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Full Discussion: Interpreting netstat -s
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Interpreting netstat -s Post 4476 by Neo on Wednesday 25th of July 2001 05:01:37 AM
Old 07-25-2001
Example output of netstat -s:

[quote]
athlon# netstat -s
Ip:
461270 total packets received
0 forwarded
0 incoming packets discarded
288 incoming packets delivered
374553 requests sent out
8 dropped because of missing route
Icmp:
29 ICMP messages received
0 input ICMP message failed.
ICMP input histogram:
destination unreachable: 29
899 ICMP messages sent
0 ICMP messages failed
ICMP output histogram:
destination unreachable: 899
Tcp:
34 active connections openings
0 passive connection openings
0 failed connection attempts
0 connection resets received
1 connections established
460013 segments received
373502 segments send out
993 segments retransmited
0 bad segments received.
2 resets sent
Udp:
123 packets received
32 packets to unknown port received.
0 packet receive errors
152 packets sent
TcpExt:
[/code]

There is nothing here that discusses file descriptors. This simply provides statistics about sockets, packets, tcp segments, and connections.

This command is not used to check for file descriptor usage.

 

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icmp(7P)							     Protocols								  icmp(7P)

NAME
icmp, ICMP - Internet Control Message Protocol SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/socket.h> #include <netinet/in.h> #include <netinet/ip_icmp.h> s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_RAW, proto); t = t_open("/dev/icmp", O_RDWR); DESCRIPTION
ICMP is the error and control message protocol used by the Internet protocol family. It is used by the kernel to handle and report errors in protocol processing. It may also be accessed by programs using the socket interface or the Transport Level Interface (TLI) for network monitoring and diagnostic functions. When used with the socket interface, a "raw socket" type is used. The protocol number for ICMP, used in the proto parameter to the socket call, can be obtained from getprotobyname(3SOCKET). ICMP file descriptors and sockets are connection- less, and are normally used with the t_sndudata / t_rcvudata and the sendto() / recvfrom() calls. Outgoing packets automatically have an Internet Protocol (IP) header prepended to them. Incoming packets are provided to the user with the IP header and options intact. ICMP is an datagram protocol layered above IP. It is used internally by the protcol code for various purposes including routing, fault iso- lation, and congestion control. Receipt of an ICMP "redirect" message will add a new entry in the routing table, or modify an existing one. ICMP messages are routinely sent by the protocol code. Received ICMP messages may be reflected back to users of higher-level protocols such as TCP or UDP as error returns from system calls. A copy of all ICMP message received by the system is provided to every holder of an open ICMP socket or TLI descriptor. SEE ALSO
getprotobyname(3SOCKET), recv(3SOCKET), send(3SOCKET), t_rcvudata(3NSL), t_sndudata(3NSL), inet(7P), ip(7P), routing(7P) Postel, Jon, Internet Control Message Protocol -- DARPA Internet Program Protocol Specification, RFC 792, Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo Park, Calif., September 1981. DIAGNOSTICS
A socket operation may fail with one of the following errors returned: EISCONN An attempt was made to establish a connection on a socket which already has one, or when trying to send a datagram with the destination address specified and the socket is already connected. ENOTCONN An attempt was made to send a datagram, but no destination address is specified, and the socket has not been con- nected. ENOBUFS The system ran out of memory for an internal data structure. EADDRNOTAVAIL An attempt was made to create a socket with a network address for which no network interface exists. NOTES
Replies to ICMP "echo" messages which are source routed are not sent back using inverted source routes, but rather go back through the nor- mal routing mechanisms. SunOS 5.10 3 Jul 1990 icmp(7P)
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