second interval, in which the smaller values are converted. Both '.' and ',' work for any locales. The WATCH_INTERVAL environment can be used to persistently set a non-default interval (following the same rules and formatting).
Make watch attempt to run command
every
--interval seconds
. Try it with
ntptime (if present) and notice how the fractional
seconds stays (nearly) the same, as opposed to normal mode where they
continuously increase.
Exit when output of command
does not change for the given
number of cycles.
Do not run the program on terminal resize, the output of the program will re-appear at the next regular run time.
Turn off the header showing the interval, command, and current time at the top of the display, as well as the following blank line.
Turn off line wrapping. Long lines will be truncated instead of wrapped to the next line.
Pass command
to exec(2) instead of
sh -c which reduces the need to use extra quoting to
get the desired effect.
Display help text and exit.
Display version information and exit.
- 0
Success.
- 1
Various failures.
- 2
Forking the process to watch failed.
- 3
Replacing child process stdout with write side pipe failed.
- 4
Command execution failed.
- 5
Closing child process write pipe failed.
- 7
IPC pipe creation failed.
- 8
Getting child process return value with waitpid(2) failed, or command exited up on error.
- other
The watch will propagate command exit status as child exit status.
The behavior of watch is affected by the following environment variables.
Update interval, follows the same rules as the --interval command line option.
POSIX option processing is used (i.e., option processing stops at the
first non-option argument). This means that flags after command
don't get interpreted by watch itself.
Upon terminal resize, the screen will not be correctly repainted until the next scheduled update. All --differences highlighting is lost on that update as well. When using the --no-rerun option, no output of will be visible.
Non-printing characters are stripped from program output. Use cat -v as part of the command pipeline if you want to see them.
Combining Characters that are supposed to display on the character at the last column on the screen may display one column early, or they may not display at all.
Combining Characters never count as different in --differences mode. Only the base character counts.
Blank lines directly after a line which ends in the last column do not display.
--precise mode doesn't yet have advanced temporal
distortion technology to compensate for a command
that takes
more than --interval seconds
to execute.
watch also can get into a state where it rapid-fires as
many executions of command
as it can to catch up from a
previous executions running longer than --interval (for
example, netstat(8) taking ages on a DNS lookup).
To watch for mail, you might do
watch -n 60 from
To watch the contents of a directory change, you could use
watch -d ls -l
If you're only interested in files owned by user joe, you might use
watch -d 'ls -l | fgrep joe'
To see the effects of quoting, try these out
watch echo $$
watch echo '$$'
watch echo "'"'$$'"'"
To see the effect of precision time keeping, try adding -p to
watch -n 10 sleep 1
You can watch for your administrator to install the latest kernel with
watch uname -r
(Note that -p isn't guaranteed to work across reboots, especially in the face of ntpdate (if present) or other bootup time-changing mechanisms)
Please send bug reports to procps@freelists.org">