On Fri, 2007-08-17 at 11:01 +0100, John Horne wrote: > > The 'netstat -an' command will show me that processes are using certain > network ports. E.g. 'netstat -an | grep 53' will show me that a DNS name > server is running: > > 127.0.0.1.53 Idle > 192.168.177.1.53 Idle > 192.168.177.1.53 *.* 0 0 49152 0 LISTEN > > But how can I find out the process (executable) pathname or its PID? > Thanks for replies go to: Juraj Lutter Loris.Serena francisco roque Ric Anderson Polachak, Jason Edward Scown John.Hallman Rahul Sen Crist Clark Tim Wright John Leadeham Some people replied suggesting using 'lsof', but as mentioned I didn't want to do this. The other suggestion was to use the 'pfiles' command. This will indeed show the executable name that is using a port, but the man page for pfiles does contain a warning: ===================================================== The following proc tools stop their target processes while inspecting them and reporting the results: pfiles, pldd, and pstack. A process can do nothing while it is stopped. Stopping a heavily used process in a production environment, even for a short amount of time, can cause severe bottlenecks and even hangs of these processes, causing them to be unavailable to users. Some databases could also terminate abnormally. Thus, for example, a database server under heavy load could hang when one of the database processes is traced using the above mentioned proc tools. Because of this, stopping a UNIX pro- cess in a production environment should be avoided. ===================================================== In this instance I would need to loop through all the processes in /proc (perhaps using 'ptree -a'), and then use pfiles on each PID to see if it has the relevant port open. If it does, then extract the executable pathname. It does work, but my concern, given the above warning, is that many processes may need to be stopped before the relevant executable is found. Probably not a problem if the server is not under load. John. -- --------------------------------------------------------------- John Horne, University of Plymouth, UK Tel: +44 (0)1752 233914 E-mail: John.Horne@plymouth.ac.uk Fax: +44 (0)1752 233839 _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Fri Aug 31 07:50:11 2007
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