As DGPickett noted you cant see the output of lsof if the process using port 5914 is not owned by you or if you do not have root privileges...so can you post the output of the following cmd...
I am trying to connect via DBACCESS and Informix server to a server on a different computer. When I execute the connect command from dbaccess I get the following message,
Exec format error cannot bind a name to the port.
As far as I know the port is not being used by another client.
How... (1 Reply)
Hi All, I suspect this is simple but I cannot find any info on it.
I have a logfile on a solaris box (EMS) that I want to tail -f but I want the output of this to be redirected to a TCP port.
I have a second solaris box (PEM) running patrol enterprise manager that I am using as an alarm... (1 Reply)
Hi
Is there any way to restrict the TCP-IP port usage.
I want to restrict TCP-IP port 1500/1550 to the oracle osuser.
Tanks in advance.
Remi (2 Replies)
Hi all
I haven't had much experience with Solaris 10 but we've started running into a problem where a process hangs, it is killed and leaves a zombie process. The sysadmins are saying this zombie process is locking a tcp port and not allowing the process to start up.
The process is a usually... (5 Replies)
Hello, I have a service running (ODBC) and every now and then it will hang and I will have to stop and restart the service. The problem is when I stop the service, it indeed stops the service, but netstat reports a tcp port still open with the fin_wait_2 status. Then I must close the client... (1 Reply)
Hi. I ran nmap on my server, and I get the following:
Starting Nmap 4.76 ( http://nmap.org ) at 2009-03-19 16:33 EDT
Interesting ports on -------- (-----):
Not shown: 997 closed ports
PORT STATE SERVICE
22/tcp open ssh
80/tcp open http
6881/tcp open bittorrent-tracker
The... (0 Replies)
I have multiple processes running the same program on my linux machine. For each process I want to be able to use a unique (available) TCP port. I have thought of using netstat to check which ports are available for use however, the time-window between checking and selecting might expose some race... (1 Reply)
Hey guys,
I need to kill the process that is currently connected to port 10540. I'm on HP-UX machine.
Below is the result of my netstat.
$ netstat -an |grep 10540
tcp 0 0 129.0.0.1.10540 *.* LISTEN
We don't have lsof command, but we have fuser.
... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I'm trying to write a small c application to test a tcp port. This works fine for the most part but the default timeout on the connect is very long. I have been reading many posts but and it looks like I need to set the socket to be non-blocking and poll for a result. I have been totally... (2 Replies)
please find the below o/p for your reference
bash-3.00# fcinfo hba-port
HBA Port WWN: 21000024ff295a34
OS Device Name: /dev/cfg/c2
Manufacturer: QLogic Corp.
Model: 375-3356-02
Firmware Version: 05.03.02
FCode/BIOS Version: BIOS: 2.02; fcode: 2.01;... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sb200
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
pldd
PLDD(1) Linux User Manual PLDD(1)NAME
pldd - display dynamic shared objects linked into a process
SYNOPSIS
pldd pid
pldd option
DESCRIPTION
The pldd command displays a list of the dynamic shared objects that are linked into the process with the specified process ID. The list
includes the libraries that have been dynamically loaded using dlopen(3).
OPTIONS
-?, --help
Display program help message.
--usage
Display a short usage message.
-V, --version
Display the program version.
EXIT STATUS
On success, pldd exits with the status 0. If the specified process does not exist, the user does not have permission to access its dynamic
shared object list, or no command-line arguments are supplied, pldd exists with a status of 1. If given an invalid option, it exits with
the status 64.
VERSIONS
pldd is available since glibc 2.15.
CONFORMING TO
The pldd command is not specified by POSIX.1. Some other systems have a similar command.
NOTES
The command
lsof -p PID
also shows output that includes the dynamic shared objects that are linked into a process.
The gdb(1) info shared command also shows the shared libraries being used by a process, so that one can obtain similar output to pldd using
a command such as the following (to monitor the process with the specified pid):
$ gdb -ex "set confirm off" -ex "set height 0" -ex "info shared"
-ex "quit" -p $pid | grep '^0x.*0x'
BUGS
Since glibc 2.19, pldd is broken: it just hangs when executed. It is unclear if it will ever be fixed.
EXAMPLE
$ echo $$ # Display PID of shell
1143
$ pldd $$ # Display DSOs linked into the shell
1143: /usr/bin/bash
linux-vdso.so.1
/lib64/libtinfo.so.5
/lib64/libdl.so.2
/lib64/libc.so.6
/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
/lib64/libnss_files.so.2
SEE ALSO ldd(1), lsof(1), dlopen(3), ld.so(8)COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
GNU 2017-09-15 PLDD(1)