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Procinfo

capabilities = {0: 'CAP_CHOWN', 1: 'CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE', 2: 'CAP_DAC_READ_SEARCH', 3: 'CAP_FOWNER', 4: 'CAP_FSETID', 5: 'CAP_KILL', 6: 'CAP_SETGID', 7: 'CAP_SETUID', 8: 'CAP_SETPCAP', 9: 'CAP_LINUX_IMMUTABLE', 10: 'CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE', 11: 'CAP_NET_BROADCAST', 12: 'CAP_NET_ADMIN', 13: 'CAP_NET_RAW', 14: 'CAP_IPC_LOCK', 15: 'CAP_IPC_OWNER', 16: 'CAP_SYS_MODULE', 17: 'CAP_SYS_RAWIO', 18: 'CAP_SYS_CHROOT', 19: 'CAP_SYS_PTRACE', 20: 'CAP_SYS_PACCT', 21: 'CAP_SYS_ADMIN', 22: 'CAP_SYS_BOOT', 23: 'CAP_SYS_NICE', 24: 'CAP_SYS_RESOURCE', 25: 'CAP_SYS_TIME', 26: 'CAP_SYS_TTY_CONFIG', 27: 'CAP_MKNOD', 28: 'CAP_LEASE', 29: 'CAP_AUDIT_WRITE', 30: 'CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL', 31: 'CAP_SETFCAP', 32: 'CAP_MAC_OVERRIDE', 33: 'CAP_MAC_ADMIN', 34: 'CAP_SYSLOG', 35: 'CAP_WAKE_ALARM', 36: 'CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND'} module-attribute

Process

cmdline property

connections property

cwd: str property

open_files property

pid = pid instance-attribute

selinux property

status property

tid = tid instance-attribute

__init__(pid=None, tid=None)

pid()

procinfo()

Display information about the running process.

tcp()

It will first list all listening TCP sockets, and next list all established TCP connections. A typical entry of /proc/net/tcp would look like this (split up into 3 parts because of the length of the line):

unix()