A library utility for reading netstat data. It's been tested on Ubuntu 14.04/16.04, Windows 7 and OS X Yosemite.
node-netstat can be installed via npm:
$ npm install node-netstat
var netstat = require('node-netstat');
netstat({
filter: {
pid: 4123,
protocol: 'tcp'
},
limit: 5
}, function (data) {
// a single line of data read from netstat
});
Executes a netstat query with any options
supplied and executes handler
for each line result read from netstat.
The handler
signature is void|boolean function(object parsedItem)
where parsedItem
represents a single result from netstat. A typical parsedItem
will look like this:
var item = {
protocol: String, // 'tcp', 'udp', or 'tcp6'
local: {
port: Number,
address: String // null if a loopback address
},
remote: {
port: Number,
address: String // null if a loopback address
},
state: '',
pid: Number // 0 if it could not be found/parsed
};
If the return value is false
, processing will stop and any remaining results will not be parsed.
- sync - (boolean) execute the operation synchronously.
- Execution is asynchronous by default.
- done - (function(error)) node-style callback, executed after the netstat command completed execution or encountered an error`.
- platform - (string) overrides the platform value returned from
os.platform()
. - limit - (number) limits the results read and parsed from the netstat process. Nothingness means no limit.
- filter - (object) a hash of value conditions for parsed line objects. If a key/value doesn't correspond with one(s) on a parsed object,
handler
won't get called. - watch - (boolean) repeatedly run until processing is cancelled by the line handler or by the external handler.
A hash map with command pattern objects:
{
cmd: 'netstat',
args: ['-lmnop', '--tcp']
};
The keys in netstat.commands
correspond to the standard os.platform()
return values ('linux', 'win32').
A hash map of line parse handlers with keys corresponding to os.platform()
values.
Line parsers have the following signature:
function (line, callback) {
// parse line contents
callback(parsedItem);
}
line
is a raw line of output read from netstat. callback
is a function and accepts a single argument: the parsed data object.
A hash map of the factory functions used to generate the default parsers with keys corresponding to os.platform()
values. Some factories include options that may be customized for specific use cases.
- parseName - (boolean) parse and include
processName
in results. Default: false
const netstat = require('node-netstat');
netstat.parsers.linux = netstat.parserFactories.linux({
parseName: true,
});
netstat({}, item => console.log(item));
/* output:
{ protocol: 'tcp',
local: { port: 631, address: '127.0.0.1' },
remote: { port: NaN, address: null },
state: 'LISTEN',
pid: 0,
processName: '' }
{ protocol: 'tcp',
local: { port: 1339, address: '127.0.0.1' },
remote: { port: NaN, address: null },
state: 'LISTEN',
pid: 10474,
processName: 'node' }
*/
A hash map of closure factories to handle logic for certain options. See source for more details on implementations for specific filters.
An object with several useful functions for implementing custom parsers.
The version of node-netstat
If the watch
option is set, the line handler can never be called. To deal with this scenario, a handler is returned and can be called to cancel netstat watching externally.
const impossibleFilter = {...};
let handler = netstat(impossibleFilter, item => console.log(item));
...
// Some time later we need to finish our script,
// we cancel netsat so
handler.cancel();
Any subsequent call to handler.cancel()
takes no effect.
node-netstat is highly extensible via the filters
, parsers
, and commands
properties.
If you see a bug or have a suggestion, feel free to open an issue here.
PR's welcome! There are no strict style guidelines, just follow best practices and try to keep with the general look & feel of the code present. All submissions must pass jslint and have a test to verify (if applicable).
Unlicense. This is a Public Domain work.
"Make art not law" -Nina Paley