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Application which scans running processes on the system for given mappings (shared libraries, executables) or open file descriptors

Project description

Scans all running applications on a host to identify those using a shared library, or an executable, some other mapping, or an open file descriptor.

This application works on UNIX-derived systems (Linux, BSD, cygwin, etc). You can use it, for example, to scan for processes using a certain version of a shared library, or running under a certain interpreter. It can print a summarized view, or optionally print all matching mappings as well.

This application can also scan for open files, either fully qualified or partially qualified.

This could be paired with https://pypi-hypernode.com/pypi/remote_copy_and_execute to do audits of running software/library usage across many machines on a network.

You must be root to scan all running processes, otherwise this will only scan that which is running under your current user.

Usage

Usage: findProcessesUsing (options) [search portion]

Searches all running processes for those containing a given mapping, or an open file (with -f).

Mappings include running executables (like python), or a shared library, or a device.

Options:

-f or --files Scan for open files instead of mappings. This should not be a symbolic link.

-v or --verbose Also print mapping lines containing the given pattern, or matched filenames when given -f.

-e or --exact Require exact match. Default is to allow partial matches

-p or --pids-only Only print pids, one per line

-i or --ignore-case Search case-insensitively. By default, case must be an exact match.

--version Print the version -h or --help Display this message and quit

Examples:

findProcessesUsing libpython2.7 # Scan for any processes linking against anything containing “libpython2.7”

findProcessesUsing -f /var/lib/data.db # Scan for any processes with an open handle to “/var/lib/data.db”

It is recommended to run this process as root, otherwise you are only able to scan your own processes.

Example Usage

Scan for mappings of libc

]$ sudo findProcessesUsing libc | head -n 20 | tail -n5

Found libc in 803 (john) [ -bash ]

Found libc in 1060 (john) [ /usr/lib/tracker/tracker-extract ]

Found libc in 1062 (www) [ /usr/bin/httpd ]

Found libc in 808 (frankl) [ /bin/sh /usr/bin/startx ]

Found libc in 1065 (frankl) [ /usr/lib/tracker/tracker-miner-user-guides ]

Scan for open file descriptor of pty

]$ ./findProcessesUsing -f -v pty

Found pty {fd=0,1,2,31} in 2384 (user1) [ /bin/bash ]

0 = “/dev/pty1”

1 = “/dev/pty1”

2 = “/dev/pty1”

31 = “/dev/pty1”

Found pty {fd=3} in 5732 (user1) [ SCREEN ]

3 = “/dev/pty0”

Found pty {fd=0,1,2} in 6184 (user1) [ screen ]

0 = “/dev/pty0”

1 = “/dev/pty0”

2 = “/dev/pty0”

Found pty {fd=0,1,2} in 5772 (user1) [ python ]

0 = “/dev/pty2”

1 = “/dev/pty2”

2 = “/dev/pty2”

Found pty {fd=0,1,2,31} in 6672 (user1) [ -bash ]

0 = “/dev/pty0”

1 = “/dev/pty0”

2 = “/dev/pty0”

31 = “/dev/pty0”

Found pty {fd=0,1,2,31} in 6072 (user1) [ /bin/bash ]

0 = “/dev/pty3”

1 = “/dev/pty3”

2 = “/dev/pty3”

31 = “/dev/pty3”

Found pty {fd=0,1,2,31} in 4796 (user1) [ /bin/bash ]

0 = “/dev/pty2”

1 = “/dev/pty2”

2 = “/dev/pty2”

31 = “/dev/pty2”

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