Closed entries are like to free ones and are reuseable.
To hunt it down, rather try to grep the port number over /net/tcp/*/local...
2010/8/12 Akshat Kumar :
> term% grep -n /net/tcp/31 /proc/*/fd
> term%
>
> quite sure they're all gone.
>
> On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 5:12 AM, wrote:
>> i'm not sur
oops, I typed that in;
s/term%/cpu%/g
On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 1:34 PM, Akshat Kumar
wrote:
> term% grep -n /net/tcp/31 /proc/*/fd
> term%
>
> quite sure they're all gone.
>
> On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 5:12 AM, wrote:
>> i'm not sure if you really killed all instances of aquarela. can you
>> grep
term% grep -n /net/tcp/31 /proc/*/fd
term%
quite sure they're all gone.
On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 5:12 AM, wrote:
> i'm not sure if you really killed all instances of aquarela. can you
> grep -n /net/tcp/31 /proc/*/fd to see who is still using that filedescriptor.
>
> --
> cinap
i'm not sure if you really killed all instances of aquarela. can you
grep -n /net/tcp/31 /proc/*/fd to see who is still using that filedescriptor.
--
cinap
--- Begin Message ---
I halted aquarela(1) with a ^D sequence, and made sure
all processes were gone. ps(1) lists no processes on
the server
I halted aquarela(1) with a ^D sequence, and made sure
all processes were gone. ps(1) lists no processes on
the server that could possibly be using port 445 (the
port aquarela listens on for the CIFS service). And yet,
netstat -n showed that TCP port 445 was still in LISTEN
state. Naturally, I ran