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Date:      Tue, 23 May 2000 19:35:34 -0400
From:      Alan Clegg <abc@firehouse.net>
To:        David Kirchner <dpk@nwserv.com>
Cc:        Oscar Ricardo Silva <oscars@mail.utexas.edu>, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Port 722 ?
Message-ID:  <20000523193534.A57347@ecto.greenpeas.org>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.21.0005231624110.29966-100000@web2.sea.nwserv.com>; from dpk@nwserv.com on Tue, May 23, 2000 at 04:27:00PM -0700
References:  <4.2.2.20000523180523.00a8f680@mail.utexas.edu> <Pine.BSF.4.21.0005231624110.29966-100000@web2.sea.nwserv.com>

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Out of the ether, David Kirchner spewed forth the following bitstream:

> An easy way to find out what an unknown port is:
> 
> First run 'netstat -aAn | grep LISTEN | grep \.portnum'. The -A flag will
> display the address for the socket. You can then figure out which process
> is using that address by running 'fstat | grep address':
> 
> dpk@web2:/home/dpk$ netstat -aAn | grep LISTEN | grep \.25
> c6400180 tcp        0      0 *.25                  *.*   LISTEN
> dpk@web2:/home/dpk$ fstat | grep c6400180
> root     sendmail   94903    4* internet stream tcp c6400180

Easier way:

	lsof -i TCP:_portnum_

ecto 101} /usr/local/sbin/lsof -i TCP:25
COMMAND   PID   USER   FD   TYPE     DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
tcpserver 381 qmaild    3u  IPv4 0xc735c500      0t0  TCP *:smtp (LISTEN)

lsof from ports, btw...

AlanC
-- 
                                      \             Alan B. Clegg
         Just because I can            \          abc@firehouse.net
        does not mean I will.           \     <http://www.firehouse.net/>;
                                         \


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