Tino Engel wrote:
Matthias Apitz schrieb:
El día Thursday, November 15, 2007 a las 11:20:30AM -0800, Yuri escribió:
'netstat -a' gives me the listing of network connection/listening
records.
But there's no link to the process id that opened it.
With lots of processes this can be a significa
Matthias Apitz schrieb:
El día Thursday, November 15, 2007 a las 11:20:30AM -0800, Yuri escribió:
'netstat -a' gives me the listing of network connection/listening records.
But there's no link to the process id that opened it.
With lots of processes this can be a significant problem to figur
El día Thursday, November 15, 2007 a las 11:20:30AM -0800, Yuri escribió:
> 'netstat -a' gives me the listing of network connection/listening records.
> But there's no link to the process id that opened it.
> With lots of processes this can be a significant problem to figure out who
> opened which
In the last episode (Nov 15), Yuri said:
> 'netstat -a' gives me the listing of network connection/listening
> records. But there's no link to the process id that opened it. With
> lots of processes this can be a significant problem to figure out who
> opened which connection.
Try /usr/bin/socksta
On Thu, 2007-11-15 at 11:20 -0800, Yuri wrote:
> 'netstat -a' gives me the listing of network connection/listening records.
> But there's no link to the process id that opened it.
Install ports/sysutils/lsof/
Each socket is a file descriptor.
~BAS
> With lots of processes this can be a signifi