Demonstrations of tcpaccept, the Linux eBPF/bcc version.
This tool traces the kernel function accepting TCP socket connections (eg, a
passive connection via accept(); not connect()). Some example output (IP
addresses changed to protect the innocent):
# ./tcpaccept
PID COMM IP RADDR LADDR LPORT
907 sshd 4 192.168.56.1 192.168.56.102 22
907 sshd 4 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 22
5389 perl 6 1234:ab12:2040:5020:2299:0:5:0 1234:ab12:2040:5020:2299:0:5:0 7001
This output shows three connections, two IPv4 connections to PID 907, an "sshd"
process listening on port 22, and one IPv6 connection to a "perl" process
listening on port 7001.
The overhead of this tool should be negligible, since it is only tracing the
kernel function performing accept. It is not tracing every packet and then
filtering.
This tool only traces successful TCP accept()s. Connection attempts to closed
ports will not be shown (those can be traced via other functions).
The -t option prints a timestamp column:
# ./tcpaccept -t
TIME(s) PID COMM IP RADDR LADDR LPORT
0.000 907 sshd 4 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 22
0.010 5389 perl 6 1234:ab12:2040:5020:2299:0:5:0 1234:ab12:2040:5020:2299:0:5:0 7001
0.992 907 sshd 4 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 22
1.984 907 sshd 4 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 22
USAGE message:
# ./tcpaccept -h
usage: tcpaccept [-h] [-t] [-p PID]
Trace TCP accepts
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t, --timestamp include timestamp on output
-p PID, --pid PID trace this PID only
examples:
./tcpaccept # trace all TCP accept()s
./tcpaccept -t # include timestamps
./tcpaccept -p 181 # only trace PID 181