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Operating Systems Linux How to easily identify socket given a PID on Linux? Post 302995480 by drysdalk on Thursday 6th of April 2017 06:29:51 AM
Old 04-06-2017
Hi,

The difficult part here would be coming up with a generic solution, since what you need from each netstat output would appear to depend on actual human knowledge of which of the listening ports is the 'correct' one. From a technical perspective, they all are: PID 32538 really is listening on ports 7666 and 38970 on all bound IPs, and on port 13804 on the IP 10.2.228.79 specifically.

So aside from you knowing which of these is the one you want, you'd need some way of identifying something that the ports you're after will actually always have in common, if you want a generic scriptable run-one-command-and-get-the-answer solution. Is there something you would always look for or which would be scriptably identifiable as the signifier of which port was the 'correct' one ? If so, then if you can give a bit more detail we may be able to narrow this down further.

As for the fd command - I've never heard of that one, sorry. Doesn't seem to either be installed or to be an option for installation on any Linux or Solaris system I currently have access to.
 

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GETTID(2)						     Linux Programmer's Manual							 GETTID(2)

NAME
gettid - get thread identification SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h> pid_t gettid(void); DESCRIPTION
gettid() returns the caller's thread ID (TID). In a single-threaded process, the thread ID is equal to the process ID (PID, as returned by getpid(2)). In a multithreaded process, all threads have the same PID, but each one has a unique TID. For further details, see the dis- cussion of CLONE_THREAD in clone(2). RETURN VALUE
On success, returns the thread ID of the calling process. ERRORS
This call is always successful. VERSIONS
The gettid() system call first appeared on Linux in kernel 2.4.11. CONFORMING TO
gettid() is Linux-specific and should not be used in programs that are intended to be portable. NOTES
Glibc does not provide a wrapper for this system call; call it using syscall(2). The thread ID returned by this call is not the same thing as a POSIX thread ID (i.e., the opaque value returned by pthread_self(3)). SEE ALSO
clone(2), fork(2), getpid(2) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.27 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2008-04-14 GETTID(2)
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