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Sunday, June 05, 2011

Who Is Connected To Your Windows Machine?


See Who’s Connected to Your Computer

To see other computer who is connected to your computer through TCP/IP services such as FTP, POP3/SMTP just use the Netstat command from the command prompt.
  1. Click on Start -> Run, and then type “cmd” (without quotes) to access the MS-DOS.
  2. 2. On the MS-DOS screen type:
    netstat (seconds)For example: netstat 5
(seconds) represent how long will netstat update the TCP/IP connections.

If you are connected to a network or Internet and you want to see which services are connected to your system then you can find that out with a simple DOS command.
To find out who is connected to your PC, go to Start –> Run –> cmd. This will open up the DOS command prompt.
Type “netstat -a” in the

command prompt and you’ll see all the connections on your system that are active at this time.

See which process is involved in the connection

NETSTAT comes with a lot of options. One of them is that you can see the executable which is involved in each connection. You can type the following command to see the executables along with the connections.
C:>netstat -b

Automatically Refreshing

If you want that the netstat results be refreshed automatically at specific intervals and you don’t have to type in the command again and again, you can use the following command option:
C:>netstat <interval>
Where interval is any no. of seconds. For example if you want the results to be refreshed after every 5 seconds, then here is the command for it:
C:netstat 5

Saving the output results

If you want to have a log of your active connections, then you can use the following command:
C:>netstat -b 1 > “connections.txt”
This command will save the results of netstat after every one second. And if you want to quit saving the results, go to the cmd prompt where the command is running, press Ctrl+C to stop the command. The file connections.txt will be saved in the directory where you currently are. For example in my example case above, it will be saved in C:

 

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