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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Get opened port with given PID? Post 302540353 by zaxxon on Wednesday 20th of July 2011 11:15:12 AM
Old 07-20-2011
You can it do the way you already did or check the server.xml of your Tomcat where the ports are defined in and grep it out of there. When having the port(s), you can just check additionally with
Code:
netstat -an| grep <port>

if it is up and running.
The way you have chosen, you do not know how many Tomcat installations/configurations are there, but just check which is up and try to get it's port.
It depends which way you want to go.
 

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ZGREP(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  ZGREP(1)

NAME
zgrep, zegrep, zfgrep -- print lines matching a pattern in gzip-compressed files SYNOPSIS
zgrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [files ...] zegrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [file ...] zfgrep [grep-flags] [--] pattern [file ...] DESCRIPTION
zgrep runs grep(1) on files or stdin, if no files argument is given, after decompressing them with zcat(1). The grep-flags and pattern arguments are passed on to grep(1). If an -e flag is found in the grep-flags, zgrep will not look for a pattern argument. zegrep calls egrep(1), while zfgrep calls fgrep(1). EXIT STATUS
In case of missing arguments or missing pattern, 1 will be returned, otherwise 0. SEE ALSO
egrep(1), fgrep(1), grep(1), gzip(1), zcat(1) AUTHORS
Thomas Klausner <wiz@NetBSD.org> BSD
December 28, 2003 BSD
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