vote up 1 vote down star

I have a windows services that bind to some TCP port, this port is use for IPC between my application.

Is there a programming (WinAPI/WinSocket and etc) way to know which application connected to my port?

i.e. in my Windows Services I would like to get a PID of the process that connected to my port.

flag

This is similar to my problem: stackoverflow.com/questions/819708/… The answer is moreless the same. – smok1 May 13 at 11:36

2 Answers

vote up 0 vote down check

If you're looking for WinAPI way of doing the same as netstat. You probably want the following API: GetExtendedTcpTable

Look for the results with TCP_TABLE_OWNER_PID_ALL argument.

The resulting MIB_TCPTABLE_OWNER_PID structure has many MIB_TCPROW_OWNER_PID structures that has dwOwningPid which is the process ID you are looking for.

link|flag
This is supported on WinXP SP2+. If you look for older versions compatibility look for AllocateAndGetTcpExTableFromStack API. – Vitaly Polonetsky May 5 at 19:35
Sorry, but this was not my questions, I wanted to know the PID of the application that connected to my port, not the PID of the application that bind to the port. – Baget May 6 at 6:32
You can't know that from remote machine. You only know the source port and IP. – Vitaly Polonetsky May 6 at 11:02
Your question is not so clear. In case you are looking for the PID of a LOCAL application that is connected to some local service, you can use GetExtendedTcpTable or AllocateAndGetTcpExTableFromStack to see both sides: the listening one and the connecting one. – Vitaly Polonetsky May 6 at 11:05
ok, thanks alot – Baget May 6 at 18:14
show 1 more comment
vote up -1 vote down

If you mean what process is using (listening on or connected using) your ports, use the following command:

netstat -a -b -o -n

-a will show you all connection (even if they in LISTENING state)

-b will show you the application executable that uses that port

-o will show you the PID of the application

-n will not do dns translations (you probably don't need these for knowing about the application), not necessary

link|flag
Thanks for the answer but i need the programming way to do this. – Baget May 5 at 19:03

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.