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I_like_cats , 4 months ago You can do ps aux | grep -i <part of process name> and the PID is in the second column of the output. However for this use case I recommend a process manager like htop or btop
You can do
ps aux | grep -i <part of process name>
and the PID is in the second column of the output. However for this use case I recommend a process manager like htop or btop