Hi Paul, with your command syntax I get no account/IP on Debian GNU/Linux:
$ ps -axww | grep imap 19024 ? S 0:00 dovecot/imap 19696 ? S 0:00 dovecot/imap 20515 ? S 0:04 dovecot/imap 22247 pts/4 S+ 0:00 grep imap 24720 ? S 0:03 dovecot/imap 24991 ? S 0:00 dovecot/imap 25446 ? S 0:03 dovecot/imap 25447 ? S 0:04 dovecot/imap 25475 ? S 0:03 dovecot/imap 31778 ? S 6:10 dovecot/imap-login
Narcis Garcia
I'm using this dedicated address because personal addresses aren't masked enough at this mail public archive. Public archive administrator should fix this against automated addresses collectors. El 19/8/22 a les 8:22, Paul Kudla (SCOM.CA Internet Services Inc.) ha escrit:
I use ps : (greping by imap & idle)
# ps -axww | grep imap | grep IDLE
thant and split() in python
8606 - S 0:08.78 imap: [keith@elirpa.com 54.242.98.60 IDLE] (imap) 12234 - I 0:01.00 imap: [reception@clancyca.com 72.143.119.178 IDLE] (imap) 20668 - S 0:02.01 imap: [paul@scom.ca 216.58.25.131 IDLE] (imap) 23219 - I 0:00.33 imap: [clancy@clancyca.com 72.143.119.178 IDLE] (imap) 26761 - S 0:00.52 imap: [ed.hanna@ekst.ca 204.237.91.165 IDLE] (imap) 26785 - I 0:00.87 imap: [ed@scom.ca 204.237.91.165 IDLE] (imap) 26787 - I 0:00.80 imap: [ed.hanna@dssmgmt.com 204.237.91.165 IDLE] (imap) 27378 - S 0:00.42 imap: [ed@scom.ca 204.237.91.165 IDLE] (imap) 31404 - S 0:03.90 imap: [paul@scom.ca 216.58.25.131 IDLE] (imap) 32494 - S 0:00.13 imap: [installers@tomkudla.ca 167.94.196.10 IDLE] (imap) 32497 - S 0:00.13 imap: [installers@tomkudla.ca 167.94.196.10 IDLE] (imap) 33809 - I 0:00.28 imap: [clancy@clancyca.com 72.143.119.178 IDLE] (imap) 36321 - I 0:00.21 imap: [clancy@clancyca.com 72.143.119.178 IDLE] (imap) 39188 - I 0:00.39 imap: [clancy@clancyca.com 72.143.119.178 IDLE] (imap) 42706 - S 0:00.45 imap: [ed@scom.ca 204.237.91.165 IDLE] (imap) 46356 - S 0:02.98 imap: [rcooke@tnky.ca 198.91.141.141 IDLE] (imap) 46422 - S 0:01.32 imap: [rcooke@tnky.ca 198.91.141.141 IDLE] (imap) 46424 - S 0:01.27 imap: [rcooke@tnky.ca 198.91.141.141 IDLE] (imap) 50756 - S 0:01.36 imap: [rcooke@tnky.ca 198.91.141.141 IDLE] (imap) 58656 - I 0:00.07 imap: [ditchburn@clancyca.com 216.58.50.30 IDLE] (imap) 63886 - S 0:00.70 imap: [rcooke@tnky.ca 198.91.141.141 IDLE] (imap) 68246 - I 0:00.08 imap: [li@clancyca.com 72.143.119.178 IDLE] (imap) 74719 - I 0:00.03 imap: [dan@elirpa.com 142.183.30.44 IDLE] (imap) 76580 - I 0:00.02 imap: [info@willsagriquipandfencing.ca 173.32.244.194 IDLE] (imap) 76584 - I 0:00.02 imap: [howard@willsagriquipandfencing.ca 173.32.244.194 IDLE] (imap) 77567 - S 0:00.04 imap: [rcooke@tnky.ca 198.91.141.141 IDLE] (imap) 77569 - I 0:00.03 imap: [rcooke@tnky.ca 198.91.141.141 IDLE] (imap)
Happy Friday !!! Thanks - paul
Paul Kudla
Scom.ca Internet Services http://www.scom.ca 004-1009 Byron Street South Whitby, Ontario - Canada L1N 4S3
Toronto 416.642.7266 Main 1.866.411.7266 Fax 1.888.892.7266 Email paul@scom.ca
On 8/18/2022 6:28 PM, J Doe wrote:
On 2022-08-16 16:46, Antonio Leding wrote:
At the risk of being pedestrian, I just use something like |sudo netstat -an | grep ‘:[ IMAP_PORT ]’|
I’m pretty sure you thought of this but still, thought I would toss it out…
Hi Antonio and Jaroslaw,
I don't think the second solution is pedestrian; I think it's cool that people have come up with different solutions for the same problem!
I am thinking that this may not be the solution that Jaroslaw is looking for, as this also requires spawning a process to run netstat and then capturing the results. The socket approach avoids an additional process.
- J