Dear Experts,
I put below command-
could you please describe the outputs column-
let me describe some them-
col_1: (10.131.60.48.55880) The IP address of the local computer and the port number being used for this particular connection appear in the Local Address column.
col_2:... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Does anyone know why I get a different output when using "netstat -a" or "netstat -an" ??
# netstat -a | grep ts15r135
tcp 0 0 nbsol152.62736 ts15r135.23211 ESTABLISHED
# netstat -an | grep 172.23.160.78
tcp 0 0 135.246.39.152.51954 ... (4 Replies)
hi all,
when I run-
wcars1j5#netstat -an | grep 8090
127.0.0.1.8090 *.* 0 0 49152 0 LISTEN
wcars1j5#
1. does this mean that no one is connected to this port?
Regards,
akash (1 Reply)
I can't tell what the output of the netstat command means. Is there anywhere that has this information? I tried the man pages, but they weren't helpful. (3 Replies)
I have a TCPIP server application (a Vendor package) which by default allows 10 connections. It provides a parameter to allow us to increase the maximum allowable connections in case it is needed. Intermittently this application is failing with maximum number of connections reached even when there... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I'm trying to figure out how much traffic has been generated and received from netstat -s output (using Linux). I can see the output shows packet counts and Octet values, how would I correctly calculate how much traffic in and how much out?
My output below:
Ip:
88847576 total... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have old SCO O/S. System keeps crashing. I made lot of changes to kernel but so for nothing helped. I wrote a script which takes netstat -an output every one minute. I saw some thing right before the system crashed. Not sure if this means anything..
uname -a
SCO_SV djx2 3.2... (2 Replies)
Hi Team,
Below is the output of netstat -an | grep 1533
tcp 0 0 17.18.18.12:583 10.3.2.0:1533 ESTABLISHED
tcp 0 0 17.18.18.12:370 10.3.2.0:1533 ESTABLISHED
Below is the o/p of netstat -a | grep server_name
tcp 0 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Girish19
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
aa-unconfined
UNCONFINED(8) AppArmor UNCONFINED(8)NAME
aa-unconfined - output a list of processes with tcp or udp ports that do not have AppArmor profiles loaded
SYNOPSIS
aa-unconfined
DESCRIPTION
aa-unconfined will use netstat(8) to determine which processes have open network sockets and do not have AppArmor profiles loaded into the
kernel.
BUGS
aa-unconfined must be run as root to retrieve the process executable link from the /proc filesystem. This program is susceptible to race
conditions of several flavours: an unlinked executable will be mishandled; an executable started before a AppArmor profile is loaded will
not appear in the output, despite running without confinement; a process that dies between the netstat(8) and further checks will be
mishandled. This program only lists processes using TCP and UDP. In short, this program is unsuitable for forensics use and is provided
only as an aid to profiling all network-accessible processes in the lab.
If you find any bugs, please report them to bugzilla at <http://bugzilla.novell.com>.
SEE ALSO netstat(8), apparmor(7), apparmor.d(5), change_hat(2), and <http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/project/?apparmor>.
NOVELL /SUSE 2008-06-11 UNCONFINED(8)