Centos Oneliners
Contents
Centos Oneliners
This will be a place to save my oneliners
Centos Oneliners
kill all pts
for x in $(ps aux | grep pts| awk '{print $2}'); do kill $x; done
Apache Oneliners
Check the Number of IP's Connecting over Port 80
netstat -tn | grep :80 | awk '{print $5}'| cut -d: -f1 | uniq -c | sort -rn | head
Check what IP's are getting the most traffic
netstat -tn | grep EST | grep :80 | awk '{print $4}' |cut -d: -f1 | uniq -c | sort -rn
Mysql Oneliners
Show locked tables
show open tables WHERE In_use > 0;
Qmail Oneliners
who are the top senders for the outgoing (remote) queue
/var/qmail/bin/qmqtool -R | awk '/ From:/ {h[$0]++} END {for (x in h) {print h[x], x}}' | sort -rn | head -20
who are the top recipients of the outgoing (remote) queue
/var/qmail/bin/qmqtool -R | awk '/ To:/ {h[$0]++} END {for (x in h) {print h[x], x}}' | sort -rn | head -20
what are the top subjects of the outgoing (remote) queue
/var/qmail/bin/qmqtool -R | awk '/ Subject:/ {h[$0]++} END {for (x in h) {print h[x], x}}' | sort -rn | head -20
what domains are have the most mail in the outgoing (remote) queue
/var/qmail/bin/qmqtool -R | grep "To: " | cut -d @ -f2 | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -20
who are the top receivers for the incoming (local) queue
/var/qmail/bin/qmqtool -L | grep "To: " | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -20
what domains are have the most mail in the incoming (local) queue
/var/qmail/bin/qmqtool -L | grep "To: " | cut -d @ -f2 | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -20
how many messages are queued up in the incoming (local) queue for a specific domain
DOMAIN="masdox.com"; /var/qmail/bin/qmqtool -L | grep "To: " | grep $DOMAIN |sort | wc -l
view the messages in the incoming (local) queue for a specific domain
DOMAIN="masdox.com"; /var/qmail/bin/qmqtool -L | grep "To: " | grep $DOMAIN |sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -20
list all domains with catch-alls
for x in /home/*/var/*/mail/catchall; do echo "$(echo $x | cut -d/ -f5) - $(cat $x)"; done; for x in /home/*/var/*/mail/.catchall; do echo "$(echo $x | cut -d/ -f5) - $(cat $x)"; done;
all domains with bounce turned off (and don't have a catchall which requires bounce to be turned off)
(for x in /home/*/var/*/mail; do if [ ! -e $x/.bounceon -a ! -e $x/.catchall ]; then echo "$x"; fi; done;) | cut -d/ -f5 | sort
which domains with bounce off or catchalls are getting the most messages
grep 'accepted any recipient' /var/log/smtp/* | awk '{print $11}' | sed 's/[<>]//g' | cut -d@ -f2 | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | head -20
list everyone with a vacation message
find /home/*/var/*/mail/*/vacation -type f ! -size 0
print out every vacation message
for x in $(find /home/*/var/*/mail/*/vacation -type f ! -size 0); do echo $x; cat $x; echo -e "\n\n-------------------"; done;
how man imap/pop3 connections are usually open. also look for it approaching the limit
awk '/tcpserver: status/ {print $4}' /var/log/imap4-ssl/* | sort | uniq -c | sort -k2 -n awk '/tcpserver: status/ {print $4}' /var/log/pop3-ssl/* | sort | uniq -c | sort -k2 -n awk '/tcpserver: status/ {print $4}' /var/log/imap4/* | sort | uniq -c | sort -k2 -n awk '/tcpserver: status/ {print $4}' /var/log/pop3/* | sort | uniq -c | sort -k2 -n