I lost your earlier posts, but the utility you want to solve this is lsof. It's at ftp://vic.cc.purdue.edu/pub/tools/unix/lsof Once it's installed you can figure out what's listening with a lsof | grep TCP It's really darn useful. have fun, greg -- Nobody of particular importance. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs
- which server is bound to which port Jack Barnett
- Re: which server is bound to which port Richard Adams
- Re: which server is bound to which port Jack Barnett
- Re: which server is bound to which port Richard Adams
- Re: which server is bound to which port Jack Barnett
- Re: which server is bound to which port Greg Olszewski
- Re: which server is bound to which port Jack Barnett
- Re: which server is bound to which port Marc-Andre Dion
- Re: which server is bound to which port Ray Olszewski
- Re: which server is bound to which port Jack Barnett
