I'm writing a small script to monitor if certain ports are attempted to be accessed on my Linux box (Centos 6) using Perl 5.10.1. I'm getting back blank entries for my peerhost request. I'm not sure why. It sounds like it may be a failure in the IO socket module (http://snowhare.com/utilities/perldoc2tree/example/IO/Socket.html) but I'm not really sure. Any insight would be much appreciated.
EDIT:
Since I enabled the strict and warnings I'm getting an 'uninitialized value $display' in the cases where I thought it was blank.
#! /usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use IO::Socket;
use Sys::Syslog qw( :DEFAULT setlogsock);
use threads;
my @threads=();
my @ports=(88,110,389);
main(\@ports);
sub main
{
my $ports=shift;
setlogsock('unix');
openlog($0,'','user');
for my $port (@{$ports} ) {
push @threads, threads->create(\&create_monitor, $port );
}
$_->join foreach @threads;
closelog;
# wait for all threads to finish
}
sub create_monitor{
my $LocalPort=shift;
my $sock = new IO::Socket::INET (
LocalPort => $LocalPort,
Proto => 'tcp',
Listen => 1,
Reuse => 1,
) or die "Could not create socket: $!\n";
while(1)
{
my $peer_connection= $sock->accept;
my $display = $peer_connection->peerhost();
my $message="Connection attempt on port $LocalPort from $display";
#syslog('info', $message);
print $message."\n";
}
}
NOTE - it is intentional that this script never finish. I'll eventually wrap this with an init script and have it run as a service.
use strict; use warnings;at the top of the script. You script contains some errors that you should fix first. Also, the shebang may be invalid. Also, your loop will never finish, as it doesn't have a termination condition. Therefore, your threads will never join. – amon Jan 3 at 16:38