Consider the following real world scenario
[...] one process is waiting for a very long time in a
Here is how I proceed in finding the other end of the socket, and the state of the socket connection with Mozilla's Thunderbird mail client in one end of the socket connection:
Finally to answer ... which process is that message being sent to ... part of the original question:
Follow the above steps and find the remote host (or IP) and remote port number. To find the corresponding process id on the remote machine to which the other half of the socket belongs to, do the following:
[...] one process is waiting for a very long time in a
send
system call. It is sending on a valid fd but
the question we have is that, is there any way to find who is on the other end
of that fd? We want to know to which process is that message being sent to.
[...]Here is how I proceed in finding the other end of the socket, and the state of the socket connection with Mozilla's Thunderbird mail client in one end of the socket connection:
- Get the process id of the application
% prstat PID USERNAME SIZE RSS STATE PRI NICE TIME CPU PROCESS/NLWP 22385 mandalik 180M 64M sleep 49 0 0:05:15 0.1% thunderbird-bin/5
- Run
pfiles
on the pid - it prints a list of open files including open sockets (pfiles
is the Solaris supported equivalent oflsof
utility).% pfiles 22385 22385: /usr/lib/thunderbird/thunderbird-bin -UILocale C -contentLocale C Current rlimit: 512 file descriptors ... ... 33: S_IFSOCK mode:0666 dev:280,0 ino:31544 uid:0 gid:0 size:0 O_RDWR|O_NONBLOCK SOCK_STREAM SO_SNDBUF(49152),SO_RCVBUF(49640) sockname: AF_INET 192.168.1.2 port: 60364 peername: AF_INET 192.18.39.10 port: 993 ... ...
- Locate the socket id and the corresponding sockname/port#, peername/port# in
the output of
pfiles pid
(see step #2).
Here my assumption is that I know the socket id I'm interested in. In the above output, 33 is the socket id. One end of the socket is bound to port 60364 on the local host 192.168.1.2; and the other end of the socket is bound to port 993 on the remote host 192.18.39.10.
- Run
netstat -a | egrep "
(get the port numbers from step 3); and check the state of the socket connection. If you see anything other than| ESTABLISHED
, it indicates trouble.% netstat -a | egrep "60364|993" solaris-devx-iprb0.60364 mail-sfbay.sun.com.993 48460 0 49640 0 ESTABLISHED
If you want to see the host names in numbers (IP addresses), runnetstat
with option-n
.% netstat -an | egrep "60364|993" 192.168.1.2.60364 192.18.39.10.993 49559 0 49640 0 ESTABLISHED
Now since we know both ends of the socket, we can easily get the state of the socket connection at the other end by runningnetstat -an | egrep '
.|
If the state of the socket connection isCLOSE_WAIT
, have a look at the following diagnosis: CPU hog with connections in CLOSE_WAIT.
Finally to answer ... which process is that message being sent to ... part of the original question:
Follow the above steps and find the remote host (or IP) and remote port number. To find the corresponding process id on the remote machine to which the other half of the socket belongs to, do the following:
- Login as
root
user on the remote host.
cd /proc
- Run
pfiles * | egrep "^[0-9]|sockname" > /tmp/pfiles.txt
.
vi /tmp/pfiles.txt
and search for the port number. If you scroll few lines up, you can see the process ID, name of the process along with its argument(s).
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