Answer is: ps -A
But, there are so many new options in ps. Try running ps --help
generic_x86:/ $ ps --help
usage: ps [-AadefLlnwZ] [-gG GROUP,] [-k FIELD,] [-o FIELD,] [-p PID,] [-t TTY,] [-uU USER,]
List processes.
Which processes to show (selections may be comma separated lists):
-A  All processes
-a  Processes with terminals that aren't session leaders
-d  All processes that aren't session leaders
-e  Same as -A
-g  Belonging to GROUPs
-G  Belonging to real GROUPs (before sgid)
-p  PIDs (--pid)
-P  Parent PIDs (--ppid)
-s  In session IDs
-t  Attached to selected TTYs
-T  Show threads
-u  Owned by USERs
-U  Owned by real USERs (before suid)
Output modifiers:
-k  Sort FIELDs in +increasing or -decreasting order (--sort)
-M  Measure field widths (expanding as necessary)
-n  Show numeric USER and GROUP
-w  Wide output (don't truncate fields)
Which FIELDs to show. (Default = -o PID,TTY,TIME,CMD)
-f  Full listing (-o USER:12=UID,PID,PPID,C,STIME,TTY,TIME,ARGS=CMD)
-l  Long listing (-o F,S,UID,PID,PPID,C,PRI,NI,ADDR,SZ,WCHAN,TTY,TIME,CMD)
-o  Output FIELDs instead of defaults, each with optional :size and =title
-O  Add FIELDS to defaults
-Z  Include LABEL