Provided by: util-linux-extra_2.41-4ubuntu3_amd64 bug

NAME

       lsfd - list file descriptors

SYNOPSIS

       lsfd [option]

DESCRIPTION

       lsfd is intended to be a modern replacement for lsof(8) on Linux systems. Unlike lsof, lsfd is
       specialized to Linux kernel; it supports Linux specific features like namespaces with simpler code. lsfd
       is not a drop-in replacement for lsof; they are different in the command line interface and output
       formats.

       The default output is subject to change. So whenever possible, you should avoid using default outputs in
       your scripts. Always explicitly define expected columns by using --output columns-list in environments
       where a stable output is required.

       lsfd uses Libsmartcols for output formatting and filtering. See the description of --output option for
       customizing the output format, and --filter option for filtering. Use lsfd --list-columns to get a list
       of all available columns.

OPTIONS

       -l, --threads
           List in threads level.

       -J, --json
           Use JSON output format.

       -n, --noheadings
           Don’t print headings.

       -o, --output list
           Specify which output columns to print. See the OUTPUT COLUMNS section for details of available
           columns.

           The default list of columns may be extended if list is specified in the format +list (e.g., lsfd -o
           +DELETED).

       -r, --raw
           Use raw output format.

       --notruncate
           Don’t truncate text in columns.

       -p, --pid pids
           Collect information only for specified processes. pids is a list of pids. A comma or whitespaces can
           be used as separators. You can use this option with pidof(1). See FILTER EXAMPLES.

           Both -Q option with an expression including PID, e.g. -Q (PID == 1), and -p option, e.g. -p 1, may
           print the same output but using -p option is much more efficient because -p option works at a much
           earlier stage of processing than the -Q option.

       -i[4|6], --inet[=4|=6]
           List only IPv4 sockets and/or IPv6 sockets.

       -Q, --filter expr
           Print only the files matching the condition represented by the expr. See also scols-filter(5) and
           FILTER EXAMPLES.

       -C, --counter label:filter_expr
           Define a custom counter used in --summary output. lsfd makes a counter named label. During collect
           information, lsfd counts files matching filter_expr, and stores the counted number to the counter
           named label. lsfd applies filters defined with --filter options before counting; files excluded by
           the filters are not counted.

           See scols-filter(5) about filter_expr. label should not include { nor :. You can define multiple
           counters by specifying this option multiple times.

           See also COUNTER EXAMPLES.

       --summary[=when]
           This option controls summary lines output. The optional argument when can be only, append or never.
           If the when argument is omitted, it defaults to only.

           The summary reports counters. A counter consists of a label and an integer value. --counter is the
           option for defining a counter. If a user defines no counter, lsfd uses the definitions of pre-defined
           built-in counters (default counters) to make the summary output.

           CAUTION: Using --summary and --json may make the output broken. Only combining --summary=only and
           --json is valid.

       --debug-filter
           Dump the internal data structure for the filter and exit. This is useful only for lsfd developers.

       --dump-counters
           Dump the definition of counters used in --summary output.

       --hyperlink[=mode]
           Print paths as terminal hyperlinks. The mode can be set to "always", "never", or "auto". The optional
           argument when can be set to "auto", "never", or "always". If the when argument is omitted, it will
           default to "auto". The "auto" setting means that hyperlinks will only be used if the output is on a
           terminal.

       -H, --list-columns
           List available columns that you can specify at --output option.

       -h, --help
           Display help text and exit.

       -V, --version
           Display version and exit.

OUTPUT COLUMNS

       Each column has a type. Types are surround by < and >.

       CAUTION: The names and types of columns are not stable yet. They may be changed in the future releases.

       AINODECLASS <string>
           Class of anonymous inode.

       ASSOC <string>
           Association between file and process.

       BLKDRV <string>
           Block device driver name resolved by /proc/devices.

       BPF-MAP.ID <number>
           Bpf map ID.

       BPF-MAP.TYPE <string>
           Decoded name of bpf map type.

       BPF-MAP.TYPE.RAW <number>
           Bpf map type (raw).

       BPF.NAME <string>
           Bpf object name.

       BPF-PROG.ID <number>
           Bpf program ID.

       BPF-PROG.TAG <string>
           Bpf program TAG.

       BPF-PROG.TYPE <string>
           Decoded name of bpf program type.

       BPF-PROG.TYPE.RAW <number>
           Bpf program type (raw).

       CHRDRV <string>
           Character device driver name resolved by /proc/devices.

       COMMAND <string>
           Command of the process opening the file.

       DELETED <boolean>
           Reachability from the file system.

       DEV <string>
           ID of the device containing the file.

       DEVTYPE <string>
           Device type (blk, char, or nodev).

       ENDPOINTS <string>
           IPC endpoints information communicated with the fd.

           lsfd collects endpoints within the processes that lsfd scans; lsfd may miss some endpoints if you
           limits the processes with -p option.

           The format of the column depends on the object associated with the fd:

           FIFO type, mqueue type, ptmx and pts sources
               PID,COMMAND,ASSOC[-r][-w]

               The last characters ([-r][-w]) represent the read and/or write mode of the endpoint.

           eventfd type
               PID,COMMAND,ASSOC

           UNIX-STREAM
               PID,COMMAND,ASSOC[-r?][-w?]

               About the last characters ([-r?][-w?]), see the description of SOCK.SHUTDOWN.

       EVENTFD.ID <number>
           Eventfd ID.

       EVENTPOLL.TFDS <string>
           File descriptors targeted by the eventpoll file.

       FD <number>
           File descriptor for the file.

       FLAGS <string>
           Flags specified when opening the file.

       FUID <number>
           User ID number of the file’s owner.

       INET.LADDR <string>
           Local IP address.

       INET.RADDR <string>
           Remote IP address.

       INET6.LADDR <string>
           Local IP6 address.

       INET6.RADDR <string>
           Remote IP6 address.

       INODE <number>
           Inode number.

       INOTIFY.INODES <string>
           Cooked version of INOTIFY.INODES.RAW. The format of the element is inode-number,source-of-inode.

       INOTIFY.INODES.RAW <string>
           List of monitoring inodes. The format of the element is inode-number,device-major:device-minor.

       KNAME <string>
           Raw file name extracted from from /proc/pid/fd/fd or /proc/pid/map_files/region.

       KTHREAD <boolean>
           Whether the process is a kernel thread or not.

       MAJ:MIN <string>
           Device ID for special, or ID of device containing file.

       MAPLEN <number>
           Length of file mapping (in page).

       MISCDEV <string>
           Misc character device name resolved by /proc/misc.

       MNTID <number>
           Mount ID.

       MODE <string>
           Access mode (rwx).

       NAME <string>
           Cooked version of KNAME. It is mostly same as KNAME.

           Some files have special formats and information sources:

           AF_VSOCK
               state=SOCK.STATE type=SOCK.TYPE laddr=VSOCK.LADDR[ raddr=VSOCK.RADDR]

               raddr is not shown for listening sockets.

           bpf-map
               id=BPF-MAP.ID type=BPF-MAP.TYPE[ name=BPF.NAME]

           bpf-prog
               id=BPF-PROG.ID type=BPF-PROG.TYPE tag= BPF-PROG.TAG [ name=BPF.NAME]

           eventpoll
               tfds=EVENTPOLL.TFDS

           eventfd
               id=EVENTFD.ID

           inotify
               inodes=INOTIFY.INODES

           misc:tun
               iface=TUN.IFACE

           NETLINK
               protocol=NETLINK.PROTOCOL[ lport=NETLINK.LPORT[ group=NETLINK.GROUPS]]

           PACKET
               type=SOCK.TYPE[ protocol=PACKET.PROTOCOL][ iface=PACKET.IFACE]

           pidfd
               pid=TARGET-PID comm=TARGET-COMMAND nspid=TARGET-NSPIDS

               lsfd extracts TARGET-PID and TARGET-NSPIDS from /proc/pid/fdinfo/fd.

           PING
               state=SOCK.STATE[ id=PING.ID][ laddr=INET.LADDR [ raddr=INET.RADDR]]

           PINGv6
               state=SOCK.STATE[ id=PING.ID][ laddr=INET6.LADDR [ raddr=INET6.RADDR]]

           ptmx
               tty-index=PTMX.TTY-INDEX

               lsfd extracts PTMX.TTY-INDEX from /proc/pid/fdinfo/fd.

           RAW
               state=SOCK.STATE[ protocol=RAW.PROTOCOL [ laddr=INET.LADDR [ raddr=INET.RADDR]]]

           RAWv6
               state=SOCK.STATE[ protocol=RAW.PROTOCOL [ laddr=INET6.LADDR [ raddr=INET6.RADDR]]]

           signalfd
               mask=SIGNALFD.MASK

           TCP, TCPv6
               state=SOCK.STATE[ laddr=TCP.LADDR [ raddr=TCP.RADDR]]

           timerfd
               clockid=TIMERFD.CLOCKID[ remaining=TIMERFD.REMAINING [ interval=TIMERFD.INTERVAL]]

           UDP, UDPv6
               state=SOCK.STATE[ laddr=UDP.LADDR [ raddr=UDP.RADDR]]

               lsfd hides raddr= if UDP.RADDR is 0.0.0.0 and UDP.RPORT is 0.

           UDP-LITE, UDPLITEv6
               state=SOCK.STATE[ laddr=UDPLITE.LADDR [ raddr=UDPLITE.RADDR]]

           UNIX-STREAM
               state=SOCK.STATE[ path=UNIX.PATH]

           UNIX
               state=SOCK.STATE[ path=UNIX.PATH] type=SOCK.TYPE

          Note that (deleted) markers are removed from this column. Refer to KNAME, DELETED, or XMODE to
          know the readability of the file from the file system.

       NETLINK.GROUPS <number>
           Netlink multicast groups.

       NETLINK.LPORT <number>
           Netlink local port id.

       NETLINK.PROTOCOL <string>
           Netlink protocol.

       NLINK <number>
           Link count.

       NS.NAME <string>
           Name (NS.TYPE:[INODE]) of the namespace specified with the file.

       NS.TYPE <string>
           Type of the namespace specified with the file. The type is mnt, cgroup, uts, ipc, user, pid, net,
           time, or unknown.

       OWNER <string>
           Owner of the file.

       PACKET.IFACE <string>
           Interface name associated with the packet socket.

       PACKET.PROTOCOL <string>
           L2 protocol associated with the packet socket.

       PARTITION <string>
           Block device name resolved by /proc/partition.

       PID <number>
           PID of the process opening the file.

       PIDFD.COMM <string>
           Command of the process targeted by the pidfd.

       PIDFD.NSPID <string>
           Value of NSpid field in /proc/pid/fdinfo/fd of the pidfd.

           Quoted from kernel/fork.c of Linux source tree:

              If pid namespaces are supported then this function will also print the pid of a given pidfd
              refers to for all descendant pid namespaces starting from the current pid namespace of the
              instance, i.e. the Pid field and the first entry in the NSpid field will be identical.

              Note that this differs from the Pid and NSpid fields in /proc/<pid>/status where Pid and
              NSpid are always shown relative to the pid namespace of the procfs instance.

       PIDFD.PID <number>
           PID of the process targeted by the pidfd.

       PING.ID <`number`>
           ICMP echo request id used on the PING socket.

       POS <number>
           File position.

       RAW.PROTOCOL <number>
           Protocol number of the raw socket.

       RDEV <string>
           Device ID (if special file).

       SIGNALFD.MASK <string>
           Masked signals.

       SIZE <number>
           File size.

       SOCK.LISTENING <boolean>
           Listening socket.

       SOCK.NETS <number>
           Inode identifying network namespace where the socket belongs to.

       SOCK.PROTONAME <string>
           Protocol name.

       SOCK.SHUTDOWN <string>
           Shutdown state of socket.

           [-r?]
               If the first character is r, the receptions are allowed. If it is -, the receptions are
               disallowed. If it is ?, the state is unknown.

           [-w?]
               If the second character is w, the transmissions are allowed. If it is -, the transmissions are
               disallowed. If it is ?, the state is unknown.

       SOCK.STATE <string>
           State of socket.

       SOCK.TYPE <string>
           Type of socket. Here type means the second parameter of socket system call:

           •   stream

           •   dgram

           •   raw

           •   rdm

           •   seqpacket

           •   dccp

           •   packet

       SOURCE <string>
           File system, partition, or device containing the file. For the association having ERROR as the value
           for TYPE column, lsfd fills this column with syscall:_errno_.

       STTYPE <string>
           Raw file types returned from stat(2): BLK, CHR, DIR, FIFO, LINK, REG, SOCK, or UNKN.

       TCP.LADDR <string>
           Local L3 (INET.LADDR or INET6.LADDR) address and local TCP port.

       TCP.LPORT <number>
           Local TCP port.

       TCP.RADDR <string>
           Remote L3 (INET.RADDR or INET6.RADDR) address and remote TCP port.

       TCP.RPORT <number>
           Remote TCP port.

       TID <number>
           Thread ID of the process opening the file.

       TIMERFD.CLOCKID <string>
           Clockid.

       TIMERFD.INTERVAL <number>
           Interval.

       TIMERFD.REMAINING <number>
           Remaining time.

       PTMX.TTY-INDEX <number>
           TTY index of the counterpart.

       TUN.IFACE <string>
           Network interface behind the tun device.

       TYPE <string>
           Cooked version of STTYPE. It is same as STTYPE with exceptions. For SOCK, print the value for
           SOCK.PROTONAME. For UNKN, print the value for AINODECLASS if SOURCE is anon_inodefs.

           If lsfd gets an error when calling a syscall to know about a target file descriptor, lsfd fills this
           column for it with ERROR.

       UDP.LADDR <string>
           Local IP address and local UDP port.

       UDP.LPORT <number>
           Local UDP port.

       UDP.RADDR <string>
           Remote IP address and remote UDP port.

       UDP.RPORT <number>
           Remote UDP port.

       UDPLITE.LADDR <string>
           Local IP address and local UDPLite port.

       UDPLITE.LPORT <number>
           Local UDP port.

       UDPLITE.RADDR <string>
           Remote IP address and remote UDPLite port.

       UDPLITE.RPORT <number>
           Remote UDP port.

       UID <number>
           User ID number.

       UNIX.PATH <string>
           Filesystem pathname for UNIX domain socket.

       USER <string>
           User of the process.

       VSOCK.LADDR <string>, VSOCK.RADDR <string>
           Local VSOCK address. The format of the element is VSOCK.LCID:VSOCK.LPORT.

           Well-known CIDs will be decoded: “*”, “hypervisor”, “local”, or “host”. Well-known ports will be
           decoded: “*”.

       VSOCK.LCID <number>, VSOCK.RCID <number>
           Local and remote VSOCK context identifiers.

       VSOCK.LPORT <number>, VSOCK.RPORT <number>
           Local and remote VSOCK ports.

       XMODE <string>
           Extended version of MODE. This column may grow; new letters may be appended to XMODE when lsfd
           supports a new state of file descriptors and/or memory mappings.

           [-r]
               opened of mapped for reading. This is also in MODE.

           [-w]
               opened of mapped for writing. This is also in MODE.

           [-x]
               mapped for executing the code. This is also in MODE.

           [-D]
               deleted from  the file system. See also DELETED.

           [-Ll]
               locked or leased. l represents a read, a shared lock or a read lease. L represents a write or an
               exclusive lock or a write lease. If both read/shared and write/exclusive locks or leases are
               taken by a file descriptor, L is used as the flag.

           [-m]
               Multiplexed. If the file descriptor is targeted by a eventpoll file or classical system calls for
               multiplexing (select, pselect, poll, and ppoll), this bit flag is set. Note that if an invocation
               of the classical system calls is interrupted, lsfd may fail to mark m on the file descriptors
               monitored by the invocation. See restart_syscall(2).

FILTER EXAMPLES

       lsfd has few options for filtering. In most of cases, what you should know is -Q (or --filter) option.
       Combined with -o (or --output) option, you can customize the output as you want.

       List files associated with PID 1 and PID 2 processes:

           # lsfd -Q '(PID == 1) or (PID == 2)'

       Do the same in an alternative way:

           # lsfd -Q '(PID == 1) || (PID == 2)'

       Do the same in a more efficient way:

           # lsfd --pid 1,2

       Whitespaces can be used instead of a comma:

           # lsfd --pid '1 2'

       Utilize pidof(1) for list the files associated with "firefox":

           # lsfd --pid "$(pidof firefox)"

       List the 1st file descriptor opened by PID 1 process:

           # lsfd -Q '(PID == 1) and (FD == 1)'

       Do the same in an alternative way:

           # lsfd -Q '(PID == 1) && (FD == 1)'

       List all running executables:

           # lsfd -Q 'ASSOC == "exe"'

       Do the same in an alternative way:

           # lsfd -Q 'ASSOC eq "exe"'

       Do the same but print only file names:

           # lsfd -o NAME -Q 'ASSOC eq "exe"' | sort -u

       List deleted files associated to processes:

           # lsfd -Q 'DELETED'

       List non-regular files:

           # lsfd -Q 'TYPE != "REG"'

       List block devices:

           # lsfd -Q 'DEVTYPE == "blk"'

       Do the same with TYPE column:

           # lsfd -Q 'TYPE == "BLK"'

       List files including "dconf" directory in their names:

           # lsfd -Q 'NAME =~ ".\*/dconf/.*"'

       List files opened in a QEMU virtual machine:

           # lsfd -Q '(COMMAND =~ ".\*qemu.*") and (FD >= 0)'

       List timerfd files expired within 0.5 seconds:

           # lsfd -Q '(TIMERFD.remaining < 0.5) and (TIMERFD.remaining > 0.0)'

       List processes communicating via unix stream sockets:

           # lsfd  -Q 'TYPE == "UNIX-STREAM" && UNIX.PATH =~ ".+"' -oUNIX.PATH,PID,COMMAND,FD,SOCK.STATE,ENDPOINTS

       List processes communicating via a specified unix stream socket:

           # lsfd  -Q 'TYPE == "UNIX-STREAM" && UNIX.PATH == "@/tmp/.X11-unix/X0"' -oUNIX.PATH,PID,COMMAND,FD,SOCK.STATE,ENDPOINTS

COUNTER EXAMPLES

       Report the numbers of netlink socket descriptors and unix socket descriptors:

           # lsfd --summary=only \
                   -C 'netlink sockets':'(NAME =~ "NETLINK:.*")' \
                   -C 'unix sockets':'(NAME =~ "UNIX:.*")'
           VALUE COUNTER
              57 netlink sockets
            1552 unix sockets

       Do the same but print in JSON format:

           # lsfd --summary=only --json \
                   -C 'netlink sockets':'(NAME =~ "NETLINK:.*")' \
                   -C 'unix sockets':'(NAME =~ "UNIX:.*")'
           {
              "lsfd-summary": [
                 {
                    "value": 15,
                    "counter": "netlink sockets"
                 },{
                    "value": 798,
                    "counter": "unix sockets"
                 }
              ]
           }

HISTORY

       The lsfd command is part of the util-linux package since v2.38.

AUTHORS

       Masatake YAMATO <yamato@redhat.com>, Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>

SEE ALSO

       bpftool(8), bps(8), lslocks(8), lsof(8), pidof(1), proc(5), scols-filter(5), socket(2), ss(8), stat(2),
       vsock(7)

REPORTING BUGS

       For bug reports, use the issue tracker <https://github.com/util-linux/util-linux/issues>.

AVAILABILITY

       The lsfd command is part of the util-linux package which can be downloaded from Linux Kernel Archive
       <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/>.

util-linux 2.41                                    2025-07-02                                            LSFD(1)