You will need to use a tool like lsof to see which processes have the port open.
You can get lsof by searching openly on the internet.
The command will be something like:-
...where you insert or loop round the ports you need. There may be quite a bit of output but enough to trace back the PID and therefore the command.
Hi,
I use the following cmd to view list of clients connected to my HPUX server
netstat -na |grep
Can anyone help me with the UNIX cmds to find list of clients connected to my HPUX server including idle time.
Any help will be highly appreciated.
Thanks
MH (2 Replies)
Hello guys,
How to shut down a port number in AIX.
May be first I need to find out what is the process ID of that process that listens to this particular port.. Is there any command to find a process ID from the port number other than "lsof".
thanks (1 Reply)
I have a netstat command set up with awk to show which ports my box is listening on. The -p switch shows the PID/program name, too, which ordinarily would be very handy. However, several entries show up as just "-" for the program name which makes it hard to identify what is keeping the port open.... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I searched other threads and could not find any relevant post about this.
I searched for process 0 in SUN OS and could find the sched/swapper process listed.
root 0 0 0 Apr 25 ? 0:06 sched
but i couldnt not find the swapper process (PID 0) in AIX. Is that... (4 Replies)
Hi
I have an IBM AIX 5.3 64Bit running with 64bit application (Kernel runs on 64bit also).
I changed the maximum proccesses per user to the maximum.
Currently the pids of proccesses in the system using 5 digits (<100000).
Is it possible to make the system use pids bigger then 4500000? I need it... (6 Replies)
Had a bizzare problem last night with one of our tools running on an AIX server that has not come up before. The tool has been in use for over a year without this problem showing up.The tool basically does this: -Kick off a background task and record the PIDGo and do a bunch of other taskswait for... (4 Replies)
I have a C program called server.c which is supposed to get the pid of another program, client.c, and send a signal to it, but I'm not sure how to do it. Server.c is first run in the background then client is run in the foreground.
I tried
pid_t pid;
pid = system("pidof -s client.c");... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I can write sh script for Linux platform
I run:
netstat -an | grep -P '\:'38''| grep ESTABLISHED
but result:
# netstat -an | grep -P '\:'38''| grep ESTABLISHED
tcp 0 0 172.16.1.107:383 172.16.1.81:49981 ESTABLISHED
tcp 0 0... (8 Replies)
Hi
I am trying to create a suspend script which will suspend the system only if it cant find port 9982 four or more times OR 192.168.0.:microsoft-ds ESTABLISHED in the output of netstat -t.
I am struggling with the 9982 bit, googling etc I came up with
if netstat -t|grep -P "(9982){4,}" ... (15 Replies)
Hello All,
I am using netstat on HP-UX to retrieve the established network connections on my host. Can anyone please confirm how can I retrieve the PID and program name as well for these connections? These are available from the netstat version on Windows but I don't see PID and program name to... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Happy83
10 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)