Hello Owen On Fri, Aug 18, 2000 at 06:18:33PM -0400, Owen G. Emry wrote: > Sorry for such a lame-brained question.
Better than not asking at all. :) > What tool can I use to see which ports various processes are listening on? netstat is quite informative: # netstat --help usage: netstat [-veenNcCF] [<Af>] -r netstat {-V|--version|-h|--help} netstat [-vnNcaeol] [<Socket> ...] netstat { [-veenNac] -i | [-cnNe] -M | -s } -r, --route display routing table -i, --interfaces display interface table -g, --groups display multicast group memberships -s, --statistics display networking statistics (like SNMP) -M, --masquerade display masqueraded connections -v, --verbose be verbose -n, --numeric dont resolve names -N, --symbolic resolve hardware names -e, --extend display other/more information -p, --programs display PID/Program name for sockets -c, --continuous continuous listing -l, --listening display listening server sockets -a, --all, --listening display all sockets (default: connected) -o, --timers display timers -F, --fib display Forwarding Information Base (default) -C, --cache display routing cache instead of FIB <Socket>={-t|--tcp} {-u|--udp} {-w|--raw} {-x|--unix} --ax25 --ipx --netrom <AF>=Use '-A <af>' or '--<af>' Default: inet List of possible address families (which support routing): inet (DARPA Internet) inet6 (IPv6) ax25 (AMPR AX.25) netrom (AMPR NET/ROM) ipx (Novell IPX) ddp (Appletalk DDP) > Is there a good place where I can find information like this without > cluttering up this mailing list? When I encounter problems, I usually dig around at google.com / mail-archive.com or the Debian site. HTH Sven