1) IP Address for PLTW SERVER a) 172.30.0.2 b) 172.30.0.13 2) IP Address for LOGIN MACHINE a) 172.30.0.2 b) 172.30.0.13 3) A command lists your currently running processes. a) ps b) man c) -ef 4) It shows every process in a full-format listing instead of only the processes you spawned in an abbreviated format. a) ps b) man c) -ef 5) Commands to manipulate man pages: QUIT a) Space Bar b) B c) / d) H e) Q 6) Commands to manipulate man pages: scroll down a) Space Bar b) B c) / d) H e) Q 7) Commands to manipulate man pages: scroll back a) Space Bar b) B c) / d) H e) Q 8) Commands to manipulate man pages: help a) Space Bar b) B c) / d) H e) Q 9) Commands to manipulate man pages: to search for a phrase a) Space Bar b) B c) / d) H e) Q 10) Commands to manipulate man pages: to search for a phrase a) Space Bar b) B c) / d) H e) Q 11) The ID of the user that launched or spawned the process. You will explore the "root" user in just a few steps. a) UID b) PID c) PPID d) CMD 12) The parent process that started or spanwed this process. A value of 0 means the process was started as one of the first processes at boot time. You can see that most processes were started by the process called "kthread". a) UID b) PID c) PPID d) CMD 13) The process or command name. The command name often contains the directory path to the executable file. a) UID b) PID c) PPID d) CMD

Cybersecurity: Lesson 3.1.3 - Analyzing Processes

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