Get only PID from tasklist using cmd title

GregariousJB picture GregariousJB · May 27, 2018 · Viewed 20.7k times · Source

Desired output:

1234

Just the PID. Nothing else - no other characters, numbers, or symbols.

I'm trying to run tasklist so it gives me only the PID of a named or titled process.

tasklist | findstr /i "cmd.exe" is the closest I've gotten, but the result is too verbose. I just want the PID number.

Bonus points for linking me a description of what the tasklist filter operators mean - "eq", "ne", etc, since they aren't anywhere in the documentation.

Answer

aschipfl picture aschipfl · May 28, 2018

The difficult thing with tasklist is its default output format. For example, when command line:

tasklist /FI "ImageName eq cmd.exe" /FI "Status eq Running"

is executed, we get:

Image Name                     PID Session Name        Session#    Mem Usage
========================= ======== ================ =========== ============
cmd.exe                      12740 Console                    1      3'328 K
cmd.exe                      11020 Console                    1      3'304 K

Unless the column widths are fixed, which I would not rely on, extracting the PID is not that trivial, because the image name could also have SPACEs in it, so using such as delimiters would not work.
A possible way was to count the number of =-signs in the second line up to the first SPACE, so we know the number of characters to truncate to have the image name removed, but this requires some kind of loop (using goto), so the performance might be quite bad.

However, there are other output formats available for tasklist. The command line:

tasklist /FI "ImageName eq cmd.exe" /FI "Status eq Running" /FO CSV

results in this output:

"Image Name","PID","Session Name","Session#","Mem Usage"
"cmd.exe","12740","Console","1","3'328 K"
"cmd.exe","11020","Console","1","3'304 K"

Now it is quite easy to extract the PID:

@echo off
for /F "delims=" %%R in ('
    tasklist /FI "ImageName eq cmd.exe" /FI "Status eq Running" /FO CSV /NH
') do (
    set "FLAG1=" & set "FLAG2="
    for %%C in (%%R) do (
        if defined FLAG1 (
            if not defined FLAG2 (
                echo %%~C
            )
            set "FLAG2=#"
        )
        set "FLAG1=#"
    )
)

Another output formats is used by the following command line:

tasklist /FI "ImageName eq cmd.exe" /FI "Status eq Running" /FO LIST

resulting in this output:

Image Name:   cmd.exe
PID:          12740
Session Name: Console
Session#:     1
Mem Usage:    3'328 K

Image Name:   cmd.exe
PID:          11020
Session Name: Console
Session#:     1
Mem Usage:    3'304 K

With this it is even simpler to get the desired output:

@echo off
for /F "tokens=2" %%K in ('
   tasklist /FI "ImageName eq cmd.exe" /FI "Status eq Running" /FO LIST ^| findstr /B "PID:"
') do (
   echo %%K
)

By the way, for the filter options /FI, there are the following operators available:

  • eq -- equal to;
  • ne -- not equal to;
  • gt -- greater than;
  • lt -- less than;
  • ge -- greater than or equal to;
  • le -- less than or equal to;

The Microsoft documentation as well as the help message (tasklist /?) do not explain their meaning, but I found the following external resources: