Hello, Keith!
On Fri, 3 Dec 1999, Keith Owens wrote:
>>I have a possibly dumb question. When I do
>>netstat --inet I get this:
>>
>>Active Internet connections (w/o servers)
>>Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State
>>tcp 0 126 linux.o3m.com:telnet denis.o3m.com:1117
>>ESTABLISHED
>>tcp 0 0 linux.o3m.com:8000 denis.o3m.com:1111
>>ESTABLISHED
>>tcp 0 0 localhost:8000 localhost:1036
>>ESTABLISHED
>>tcp 4 0 localhost:1036 localhost:8000
>>ESTABLISHED
>>tcp 0 0 localhost:1032 localhost:1033
>>ESTABLISHED
>>tcp 0 0 localhost:1033 localhost:1032
>>ESTABLISHED
>>
>>so I am wondering, what are ports 1033, 1031, 10xx ? And since it's a
>>connection, how possible that on a badly configured ppp-on-demand they'd
>>bring up the link?
>
>They probably belong to squid. Get lsof and "lsof [EMAIL PROTECTED]:1033"
>will say for certain. Or shutdown squid and see if they go away.
Guys, what about socklist or lsof ? They should just show the exact
process who owns every tcp/udp socket
Bye.
--
Reporter:
A writer who guesses his way to the truth
and dispels it with a tempest of words.
-- Ambrose Bierce
--
With best of best regards, Pawel S. Veselov (aka Black Angel)
Web page : http://i.am/BlackAngel | ICQ UIN : 5252265
Internet e-mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-net" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]