ah yes another intresting cmd... nmap localhost or nmap <IP> gives u
http-proxy 8080 jserv 8007 this of course is in linux...i dn't know if it's available in solaris...and also i believe it has some export restrictions ravi ----- Original Message ----- From: "David Cassidy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 3:11 PM Subject: Re: Other question > Hey Ravi, > > > Try doing ps auxwwwf > > it'll give you alot more detail .... > > the ps -ax won't let you actually see what java is running > > David > > > Ravishankar S wrote: > > >hi Laura, > > > >when tomcat runs an instance of java is always running..try > > > >ps -ax | grep 'java*' > > > >it should give a bunch of java instances depending on the no of > >threads....here's what my redhat 6.2 said > > > >21619 pts/3 S 0:14 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21664 pts/3 S 0:08 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21665 pts/3 S 0:21 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21666 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21667 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21668 pts/3 S 0:34 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21669 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21670 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21671 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21672 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21673 pts/3 S 0:01 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21674 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21675 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21676 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21677 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21678 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21679 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > >21680 pts/3 S 0:00 > >/usr/java/jdk1.3.1/bin/i386/native_threads/java -clas > > 9085 pts/8 S 0:00 grep java > > > >ravi > > > >----- Original Message ----- > >From: "Laura" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >To: "Tomcat Users List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 2:56 PM > >Subject: Other question > > > > > >Hi all, > > > >thanks for your reply (Security - Attack): you are telling me that I > >shouldn't worry because Apache is secure. (I hope it) > > > >I have one other question: If Tomcat shouts down for some cause, how can I > >know it? > >For example, Apache has a PID and so you can control if the apache process, > >with that PID, is alive. > > > >But Tomcat doesn't write any PID: how can I know if Tomcat is alive or not? > >Is there any script for that? > > > >Thanks for your help > > > > > >Laura > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > >-- > >To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > > > > > > > > -- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
