Checking who is listening on a Unix Domain Socket


 
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Old 06-18-2008
Checking who is listening on a Unix Domain Socket

Hi all,

I'm writing a kernel module and part of it involves controlling IPCs between processes. My problem is when a process tries to connect to a Unix domain socket, the only identifying information of the socket it supplies (that I can see, anyway) is the special pathname of the socket. From the pathname, I need to find out what process is binded/listening on it. Is there an easy way to do this? I would imagine that some data structures and functions in the kernel already would help with this but I just can't find anything helpful. Anyone know how to do this?
 
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PMC(8)							      System Manager's Manual							    PMC(8)

NAME
pmc - PTP management client SYNOPSIS
pmc [ -2 | -4 | -6 | -u ] [ -b boundary-hops ] [ -d domain-number ] [ -i interface ] [ -t transport-specific-field ] [ -v ] [ -z ] [ com- mand ] ... DESCRIPTION
pmc is a program which implements a PTP management client according to IEEE standard 1588. The program reads from the standard input or from the command line actions specified by name and management ID, sends them over the selected transport and prints any received replies. There are three actions supported: GET retrieves the specified information, SET updates the specified information and CMD (or COMMAND) ini- tiates the specified event. Command help can be used to get a list of supported actions and management IDs. OPTIONS
-2 Select the IEEE 802.3 network transport. -4 Select the UDP IPv4 network transport. This is the default transport. -6 Select the UDP IPv6 network transport. -u Select the Unix Domain Socket transport. -b boundary-hops Specify the boundary hops value in sent messages. The default is 1. -d domain-number Specify the domain number in sent messages. The default is 0. -i interface Specify the network interface. The default is /var/run/pmc for the Unix Domain Socket transport and eth0 for the other transports. -t transport-specific-field Specify the transport specific field in sent messages as a hexadecimal number. The default is 0x0. -h Display a help message. -v Prints the software version and exits. -z The official interpretation of the 1588 standard mandates sending GET actions with valid (but meaningless) TLV values. Therefore the pmc program normally sends GET requests with properly formed TLV values. This option enables the legacy option of sending zero length TLV values instead. MANAGEMENT IDS
CURRENT_DATA_SET TIME_STATUS_NP NULL_MANAGEMENT SEE ALSO
ptp4l(8) linuxptp July 2013 PMC(8)