I want to list the time for how long a secure connections last to my server/blade. i am using netstat command to get the same, but not sure how to get the time for how long connections is being ESTABLISHED.
Output is as below
How do i find the for how long it is actually keeping the secure connection established. please advice.
Hi
what is the command to see the process name/application name
along with the port number, connection status ...
netstat is not giving process/application name
Is there any way to know which application is holding which port?
Thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Hi..,
Now, I am reading about the netstat command and its implementation. I have doubts in some options and its functionalities,
natstat - M (Which is described as display masqueraded connections), what it means?
What is Forwarding Information Base.?(--fib)
Thanks in advance,... (3 Replies)
For FreeBSD I use this command to determine what ports are listenning
netstat -an | grep LISTEN
is there another way, perhaps another command? (2 Replies)
I can't tell what the output of the netstat command means. Is there anywhere that has this information? I tried the man pages, but they weren't helpful. (3 Replies)
Greetings to all,
Here is a line of output from my netstat command
cbp031.904 wdcprodhome.nfsd 98304 0 49640 0 ESTABLISHED
The only thing i recognize is the unix machine "cbp031" but what is .904 and all the other data telling me?
Thanks in advance. (3 Replies)
Hi,
In my project we use sftp with batch mode (password less) script in parallel for 14 sessions which connects to 2 different servers alternatively i.e. 7 connects to one server say server1 and the other 7 connects to say server 2.
Now the problem is that these 14 sessions are run in... (5 Replies)
Do I have this command correct to show all current connections/sessions my Solaris box has? It does not seem to do anything.
netstat -an | grep EST (6 Replies)
Hi
Can any body tell me about TIME_WAIT status meaning in the following command output.
# netstat -anp|grep 5000
tcp 0 0 127.0.0.1:50006 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 5058/ccsd
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:50008 0.0.0.0:* ... (3 Replies)
When running netstat -i from the Command Terminal,
It returns with 21 different connections..
The addresses all look like this:
::1
fe80:1::1
10:dd:b1:a5:c4:ba
with Network names like
Linke#2
fe80::8e2d
How can I delve deeper into this to clarify what is going on with my network?... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dwfiedler
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
netstat-nat
netstat-nat(1) General Commands Manual netstat-nat(1)NAME
netstat-nat - Show the natted connections on a linux iptable firewall
SYNOPSIS
netstat-nat [options]
DESCRIPTION
netstat-nat Displays NAT connections managed by netfilter/iptables which comes with the > 2.4.x linux kernels.
The program reads its information from '/proc/net/ip_conntrack' or '/proc/net/nf_conntrack', which is the temporary conntrack-storage of
netfilter.
OPTIONS -h displays help
-n don't resolve IPs/portnumbers to host/portnames
-p <protocol>
display NAT connections with protocol selection (see /etc/protocols)
-s <source host>
display connections by source IP/hostname
-d <destination host>
display connections by destination IP/hostname
-S display SNAT connections
-D display DNAT connections
-L display only connections to NAT box self (doesn't show SNAT & DNAT)
-R display only connections routed through the NAT box (doesn't show SNAT & DNAT)
-x extended view of hostnames
-r <src|dst|src-port|dst-port|state>
sort connections
-o no output header
-N display NAT box connection information (only valid with SNAT & DNAT)
-v prints version
FILES
/proc/net/ip_conntrack or /proc/net/nf_conntrack
SEE ALSO
http://www.tweegy.nl/projects/netstat-nat/
http://www.netfilter.org/
AUTHOR
netstat-nat has been written by D.Wijsman danny@tweegy.nl
The manual page has been written by marceln@xs4all.nl
July 2002 netstat-nat(1)