I'm using Ubuntu 11.10.
If I open a terminal and call: ps all I get the results truncated (i.e. 100 characters at most for each line) to the size of the terminal window.
If I call ps all > file The lines don't get truncated and all the information is in the file (There is a line that has ~200 characters)
In C, I am trying to achieve the same but the lines get truncated.
I've triedint rc = system("ps all > file");
as well as variants of popen.
I assume the shell being used by system (and popen) defaults the output of each line to 80, which make sense if I were to parse it using popen, but since I am piping it to a file I expect it to disregard the size of the shell like I experienced when doing it in my shell.
TL;DR
How can I make sure ps all > file doesn't truncate lines when called from C application?
As a workaround, try passing -w or possibly -ww to ps when you invoke it.
From the man page (BSD):
-w      Use 132 columns to display information, instead of the default which is your 
        window size.  If the -w option is specified more than once, ps will use as many
        columns as necessary without regard for your window size.  When output is
        not to a terminal, an unlimited number of columns are always used.
Linux:
-w      Wide output. Use this option twice for unlimited width.
You might have some success doing a fork/exec/wait yourself instead of using system; omitting error handling for brevity:
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
pid_t pid = fork();
if (!pid) {
   /* child */
   FILE* fp = fopen("./your-file", "w");
   close(STDOUT_FILENO);
   dup2(fileno(fp), STDOUT_FILENO);
   execlp("ps", "ps", "all", (char*)NULL);
} else {
  /* parent */
  int status;
  wait(&status);
  printf("ps exited with status %d\n", status);
}
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