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Operating Systems Linux How to easily identify socket given a PID on Linux? Post 302995447 by drysdalk on Wednesday 5th of April 2017 07:55:36 PM
Old 04-05-2017
Hi,

My take on this would be that all the socket information is correct. A process can have multiple network connections open simultaneously. It can also contain multiple threads within itself, which can themselves have multiple connections open, and so on. So in this case, the process with PID 32752 has all four of those connections open.
 

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ACCEPT(2)							System Calls Manual							 ACCEPT(2)

NAME
accept - accept a connection on a socket SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/socket.h> ns = accept(s, addr, addrlen) int ns, s; struct sockaddr *addr; int *addrlen; DESCRIPTION
The argument s is a socket that has been created with socket(2), bound to an address with bind(2), and is listening for connections after a listen(2). Accept extracts the first connection on the queue of pending connections, creates a new socket with the same properties of s and allocates a new file descriptor, ns, for the socket. If no pending connections are present on the queue, and the socket is not marked as non-blocking, accept blocks the caller until a connection is present. If the socket is marked non-blocking and no pending connections are present on the queue, accept returns an error as described below. The accepted socket, ns, may not be used to accept more connections. The original socket s remains open. The argument addr is a result parameter that is filled in with the address of the connecting entity, as known to the communications layer. The exact format of the addr parameter is determined by the domain in which the communication is occurring. The addrlen is a value-result parameter; it should initially contain the amount of space pointed to by addr; on return it will contain the actual length (in bytes) of the address returned. This call is used with connection-based socket types, currently with SOCK_STREAM. It is possible to select(2) a socket for the purposes of doing an accept by selecting it for read. RETURN VALUE
The call returns -1 on error. If it succeeds, it returns a non-negative integer that is a descriptor for the accepted socket. ERRORS
The accept will fail if: [EBADF] The descriptor is invalid. [ENOTSOCK] The descriptor references a file, not a socket. [EOPNOTSUPP] The referenced socket is not of type SOCK_STREAM. [EFAULT] The addr parameter is not in a writable part of the user address space. [EWOULDBLOCK] The socket is marked non-blocking and no connections are present to be accepted. SEE ALSO
bind(2), connect(2), listen(2), select(2), socket(2) 4.2 Berkeley Distribution May 22, 1986 ACCEPT(2)
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