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Full Discussion: Howto stop loops in CentOS
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Howto stop loops in CentOS Post 302971684 by Azrael on Sunday 24th of April 2016 04:27:27 AM
Old 04-24-2016
If you are hacked, then the processes that are sending ping are most likely going to restart, even if you kill them. You need to find the files on the system doing this first. I would try to run the following as root to get the PID of any process sending out ping:

Code:
ps faux | awk '/ping/ { print $2 }'

Then try grepping the PIDs from lsof to see if you can find the files associated with this.

If ping is being ran as root, or the files that is sending the ping requests are owned by root, you probably need a complete reload of Centos. Otherwise just chmod 000 any malicious files you find or remove them.

Last edited by DukeNuke2; 04-24-2016 at 05:40 AM..
 

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RDS-PING(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					       RDS-PING(1)

NAME
rds-ping -- test reachability of remote node over RDS SYNOPSIS
rds-ping [-c count] [-i interval] [-I local_addr] remote_addr DESCRIPTION
rds-ping is used to test whether a remote node is reachable over RDS. Its interface is designed to operate pretty much the standard ping(8) utility, even though the way it works is pretty different. rds-ping opens several RDS sockets and sends packets to port 0 on the indicated host. This is a special port number to which no socket is bound; instead, the kernel processes incoming packets and responds to them. OPTIONS
The following options are available for use on the command line: -c count Causes rds-ping to exit after sending (and receiving) the specified number of packets. -I address By default, rds-ping will pick the local source address for the RDS socket based on routing information for the destination address (i.e. if packets to the given destination would be routed through interface ib0, then it will use the IP address of ib0 as source address). Using the -I option, you can override this choice. -i timeout By default, rds-ping will wait for one second between sending packets. Use this option to specified a different interval. The timeout value is given in seconds, and can be a floating point number. Optionally, append msec or usec to specify a timeout in milliseconds or microseconds, respectively. Specifying a timeout considerably smaller than the packet round-trip time will produce unexpected results. AUTHORS
rds-ping was written by Olaf Kirch <olaf.kirch@oracle.com>. SEE ALSO
rds(7), rds-info(1), rds-stress(1). BSD
Apr 22, 2008 BSD
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