ss - another utility to investigate sockets
ss [options] [ FILTER ]
ss is used to dump socket statistics. It allows showing information similar to netstat. It can display more TCP and state information than other tools.
When no option is used ss displays a list of open non-listening sockets (e.g. TCP/UNIX/UDP) that have established connection.
Show summary of options.
Output version information.
Suppress header line.
Print each socket's data on a single line.
Do not try to resolve service names. Show exact bandwidth values, instead of human-readable.
Try to resolve numeric address/ports.
Display both listening and non-listening (for TCP this means established connections) sockets.
Display only listening sockets (these are omitted by default).
Show timer information. For TCP protocol, the output format is:
timer:(<timer_name>,<expire_time>,<retrans>)
the name of the timer, there are five kind of timer names:
on : means one of these timers: TCP retrans timer, TCP early retrans timer and tail loss probe timer
keepalive: tcp keep alive timer
timewait: timewait stage timer
persist: zero window probe timer
unknown: none of the above timers
how long time the timer will expire
how many times the retransmission occurred
Show detailed socket information. The output format is:
uid:<uid_number> ino:<inode_number> sk:<cookie>
the user id the socket belongs to
the socket's inode number in VFS
an uuid of the socket
Show socket memory usage. The output format is:
skmem:(r<rmem_alloc>,rb<rcv_buf>,t<wmem_alloc>,tb<snd_buf>,
f<fwd_alloc>,w<wmem_queued>,o<opt_mem>,
bl<back_log>,d<sock_drop>)
the memory allocated for receiving packet
the total memory can be allocated for receiving packet
the memory used for sending packet (which has been sent to layer 3)
the total memory can be allocated for sending packet
the memory allocated by the socket as cache, but not used for receiving/sending packet yet. If need memory to send/receive packet, the memory in this cache will be used before allocate additional memory.
The memory allocated for sending packet (which has not been sent to layer 3)
The memory used for storing socket option, e.g., the key for TCP MD5 signature
The memory used for the sk backlog queue. On a process context, if the process is receiving packet, and a new packet is received, it will be put into the sk backlog queue, so it can be received by the process immediately
the number of packets dropped before they are de-multiplexed into the socket
Show process using socket.
Show internal TCP information. Below fields may appear:
show string "ts" if the timestamp option is set
show string "sack" if the sack option is set
show string "ecn" if the explicit congestion notification option is set
show string "ecnseen" if the saw ecn flag is found in received packets
show string "fastopen" if the fastopen option is set
the congestion algorithm name, the default congestion algorithm is "cubic"
if window scale option is used, this field shows the send scale factor and receive scale factor
tcp re-transmission timeout value, the unit is millisecond
used for exponential backoff re-transmission, the actual re-transmission timeout value is icsk_rto << icsk_backoff
rtt is the average round trip time, rttvar is the mean deviation of rtt, their units are millisecond
ack timeout, unit is millisecond, used for delay ack mode
max segment size
congestion window size
path MTU value
tcp congestion window slow start threshold
bytes acked
bytes received
segments sent out
segments received
egress bps
how long time since the last packet sent, the unit is millisecond
how long time since the last packet received, the unit is millisecond
how long time since the last ack received, the unit is millisecond
the pacing rate and max pacing rate
a helper variable for TCP internal auto tuning socket receive buffer
MPTCP subflow information
Show ToS and priority information. Below fields may appear:
IPv4 Type-of-Service byte
IPv6 Traffic Class byte
Class id set by net_cls cgroup. If class is zero this shows priority set by SO_PRIORITY.
Show cgroup information. Below fields may appear:
Cgroup v2 pathname. This pathname is relative to the mount point of the hierarchy.
Attempts to forcibly close sockets. This option displays sockets that are successfully closed and silently skips sockets that the kernel does not support closing. It supports IPv4 and IPv6 sockets only.
Print summary statistics. This option does not parse socket lists obtaining summary from various sources. It is useful when amount of sockets is so huge that parsing /proc/net/tcp is painful.
Continually display sockets as they are destroyed
As the -p option but also shows process security context.
For netlink(7) sockets the initiating process context is displayed as follows:
If valid pid show the process context.
If destination is kernel (pid = 0) show kernel initial context.
If a unique identifier has been allocated by the kernel or netlink user, show context as "unavailable". This will generally indicate that a process has more than one netlink socket active.
As the -Z option but also shows the socket context. The socket context is taken from the associated inode and is not the actual socket context held by the kernel. Sockets are typically labeled with the context of the creating process, however the context shown will reflect any policy role, type and/or range transition rules applied, and is therefore a useful reference.
Switch to the specified network namespace name.
Show socket BPF filters (only administrators are allowed to get these information).
Display only IP version 4 sockets (alias for -f inet).
Display only IP version 6 sockets (alias for -f inet6).
Display PACKET sockets (alias for -f link).
Display TCP sockets.
Display UDP sockets.
Display DCCP sockets.
Display RAW sockets.
Display Unix domain sockets (alias for -f unix).
Display SCTP sockets.
Display vsock sockets (alias for -f vsock).
Display XDP sockets (alias for -f xdp).
Display inet socket options.
Display sockets of type FAMILY. Currently the following families are supported: unix, inet, inet6, link, netlink, vsock, xdp.
List of socket tables to dump, separated by commas. The following identifiers are understood: all, inet, tcp, udp, raw, unix, packet, netlink, unix_dgram, unix_stream, unix_seqpacket, packet_raw, packet_dgram, dccp, sctp, vsock_stream, vsock_dgram, xdp Any item in the list may optionally be prefixed by an exclamation mark (!) to exclude that socket table from being dumped.
Do not display anything, just dump raw information about TCP sockets to FILE after applying filters. If FILE is - stdout is used.
Read filter information from FILE. Each line of FILE is interpreted like single command line option. If FILE is - stdin is used.
Please take a look at the official documentation for details regarding filters.
STATE-FILTER allows to construct arbitrary set of states to match. Its syntax is sequence of keywords state and exclude followed by identifier of state.
All standard TCP states: established, syn-sent, syn-recv, fin-wait-1, fin-wait-2, time-wait, closed, close-wait, last-ack, listening and closing.
all - for all the states
connected - all the states except for listening and closed
synchronized - all the connected states except for syn-sent
bucket - states, which are maintained as minisockets, i.e. time-wait and syn-recv
big - opposite to bucket
Display all TCP sockets.
Display all TCP sockets with process SELinux security contexts.
Display all UDP sockets.
Display all established ssh connections.
Find all local processes connected to X server.
List all the tcp sockets in state FIN-WAIT-1 for our apache to network 193.233.7/24 and look at their timers.
List sockets in all states from all socket tables but TCP.
ip(8),
RFC 793 - https://tools.ietf.org/rfc/rfc793.txt (TCP states)
ss was written by Alexey Kuznetsov, <kuznet@ms2.inr.ac.ru>.
This manual page was written by Michael Prokop <mika@grml.org> for the Debian project (but may be used by others).