Hello itsagift,
You are more than welcome in the Linux world. We will do our best to help you fix your issues and teach you how things work
. You will not regret using Linux. Just stay calm and observe. My experience in the 16 years that i work with Linux, 9 times out of 10 it is your fault if something does not work and that 1 time it is often a bug.
If you do a
ps faux | grep deluge
you will see all the running deluge processes.
To see if you need or do not need to use the the command
sudo, type
whoami
, the output will show you what user you currently are. If it is root, then you do not need to use the command
sudo, if you are another user, then you have to use the command
sudo
You could put the output of both deluged and deluge-web systemd service. Use the command
sudo systemctl cat <name of the service>
. You will get a output and you can put the output in a message. Use the button </> in the mark-up window to make it more clear like this. This is how my deluged.service looks like as an example.
Code: Select all
<USER>@<SYSTEM>:~# systemctl cat deluged.service
# /etc/systemd/system/deluged.service
[Unit]
Description=Deluge Bittorrent Client Daemon
Documentation=man:deluged
After=network-online.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=deluge
Group=sambashare
UMask=007
#ExecStart=/usr/bin/deluged -d -L info -l /var/log/deluge/deluged.log
ExecStart=/usr/bin/deluged -d -L debug -l /var/log/deluge/deluged.log
Restart=on-failure
# Configures the time to wait before service is stopped forcefully.
TimeoutStopSec=300
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Extra information what the command does, but not necessary to read.
The "faux" options of the command
ps will give you the ability to see all the processes, which user is running them, how much memory it is using, how much cpu it is using, do the next thing and also which is the parent process and which is the child process. The ps faux command is super essential.
This
| sign is called
pipe. It is is like taking the output of the first command and giving it to the second command. So if you use only
ps faux, you would get a whole list of all the processes. With pipe you take this output and further narrow it down with the
grep command. This is also another essential commando in Linux and is very flexible. You grab a certain word or characters from the whole list. In this case you are saying, grab all the deluge you see there. You do need full user abilities to see also which application a process is. Either executing it with the root user or with sudo.