2

In linux, I can use lsof -i as in the following function:

def FindProcessUsingPort(portnum):
    import os
    fp = os.popen("lsof -i :%s" % portnum)
    lines = fp.readlines()
    fp.close()
    pid = None
    if len(lines) >= 2:
        pid = int(lines[1].split()[1])
    return pid

Is there a cross-platform way to figure this out?

As a relevant reference, once I know the process id, the psutil library is very nice and lets me determine all sorts of useful process information for it in a cross-platform way. I just can't get the first part to work (finding the pid) cross-platform at the moment.


If not familiar with the lsof -i switch, the output looks like below (after launching a python process that opens a TCP socket listening on port 1234):

$ lsof -i :1234
COMMAND   PID USER   FD   TYPE  DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
python  22380 russ   15u  IPv4 4015476      0t0  TCP *:1234 (LISTEN)
2
  • 2
    see: stackoverflow.com/questions/15708/lsof-equivalent-for-windows. They talk about files, but it's unlikely it should be easier for ports.
    – tokland
    Oct 6, 2010 at 16:13
  • 1
    @tokland: thanks. But I'm looking for a way that does not require the installation of os-specific non-python packages. I agree it might be unlikely on windows, but I still needed to ask. +1 anyway for linking to something that references sysinternals... when in Windows those tools are indispensable.
    – Russ
    Oct 6, 2010 at 16:51

4 Answers 4

2

This answer is more of a tangent to your question, but if you can find OS-specific ways but nothing strictly portable, I'd make your module like the following

def find_port_owner_windows(p):
    doit()

def find_port_owner_linux(p):
    doit2()

port_finders = {'nt': find_port_owner_windows,
                'posix': find_port_owner_linux}

try:
    find_port_owner = port_finders[os.name]
except KeyError:
    raise RuntimeError("No known port finder for your OS (%s)" % os.name)
2
  • Definitely a tangent, but thanks! I'm looking for a cross-platform way to do it, where the solution preferably isn't "figure out how to do it in the each of the platforms and dispatch a call in your code based on os.name or sys.platform". Although if that's all that is available, then so it goes.
    – Russ
    Oct 6, 2010 at 17:17
  • Sometimes this really is the answer, though. Like in this case, for example.
    – SamB
    Oct 10, 2011 at 17:20
2

No, this is not built into python.

2

Like Daenyth's anwer, this doesn't precisely answer the question you asked, but I think you'll probably find it helpful given that the answer to that seems to be "you can't".

Well, NT's netstat.exe may not be quite as capable as that, but it can at least do this:

C:\Documents and Settings\Sam\My Documents>netstat -o -b -n

Active Connections

  Proto  Local Address          Foreign Address        State           PID
  TCP    127.0.0.1:1083         127.0.0.1:6000         ESTABLISHED     3716
  [Xming.exe]

  TCP    127.0.0.1:1084         127.0.0.1:6000         ESTABLISHED     3716
  [Xming.exe]

  TCP    127.0.0.1:1085         127.0.0.1:6000         ESTABLISHED     3716
  [Xming.exe]

  TCP    127.0.0.1:1214         127.0.0.1:9481         ESTABLISHED     236
  Can not obtain ownership information
  TCP    127.0.0.1:1231         127.0.0.1:31416        ESTABLISHED     2764
  [boincmgr.exe]

  TCP    127.0.0.1:3814         127.0.0.1:6000         ESTABLISHED     716
  [putty.exe]

The "Can not obtain ownership information" lines are because I'm not running this as an administrator, so (just like on Linux) I can really only see this info for my own processes. (I'm probably actually allowed to do this for any process whose ACL grants me the necessary access, but in practice that means basically the same thing as "my processes" for non-admin users.)

The exact version of netstat.exe, as copied from Explorer's Properties dialog, is "5.1.2600.5512 (xpsp.080413-0852)". I happen to be running XP SP3, but I'm not sure when this file was last updated. (Yes, I am using a non-admin account in XP. It's not as easy as it should be, but it's also not as hard as you might think.)

0

The following code will help you retrieve the PID of a process running on a particular port. In this case it is 5556.

import subprocess
import re

port = 5556
data = subprocess.check_output(['lsof', '-i:{}'.format(port)]).decode().split('\n')[1]
pid = re.match('^([a-zA-Z0-9]+)(\s+)([0-9]+)\s', data).groups()[2]
print(pid)

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