According to Ray Olszewski: While burning my CPU.
> 
> To se ethe full list of standard services, look in /etc/services. To see
> which ones your inetd is actually set to run, look in /etc/inetd.conf .
> 
> The S in SW means the process is sleeping. In practice this means it is
> waiting for some resource (a file, a printer, a serial port .. whatever) to
> become available. ("man ps" for more details.)  To see what's going on, you
> might see if inetd is logging anything to any of your log files (on a
> typical system, /var/log/messages and /var/log/debug are the main two log
> files).

The following _might_ be of more help.

 'pstree' 

> 
> 
> At 07:21 PM 6/7/99 +0200, Gevaerts Frank wrote:
> >What exactly does in.inetd do ? Today we had over a hundred processes of
> >it on our mailserver at work (for three or four users). ps -ax showed the
> >process state as SW. Does anyone know what this means ?
> 
> ------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"---
> Ray Olszewski                                        -- Han Solo
> 762 Garland Drive
> Palo Alto, CA  94303-3603
> 650.328.4219 voice                                    [EMAIL PROTECTED]        
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
> 


-- 
Regards Richard.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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