FUSER(1) manual page
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fuser - identify processes using files or sockets
fuser
[-fuv] [-a|-s] [-4|-6] [-c|-m|-n space] [ -k [-i] [-M] [-w] [-SIGNAL] ] name ...
fuser -l
fuser -V
fuser displays the PIDs of processes using the specified
files or file systems. In the default display mode, each file name is followed
by a letter denoting the type of access:
- c
- current directory.
- e
- executable
being run.
- f
- open file. f is omitted in default display mode.
- F
- open file
for writing. F is omitted in default display mode.
- r
- root directory.
- m
- mmap’ed
file or shared library.
fuser returns a non-zero return code if none of
the specified files is accessed or in case of a fatal error. If at least
one access has been found, fuser returns zero.
In order to look up processes
using TCP and UDP sockets, the corresponding name space has to be selected
with the -n option. By default fuser will look in both IPv6 and IPv4 sockets.
To change the default, behavior, use the -4 and -6 options. The socket(s)
can be specified by the local and remote port, and the remote address.
All fields are optional, but commas in front of missing fields must be
present:
[lcl_port][,[rmt_host][,[rmt_port]]]
Either symbolic or numeric
values can be used for IP addresses and port numbers.
fuser outputs only
the PIDs to stdout, everything else is sent to stderr.
- -a, --all
- Show
all files specified on the command line. By default, only files that are
accessed by at least one process are shown.
- -c
- Same as -m option, used for
POSIX compatibility.
- -f
- Silently ignored, used for POSIX compatibility.
- -k,
--kill
- Kill processes accessing the file. Unless changed with -SIGNAL, SIGKILL
is sent. An fuser process never kills itself, but may kill other fuser
processes. The effective user ID of the process executing fuser is set
to its real user ID before attempting to kill.
- -i, --interactive
- Ask the user
for confirmation before killing a process. This option is silently ignored
if -k is not present too.
- -l, --list-signals
- List all known signal names.
- -m NAME,
--mount NAME
- NAME specifies a file on a mounted file system or a block device
that is mounted. All processes accessing files on that file system are
listed. If a directory file is specified, it is automatically changed to
NAME/. to use any file system that might be mounted on that directory.
- -M
--ismountpoint
- Request will be fulfilled only if NAME specifies a mountpoint.
This is an invaluable seatbelt which prevents you from killing the machine
if NAME happens to not be a filesystem.
- -w
- Kill only processes which have
write access. This option is silently ignored if -k is not present too.
- -n
SPACE, --namespace SPACE
- Select a different name space. The name spaces file
(file names, the default), udp (local UDP ports), and tcp (local TCP ports)
are supported. For ports, either the port number or the symbolic name can
be specified. If there is no ambiguity, the shortcut notation name/space
(e.g. 80/tcp) can be used.
- -s, --silent
- Silent operation. -u and -v are ignored
in this mode. -a must not be used with -s.
- -SIGNAL
- Use the specified signal
instead of SIGKILL when killing processes. Signals can be specified either
by name (e.g. -HUP)orby number (e.g. -1). This option is silently ignored if the
-k option is not used.
- -u, --user
- Append the user name of the process owner
to each PID.
- -v, --verbose
-
Verbose mode. Processes are shown in a ps-like style.
The fields PID, USER and COMMAND are similar to ps. ACCESS shows how the
process accesses the file. Verbose mode will also show when a particular
file is being access as a mount point, knfs export or swap file. In this
case kernel is shown instead of the PID.
- -V, --version
- Display version information.
- -4, --ipv4
- Search only for IPv4 sockets. This option must not be used with
the -6 option and only has an effect with the tcp and udp namespaces.
- -6,
--ipv6
- Search only for IPv6 sockets. This option must not be used with the
-4 option and only has an effect with the tcp and udp namespaces.
- -
- Reset all
options and set the signal back to SIGKILL.
- /proc
- location of the proc
file system
- fuser -km /home
- kills all processes accessing the file
system /home in any way.
- if fuser -s /dev/ttyS1; then :; else something;
fi
- invokes something if no other process is using /dev/ttyS1.
- fuser telnet/tcp
- shows all processes at the (local) TELNET port.
Processes accessing
the same file or file system several times in the same way are only shown
once.
If the same object is specified several times on the command line,
some of those entries may be ignored.
fuser may only be able to gather partial
information unless run with privileges. As a consequence, files opened
by processes belonging to other users may not be listed and executables
may be classified as mapped only.
Installing fuser SUID root will avoid
problems associated with partial information, but may be undesirable for
security and privacy reasons.
udp and tcp name spaces, and UNIX domain sockets
can’t be searched with kernels older than 1.3.78.
Accesses by the kernel are
only shown with the -v option.
The -k option only works on processes. If the
user is the kernel, fuser will print an advice, but take no action beyond
that.
fuser -m /dev/sgX will show (or kill with the -k flag) all processes,
even if you don’t have that device configured. There may be other devices
it does this for too.
fuser cannot report on any processes that it doesn’t
have permission to look at the file descriptor table for. The most common
time this problem occurs is when looking for TCP or UDP sockets when running
fuser as a non-root user. In this case fuser will report no access
The mount
-m option will match any file within the save device as the specified file,
use the -M option as well if you mean to specify only the mount point.
kill(1)
, killall(1)
, lsof(8)
, pkill(1)
, ps(1)
, kill(2)
.
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