NAME
gerrit show-connections - Display active client SSH connections
SYNOPSIS
ssh -p <port> <host> gerrit show-connections [--numeric | -n]
DESCRIPTION
Presents a table of the active SSH connections, the users who are currently connected to the internal server and performing an activity.
ACCESS
Caller must be a member of the privileged Administrators group, or have been granted the View Connections global capability.
SCRIPTING
Intended for interactive use only.
OPTIONS
- --numeric
- -n
- 
Show client hostnames as IP addresses instead of DNS hostname. 
- --wide
- -w
- 
Do not format the output to the terminal width (default of 80 columns). 
DISPLAY
- Session
- 
Unique session identifier on this server. Session identifiers have a period of 2^32-1 and start from a random value. 
- Start
- 
Time (local to the server) that this connection started. 
- Idle
- 
Time since the last data transfer on this connection. Note that most SSH clients use not only a TCP based connection keep-alive, but also an encrypted keep alive higher up in the SSH protocol stack. That higher keep alive resets the idle timer, about once a minute. 
- User
- 
The username of the account that is authenticated on this connection. If the -n option is used, this column shows the Account Id instead. 
- Remote Host
- 
Reverse lookup hostname, or if -n option is used, the remote IP address. 
EXAMPLES
With reverse DNS lookup (default):
$ ssh -p 29418 review.example.com gerrit show-connections Session Start Idle User Remote Host -------------------------------------------------------------- 3abf31e6 20:09:02 00:00:00 jdoe jdoe-desktop.example.com --
Without reverse DNS lookup:
$ ssh -p 29418 review.example.com gerrit show-connections -n Session Start Idle User Remote Host -------------------------------------------------------------- 3abf31e6 20:09:02 00:00:00 a/1001240 10.0.0.1 --
Part of Gerrit Code Review