Archivo de la categoría: 4to Info
Campaña “Internet Segura” CEG
Para una navegación responsable, provechosa y divertida. Campaña “Internet Segura” del Complejo Educativo “Dr. F. de Gurruchaga” – Rosario
Con alumnos de 2do, 3ro y 4to del área Informática del CEG.
Excelente experiencia!
Curso de Lógica binaria
1. Introducción
Señales analógicas y digitales
2. Código binario, decimal y hexadecimal
Introducción
De binario a decimal
De decimal a binario
Sistema hexadecimal
3. Tabla de verdad
La tabla de verdad
4. Funciones lógicas
Operaciones lógicas básicas
Función lógica vs tabla de verdad
Tabla de verdad vs función lógica
Álgebra de Boole
CASO – TP Multitarea
Why don’t the iPad and iPhone support multitasking? The answer isn’t what you think.

1- Para un iPad, iPhon y tu celular: buscar Hardware, SO y características del SO
2- Multitarea: que es? como funciona? buscar gráficos y videos que la expliquen
3- En qué generación de SO se uso el multitasking, porqué? cómo?
4- Traducir el artículo http://blog.rlove.org/2010/04/why-ipad-and-iphone-dont-support.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+rlove+%28Robert+Love%29&utm_content=Google+Reader
5- Responder a la pregunta con un desarrollo personal
6- Exponer su trabajo en 7 minutos
http://www.google.com.ar/url?sa=t&source=video&oi=video_result&cad=17143426215135449525&ct=res&cd=28&ved=0CCIQtwIwBzgU&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3D7emvUBpEkbU&ei=CaG4S4qSFsKPuAf7lLmdCA&usg=AFQjCNFVpEpbDRra4Uf60QBpq3mBEntCPQ&sig2=gYx3b15BfRxeK9LV-g_HMQ
CASO – TP Multitarea
TP Multitarea: Why don’t the iPad and iPhone support multitasking? The answer isn’t what you think.
1- Para un iPad, iPhon y tu celular: buscar Hardware, SO, características del SO http://images.appleinsider.com/multitasking.png
2- Multitarea: que es? como funciona? buscar gráficos y videos que la expliquen
3- En qué generación de SO se uso el multitasking, porqué? cómo?
4- Traducir el artículo http://blog.rlove.org/2010/04/why-ipad-and-iphone-dont-support.html
5- Responder a la pregunta con un desarrollo personal
6- Exponer su trabajo en 7 minutos
http://www.chw.net/2010/07/windows-phone-7-no-tendra-multitasking/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7emvUBpEkbU
Informática, tecnología y multimedia — UOCOpenCourseWare
Informática, tecnología y multimedia — UOCOpenCourseWare
How to Fix Your Relatives’ Terrible Computer – Repair – Lifehacker
How to Fix Your Relatives’ Terrible Computer – Repair – Lifehacker
Computer won’t boot, needs a re-install
The problem: Turning on the computer results in a message that states Windows can’t boot because something is missing (a boot loader, an important file, etc.) or something is wrong. There are many variations on this message, but they all say basically the same thing: You will not be getting into Windows.
Quick-fix triage: Load the original XP, Vista, or Windows 7 (Really? Broken already?) CD or DVD in the system and boot the system from there, which might require hitting a key to bring up “boot options” or pressing a key when asked to “Press any key to boot from CD.” Wait for the CD to load—it may seem like it’s installing, but it’s just loading a mini-system for installation and, in this case, repair. Follow the prompts to repair an existing installation, or, in the case of Vista or 7, ask it to repair the startup process.
What you’ll need:
- XP, Vista, or Windows 7 installation CD/DVD: It may be from a computer manufacturer and not look like a Microsoft-obtained, holograph-packed disc, so look around a bit. If it’s a “System Restoration” disc, be sure that you can boot from it and install a full copy of Windows from it.
- USB thumb drive: At least 1GB in size.
- External USB drive or blank DVDs: For backing up important files.
- Ubuntu Live CD or Knoppix Live CD: Both are Linux distributions, but we’re just using them because they run on most kinds of hardware without installing, and can transfer the files you need to your backup media. Ubuntu should work; if it doesn’t, give Knoppix a go. You can use the free tool UNetBootin to transfer the ISO you downloaded to a thumb drive, which is necessary if you’re backing up to DVDs, and recommended in any case to speed things up.
If that doesn’t work, and you really feel this system can boot again except for some silly error, try creating an Ultimate Recovery CD, as detailed at the How-To Geek’s home away from Lifehacker.
If that worked, hooray! If not, soldier on to the next step.
Back up the files: Have your USB hard drive or blank DVDs handy, and remove the Windows CD/DVD from the computer if you tried to use that for a fix. Stick your thumb drive with the Ubuntu (or Knoppix) image into a USB slot, then boot up the computer. You may have to hit F12 or another key to boot from USB, or change a setting in the BIOS (which you can access by hitting a key—written in that fast-disappearing text—at boot-up). You’ll be asked to choose a language, then hit the option to “Try Ubuntu without any changes.” After some loading, you’ll arrive at an Ubuntu desktop.Move your cursor to the “Places” menu, and check to see that your USB drive (MyBook, in my case) or blank DVD is showing up. You should also see the hard drive Windows is running from. On an XP or Vista system, there’s usually just one, but on Windows 7, there are two—a “System Reserved” (fairly small) and a larger, main drive. Check to see that you can open and access those files as well.
Ask your relatives which files and documents are important to them. When doing my own tech support work, I usually back up the entire “My Documents” folder (with “My Music” and “My Pictures” included), their Outlook or (yes, sometimes) Outlook Express email data (explained here), and their Firefox profile or, more likely, their “Favorites” folder for Internet Explorer (
C:\Documents and Settings\Username\Favoritesin XP, or C:\Users\Username\Favorites in Vista or 7). In any case, always ask, and make sure there isn’t any software they can’t locate a license for.
When you’re ready to back up, simply open your USB drive from the Places menu, then open your main Windows drive, and drag files to copy from your Windows system onto the backup medium.
If you’re burning to DVD, head to the Applications menu in your temporary Ubuntu system, mouse over the Accessories sub-menu, and select “CD/DVD Creator” when it pops up. You’ll get a folder you can drag files you want to burn into, then hit “Write to Disc” to burn them.When you’re all done backing up files, head to the menu with the power icon next to it (labeled “Live user,” most likely) and select “Shut Down.” You’ll eventually be prompted to remove your live CD or USB stick—do so, and swap in the Windows installation CD or DVD. Turn off the system, then turn it back on. Follow the instructions to install Windows on the system, erasing whatever partitions or data exist on there at the moment (assuming you’re sure the important stuff is backed up).
Clogged with crapware
The problem: The computer boots up … eventually. Programs open very slowly, the hard drive seems to click and whir endlessly, and messages, reminders, and pop-up windows jump onto the screen every few minutes.
Quick-fix triage: If you don’t suspect there’s anything actually malicious and infectious on the system—that is, you’re fairly sure they’ve been running and updating an anti-virus and anti-malware client—grab a copy of Revo Uninstaller Portable (direct ZIP file link), and run it off the USB stick you brought with you.
Click the “Tools” button, choose the Autorun menu on the left, and look through the items on the right. Uncheck the stuff that’s really unnecessary—most of it, really, unless they constantly use a printer/scanner or run an antivirus app—and remind your host to un-check the toolbars and “helper” apps offered when installing things.If things are much better now, and you don’t imagine that malware is an issue, you’re all done. Otherwise …
What you’ll need: Mostly a small batch of software, recommended by this author and the How-To Geek. You can run these once and remove them, or run them off a thumb drive, in some cases. The last download is one you’ll keep installed on the system.
- Revo Uninstaller Portable: Completely, utterly removes the programs, toolbars, and other junk apps that aren’t needed.
- SuperAntiSpyware: For cleaning (you guessed it) spyware.
- Malwarebytes (or its portable version): For the clingy cookies, add-ons, and apps that try and do unauthorized stuff.
- CCleaner Portable: For freeing up hard drive space and clearing out temp/cache files that bog down the system index.
- Microsoft Security Essentials or Panda Cloud Antivirus: The former for a system that’s got enough horsepower to be adequate, the latter for a system that’s light on resources.
The fixing process? It’s nothing special, actually—just run the quick-fix triage in any case, removing the auto-run apps that bog down system resources, and then run these secondary apps, generally in the order they’re listed. Keep Security Essentials or Panda Cloud Antivirus installed (not both!), and, while you’re being helpful, back up this computer’s pictures, music, and important documents.Tuning up and bomb-proofing
Maybe everything technically “works,” but watching your relatives open emails in Outlook Express and browse on Internet Explorer 6 is just, well, painful. Here are the steps we recommend to get things moving:
- Run the basics of the “clogged with crapware” section: The one involving Revo Uninstaller and startup programs, under the “quick-fix triage” sub-section, and installing either Microsoft Security Essentials or Panda Cloud Antivirus.
- Install Firefox and make it the default: Be sure to use the bookmark and setting import from Internet Explorer. You could even go with Google Chrome for even tighter security and speed, if your relatives wouldn’t mind the abrupt shift in look and feel.
Set up their email in Gmail: Gmail has made it much easier to import email accounts, whether they’re AOL, cable company, or other defaults that just stuck around. You can make a simple switch in the settings to keep your relatives receiving and sending email from their same address (or multiple addresses). Save their Gmail password in Firefox, but make sure they know it, and they’ll even get some new-fangled email portability.- Physically clean the beast: Stop by the local office store, grab a can of compressed air, and clean out the “dust bunnies”, especially if you can hear the exhaust fans over the mid-day football.
- Replace cruddy programs with superior alternatives: Gina’s 2008 recommendations still hold up, but we updated them a bit, and made them super-easy to install in one shot, with our Lifehacker Pack 2009. Or use Ninite for a similar one-click awesomeware package.
Trabajo Práctico Evolución de los Procesadores y los Sistemas Operativos
Trabajo Práctico Evolución de los Procesadores y los Sistemas Operativos
http://www.kbglob.com/gnulinux/evolucion-de-los-sistemas-operativos/
- Realizar en una hoja de calculo de http://docs.google.com un cuadro comparativo con las siguientes caracteristicas de los procesadores: año, empresa, modelo, cantidad de transistores, velocidad, bus de datos, bus de direcciones, memoria, dispositivos de almacenamiento, precio, sistema operativo, imagen.
- Detallar los requerimientos mínimos de cada versión de S.O.
- Crear un video sobre evolución de los sistemas operativos en http://animoto.com/
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microprocesador
http://www.pcworld.com.ve/n21/articulos/intel.html
http://orbita.starmedia.com/~osander/Historia1.htm
http://www.alpertron.com.ar/INTEL.HTM
http://www.conozcasuhardware.com/quees/micro1.htm
La historia de la PC
http://www.kbglob.com/gnulinux/evolucion-de-los-sistemas-operativos/
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/CP/M
CASO – TP Sistemas Operativos Móviles
Sistema Operativo móvil. ¿Qué significa esto?
Un Sistema Operativo Móvil es una plataforma o escritorio virtual, libre y gratuito que se parece bastante a un sistema operativo convencional. Al ser virtual, podéis acceder a él desde cualquier ordenador que tenga instalado un navegador y una conexión a Internet.
¿Y para qué sirve un sistema operativo móvil?
Pues sirve para tener tu escritorio en cualquier ordenador en el que te sientas. Por ejemplo, configuras una serie de accesos directos, guardas algunos archivos de texto que te hacen falta y configuras algunos favoritos en el navegador. Todas estas cosas que has configurado las tendrás en cualquier ordenador en el que accedas a tu sistema operativo móvil.
Un ejemplo de sistema operativo móvil es EYEOS.
Antes de comenzar los ejercicios os voy a dar algunos consejos:
- Tenemos una conexión a Internet lenta por lo que esperad siempre a que la página cargue completamente antes de seguir abriendo aplicaciones del sistema operativo.
- Probad también este ejercicio a hacerlo en casa para que comprobéis el funcionamiento de este sistema operativo con una conexión a Internet adecuada.
- Probad el sistema operativo poniendo el navegador en pantalla completa (pulsando F11) y os parecerá realmente que estáis en él y no en una simple página web.
Los ejercicios que tenéis que realizar en esta práctica son:
- Accede a la página del sistema operativo móvil EyeOS y regístraste como un nuevo usuario para poder usarlo. Para ello tienes que ir a la sección New User y escribir un nombre de usuario, una contraseña y elegir el idioma (elige el español).
- Una vez que te has registrado, entra en el sistema operativo con el nombre de usuario y la contraseña que has elegido y échale un vistazo. Curiosea e investiga todo lo que encuentres. Te darás cuenta de que tienes un escritorio con una serie de elementos parecidos a los que aparecen en Windows o Guadalinex. Pincha sobre ellos y ve abriendo programas de uno en uno. Indica para qué sirve cada una de las opciones. Haz un dibujo del escritorio si es necesario para indicar los botones y su funcionalidad.
- Abre una ventana cualquiera de un programa en este sistema operativo y descríbela. ¿Hay botón de cerrar? ¿y de maximizar? ¿y de minimizar?
- Entra en la configuración del sistema operativo (opción preferencias del menú principal) y cambia la imagen del fondo del escritorio (elegid la imagen de la mariposa que tenéis creada).
- Abre el procesador de textos y crea un documento de texto que contenga los nombres de diez colores (usa las negritas, cursivas y subrayados) y guárdalo con el nombre “colores” en una carpeta llamada “Informática“.
- Prueba el resto de programas de oficina (ofimáticos) y guarda algún documento con cada uno de ellos en la carpeta Informática del ejercicio anterior. ¿Cuáles podemos encontrar? ¿Cuáles son sus equivalentes en el Microsoft Office? ¿Y sus equivalentes en el OpenOffice?
- Entrad en Public Board. Esta aplicación sirve para hablar (chatear) con todas las personas que estén usando EyeOS en este momento. Podréis hablar entre vosotros. Usadlo durante 2 o 3 minutos.
- Entrad en el navegador de Internet, llamado Navigator. Entrad en la página de la asignatura y guardadla en vuestros favoritos (llamados bookmarks).
- Probad la calculadora del sistema y el EyeNotes. ¿para qué sirve este último?
- Entrad en Software. Aquí encontraréis una lista de todas las aplicaciones que están instaladas en este sistema. Ejecutad el programa EyeTerre, el juego Sonic y el EyeGroups.
- Por último, escribid un comentario a este ejercicio dando vuestra impresión sobre el sistema operativo móvil que acabáis de probar.
Category:OWASP WebGoat Project – OWASP
WebGoat is a deliberately insecure J2EE web application maintained by OWASP designed to teach web application security lessons. In each lesson, users must demonstrate their understanding of a security issue by exploiting a real vulnerability in the WebGoat application. For example, in one of the lessons the user must use SQL injection to steal fake credit card numbers. The application is a realistic teaching environment, providing users with hints and code to further explain the lesson.
Why the name “WebGoat”? Developers should not feel bad about not knowing security. Even the best programmers make security errors. What they need is a scapegoat, right? Just blame it on the ‘Goat!
Listado de número de puertos TCP y UDP
List of TCP and UDP port numbers
List of TCP and UDP port numbers – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Port | Description | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 1/TCP,UDP | TCP Port Service Multiplexer | Official |
| 2/TCP,UDP | Management Utility | Official |
| 3/TCP,UDP | Compression Process | Official |
| 4/TCP,UDP | Unassigned | Official |
| 5/TCP,UDP | Remote Job Entry | Official |
| 6/TCP,UDP | Unassigned | Official |
| 7/TCP,UDP | Echo | Official |
| 8/TCP,UDP | Unassigned | Official |
| 9/TCP,UDP | Discard | Official |
| 11/TCP,UDP | Active Users | Official |
| 13/TCP,UDP | DAYTIME – (RFC 867) | Official |
| 17/TCP,UDP | Quote of the Day | Official |
| 18/TCP,UDP | Message Send Protocol | Official |
| 19/TCP,UDP | Character Generator | Official |
| 20/TCP | FTP – data | Official |
| 21/TCP | FTP—control (command) | Official |
| 22/TCP,UDP | Secure Shell (SSH)—used for secure logins, file transfers (scp, sftp) and port forwarding | Official |
| 23/TCP | Telnet protocol—unencrypted text communications | Official |
| 25/TCP,UDP | Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)—used for e-mail routing between mail servers | Official |
| 34/TCP,UDP | Remote File (RF)—used to transfer files between machines | Unofficial |
| 35/TCP,UDP | Any private printer server protocol | Official |
| 35/TCP,UDP | QMS Magicolor 2 printer server protocol | Unofficial |
| 37/TCP,UDP | TIME protocol | Official |
| 39/TCP,UDP | Resource Location Protocol[2] (RLP)—used for determining the location of higher level services from hosts on a network | Official |
| 41/TCP,UDP | Graphics | Official |
| 42/TCP,UDP | nameserver, ARPA Host Name Server Protocol | Official |
| 42/TCP,UDP | WINS | Unofficial |
| 43/TCP | WHOIS protocol | Official |
| 47/TCP | GRE protocol | Official |
| 49/TCP,UDP | TACACS Login Host protocol | Official |
| 52/TCP,UDP | XNS (Xerox Network Systems) Time Protocol | Official |
| 53/TCP,UDP | Domain Name System (DNS) | Official |
| 54/TCP,UDP | XNS (Xerox Network Systems) Clearinghouse | Official |
| 55/TCP,UDP | ISI-GL (ISI Graphics Language) | Unofficial |
| 56/TCP,UDP | XNS (Xerox Network Systems) Authentication | Official |
| 56/TCP,UDP | RAP (Route Access Protocol)[3] | Unofficial |
| 57/TCP | MTP, Mail Transfer Protocol | Unofficial |
| 58/TCP,UDP | XNS (Xerox Network Systems) Mail | Official |
| 67/UDP | Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP) Server; also used by Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) | Official |
| 68/UDP | Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP) Client; also used by Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) | Official |
| 69/UDP | Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) | Official |
| 70/TCP | Gopher protocol | Official |
| 79/TCP | Finger protocol | Official |
| 80/TCP,UDP | Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) | Official |
| 81/TCP | Torpark—Onion routing | Unofficial |
| 82/UDP | Torpark—Control | Unofficial |
| 83/TCP | MIT ML Device | Official |
| 88/TCP,UDP | Kerberos—authentication system | Official |
| 90/TCP,UDP | dnsix (DoD Network Security for Information Exchange) Securit Attribute Token Map | Official |
| 90/TCP,UDP | Pointcast | Unofficial |
| 99/TCP | WIP Message Protocol | Unofficial |
| 101/TCP | NIC host name | Official |
| 102/TCP | ISO-TSAP (Transport Service Access Point) Class 0 protocol[4] | Official |
| 104/TCP,UDP | ACR/NEMA Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine | Official |
| 105/TCP,UDP | CCSO name server protocol (CSO) | Official |
| 107/TCP | Remote TELNET Service[5] protocol | Official |
| 109/TCP | Post Office Protocol 2 (POP2) | Official |
| 110/TCP | Post Office Protocol 3 (POP3) | Official |
| 111/TCP,UDP | Sun Remote Procedure Call | Official |
| 113/UDP | ident—user identification system, used by IRC servers to identify users | Official |
| 113/TCP,UDP | Authentication Service (auth) | Official |
| 115/TCP | Simple File Transfer Protocol (SFTP) | Official |
| 117/TCP | UUCP Path Service | Official |
| 118/TCP,UDP | SQL (Structured Query Language) Services | Official |
| 119/TCP | Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP)—used for retrieving newsgroup messages | Official |
| 123/UDP | Network Time Protocol (NTP)—used for time synchronization | Official |
| 135/TCP,UDP | DCE endpoint resolution | Official |
| 135/TCP,UDP | Microsoft EPMAP (End Point Mapper), also known as DCE/RPC Locator service[6], used to remotely manage services including DHCP server, DNS server and WINS. Also used by DCOM | Unofficial |
| 137/TCP,UDP | NetBIOS NetBIOS Name Service | Official |
| 138/TCP,UDP | NetBIOS NetBIOS Datagram Service | Official |
| 139/TCP,UDP | NetBIOS NetBIOS Session Service | Official |
| 143/TCP,UDP | Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP)—used for retrieving, organizing, and synchronizing e-mail messages | Official |
| 152/TCP,UDP | Background File Transfer Program (BFTP)[7] | Official |
| 153/TCP,UDP | SGMP, Simple Gateway Monitoring Protocol | Official |
| 156/TCP,UDP | SQL Service | Official |
| 158/TCP,UDP | DMSP, Distributed Mail Service Protocol | Unofficial |
| 161/TCP,UDP | Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) | Official |
| 162/TCP,UDP | Simple Network Management Protocol Trap (SNMPTRAP)[8] | Official |
| 170/TCP | Print-srv, Network PostScript | Official |
| 177/TCP,UDP | X Display Manager Control Protocol (XDMCP) | Official |
| 179/TCP | BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) | Official |
| 194/TCP,UDP | IRC (Internet Relay Chat) | Official |
| 199/TCP,UDP | SMUX, SNMP Unix Multiplexer | Official |
| 201/TCP,UDP | AppleTalk Routing Maintenance | Official |
| 209/TCP,UDP | The Quick Mail Transfer Protocol | Official |
| 210/TCP,UDP | ANSI Z39.50 | Official |
| 213/TCP,UDP | IPX | Official |
| 218/TCP,UDP | MPP, Message Posting Protocol | Official |
| 220/TCP,UDP | IMAP, Interactive Mail Access Protocol, version 3 | Official |
| 256/TCP,UDP | 2DEV “2SP” Port | Unofficial |
| 259/TCP,UDP | ESRO, Efficient Short Remote Operations | Official |
| 264/TCP,UDP | BGMP, Border Gateway Multicast Protocol | Official |
| 311/TCP | Mac OS X Server Admin (officially AppleShare IP Web administration) | Official |
| 308/TCP | Novastor Online Backup | Official |
| 318/TCP,UDP | PKIX TSP, Time Stamp Protocol | Official |
| 323/TCP,UDP | IMMP, Internet Message Mapping Protocol | Unofficial |
| 350/TCP,UDP | MATIP-Type A, Mapping of Airline Traffic over Internet Protocol | Official |
| 351/TCP,UDP | MATIP-Type B, Mapping of Airline Traffic over Internet Protocol | Official |
| 366/TCP,UDP | ODMR, On-Demand Mail Relay | Official |
| 369/TCP,UDP | Rpc2portmap | Official |
| 370/TCP,UDP | codaauth2 – Coda authentication server | Unofficial |
| 370/TCP,UDP | securecast1 – Outgoing packets to NAI’s servers, http://www.nai.com/asp_set/anti_virus/alerts/faq.as | Unofficial |
| 371/TCP,UDP | ClearCase albd | Official |
| 383/TCP,UDP | HP data alarm manager | Official |
| 384/TCP,UDP | A Remote Network Server System | Official |
| 387/TCP,UDP | AURP, AppleTalk Update-based Routing Protocol | Official |
| 389/TCP,UDP | Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) | Official |
| 401/TCP,UDP | UPS Uninterruptible Power Supply | Official |
| 402/TCP | Altiris, Altiris Deployment Client | Unofficial |
| 411/TCP | Direct Connect Hub | Unofficial |
| 412/TCP | Direct Connect Client-to-Client | Unofficial |
| 427/TCP,UDP | Service Location Protocol (SLP) | Official |
| 443/TCP,UDP | Hypertext Transfer Protocol over TLS/SSL (HTTPS) | Official |
| 444/TCP,UDP | SNPP, Simple Network Paging Protocol (RFC 1568) | Official |
| 445/TCP | Microsoft-DS Active Directory, Windows shares | Official |
| 445/UDP | Microsoft-DS SMB file sharing | Official |
| 464/TCP,UDP | Kerberos Change/Set password | Official |
| 465/TCP | Cisco protocol | Unofficial |
| 465/TCP | SMTP over SSL | Unofficial |
| 475/TCP | tcpnethaspsrv (Hasp services, TCP/IP version) | Official |
| 497/TCP | Dantz Retrospect | Official |
| 500/UDP | Internet Security Association and Key Management Protocol (ISAKMP) | Official |
| 501/TCP | STMF, Simple Transportation Management Framework – DOT NTCIP 1101 | Unofficial |
| 502/TCP,UDP | Modbus, Protocol | Unofficial |
| 504/TCP,UDP | Citadel – multiservice protocol for dedicated clients for the Citadel groupware system | Official |
| 510/TCP | First Class Protocol | Unofficial |
| 512/TCP | Rexec, Remote Process Execution | Official |
| 512/UDP | comsat, together with biff | Official |
| 513/TCP | Login | Official |
| 513/UDP | Who | Official |
| 514/TCP | Shell—used to execute non-interactive commands on a remote system | Official |
| 514/UDP | Syslog—used for system logging | Official |
| 515/TCP | Line Printer Daemon—print service | Official |
| 517/UDP | Talk | Official |
| 518/UDP | NTalk | Official |
| 520/TCP | efs, extended file name server | Official |
| 520/UDP | Routing—RIP | Official |
| 524/TCP,UDP | NCP (NetWare Core Protocol) is used for a variety things such as access to primary NetWare server resources, Time Synchronization, etc. | Official |
| 525/UDP | Timed, Timeserver | Official |
| 530/TCP,UDP | RPC | Official |
| 531/TCP,UDP | AOL Instant Messenger, IRC | Unofficial |
| 532/TCP | netnews | Official |
| 533/UDP | netwall, For Emergency Broadcasts | Official |
| 540/TCP | UUCP (Unix-to-Unix Copy Protocol) | Official |
| 542/TCP,UDP | commerce (Commerce Applications) | Official |
| 543/TCP | klogin, Kerberos login | Official |
| 544/TCP | kshell, Kerberos Remote shell | Official |
| 545/TCP | OSIsoft PI (VMS), OSISoft PI Server Client Access | Unofficial |
| 546/TCP,UDP | DHCPv6 client | Official |
| 547/TCP,UDP | DHCPv6 server | Official |
| 548/TCP | Apple Filing Protocol (AFP) over TCP | Official |
| 550/UDP | new-rwho, new-who | Official |
| 554/TCP,UDP | Real Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP) | Official |
| 556/TCP | Remotefs, RFS, rfs_server | Official |
| 560/UDP | rmonitor, Remote Monitor | Official |
| 561/UDP | monitor | Official |
| 563/TCP,UDP | NNTP protocol over TLS/SSL (NNTPS) | Official |
| 587/TCP | e-mail message submission[9] (SMTP) | Official |
| 591/TCP | FileMaker 6.0 (and later) Web Sharing (HTTP Alternate, also see port 80) | Official |
| 593/TCP,UDP | HTTP RPC Ep Map, Remote procedure call over Hypertext Transfer Protocol, often used by Distributed Component Object Model services and Microsoft Exchange Server | Official |
| 604/TCP | TUNNEL profile[10], a protocol for BEEP peers to form an application layer tunnel | Official |
| 623/UDP | ASF Remote Management and Control Protocol (ASF-RMCP) | Official |
| 631/TCP,UDP | Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) | Official |
| 636/TCP,UDP | Lightweight Directory Access Protocol over TLS/SSL (LDAPS) | Official |
| 639/TCP,UDP | MSDP, Multicast Source Discovery Protocol | Official |
| 641/TCP,UDP | SupportSoft Nexus Remote Command (control/listening): A proxy gateway connecting remote control traffic | Official |
| 646/TCP,UDP | LDP, Label Distribution Protocol, a routing protocol used in MPLS networks | Official |
| 647/TCP | DHCP Failover protocol[11] | Official |
| 648/TCP | RRP (Registry Registrar Protocol)[12] | Official |
| 652/TCP | DTCP, Dynamic Tunnel Configuration Protocol | Unofficial |
| 653/TCP,UDP | SupportSoft Nexus Remote Command (data): A proxy gateway connecting remote control traffic | Official |
| 654/TCP | AODV (Ad-hoc On-demand Distance Vector) | Official |
| 655/TCP | IEEE MMS (IEEE Media Management System)[13][14] | Official |
| 657/TCP,UDP | IBM RMC (Remote monitoring and Control) protocol, used by System p5 AIX Integrated Virtualization Manager (IVM)[15] and Hardware Management Console to connect managed logical partitions (LPAR) to enable dynamic partition reconfiguration | Official |
| 660/TCP | Mac OS X Server administration | Official |
| 665/TCP | sun-dr, Remote Dynamic Reconfiguration | Unofficial |
| 666/UDP | Doom, first online first-person shooter | Official |
| 674/TCP | ACAP (Application Configuration Access Protocol) | Official |
| 691/TCP | MS Exchange Routing | Official |
| 692/TCP | Hyperwave-ISP | Official |
| 694/TCP,UDP | Linux-HA High availability Heartbeat | Official |
| 695/TCP | IEEE-MMS-SSL (IEEE Media Management System over SSL)[16] | Official |
| 698/UDP | OLSR (Optimized Link State Routing) | Official |
| 699/TCP | Access Network | Official |
| 700/TCP | EPP (Extensible Provisioning Protocol), a protocol for communication between domain name registries and registrars (RFC 4934) | Official |
| 701/TCP | LMP (Link Management Protocol (Internet))[17], a protocol that runs between a pair of nodes and is used to manage traffic engineering (TE) links | Official |
| 702/TCP | IRIS[18][19] (Internet Registry Information Service) over BEEP (Blocks Extensible Exchange Protocol)[20] (RFC 3983) | Official |
| 706/TCP | SILC, Secure Internet Live Conferencing | Official |
| 711/TCP | Cisco TDP, Tag Distribution Protocol[21][22][23]—being replaced by the MPLS Label Distribution Protocol[24] | Official |
| 712/TCP | TBRPF, Topology Broadcast based on Reverse-Path Forwarding routing protocol (RFC 3684) | Official |
| 712/UDP | Promise RAID Controller | Unofficial |
| 720/TCP | SMQP, Simple Message Queue Protocol | Unofficial |
| 749/TCP,UDP | Kerberos administration | Official |
| 750/TCP | rfile | Official |
| 750/UDP | loadav | Official |
| 750/UDP | kerberos-iv, Kerberos version IV | Official |
| 751/TCP,UDP | pump | Official |
| 751/TCP,UDP | kerberos_master, Kerberos authentication | Unofficial |
| 752/TCP | qrh | Official |
| 752/UDP | qrh | Official |
| 752/UDP | userreg_server, Kerberos Password (kpasswd) server | Unofficial |
| 753/TCP | Reverse Routing Header (rrh)[25] | Official |
| 753/UDP | Reverse Routing Header (rrh) | Official |
| 753/UDP | passwd_server, Kerberos userreg server | Unofficial |
| 754/TCP | tell send | Official |
| 754/TCP | krb5_prop, Kerberos v5 slave propagation | Unofficial |
| 754/UDP | tell send | Official |
| 760/TCP,UDP | ns | Official |
| 760/TCP,UDP | krbupdate [kreg], Kerberos registration | Unofficial |
| 782/TCP | Conserver serial-console management server | Unofficial |
| 783/TCP | SpamAssassin spamd daemon | Unofficial |
| 829/TCP | CMP (Certificate Management Protocol) | Unofficial |
| 843/TCP | Adobe Flash socket policy server | Unofficial |
| 860/TCP | iSCSI (RFC 3720) | Official |
| 873/TCP | rsync file synchronisation protocol | Official |
| 888/TCP | cddbp, CD DataBase (CDDB) protocol (CDDBP)—unassigned but widespread use | Unofficial |
| 901/TCP | Samba Web Administration Tool (SWAT) | Unofficial |
| 901/TCP, UDP | VMware Virtual Infrastructure Client (UDP from server being managed to management console) | Unofficial |
| 902/TCP | VMware Server Console (TCP from management console to server being Managed) | Unofficial |
| 902/UDP | VMware Server Console (UDP from server being managed to management console) | Unofficial |
| 903/TCP | VMware Remote Console [26] | Unofficial |
| 904/TCP | VMware Server Alternate (if 902 is in use, i.e. SUSE linux) | Unofficial |
| 911/TCP | Network Console on Acid (NCA)—local tty redirection over OpenSSH | Unofficial |
| 953/TCP,UDP | Domain Name System (DNS) RDNC Service | Unofficial |
| 981/TCP | SofaWare Technologies Remote HTTPS management for firewall devices running embedded Check Point FireWall-1 software | Unofficial |
| 989/TCP,UDP | FTPS Protocol (data): FTP over TLS/SSL | Official |
| 990/TCP,UDP | FTPS Protocol (control): FTP over TLS/SSL | Official |
| 991/TCP,UDP | NAS (Netnews Administration System) | Official |
| 992/TCP,UDP | TELNET protocol over TLS/SSL | Official |
| 993/TCP | Internet Message Access Protocol over SSL (IMAPS) | Official |
| 995/TCP | Post Office Protocol 3 over TLS/SSL (POP3S) | Official |
| 999/TCP | ScimoreDB Database System | Unofficial |
| 1001/TCP | JtoMB | Unofficial |
| 1023/TCP,UDP | Reserved[1] | Official |
[edit] Registered ports: 1024–49151
Only those ports that are commonly used are listed; for full list, refer to the IANA port list.[1]
When investigating TCP traffic, be careful not to confuse the client and server ports. The client port is incremental, typically beginning at 1024 at boot time and wrapping at 4096. If the port you are investigating is in the lower part of this range, it may be a client port. Stateful firewalls identify the server port, but packet sniffers and stateless firewalls do not. For example, a packet sniffer showing a TCP packet with source port 1080 and destination port 1494 might be either the SOCKetS or Citrix Independent Computing Architecture (ICA) protocols. The only way to know for sure is to examine the initial TCP handshake.
With UDP, client port selection depends on the application and may be incremental, fixed to a nonsensical value, or fixed equal to the server port.
| Port | Description | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 1024/TCP,UDP | Reserved[1] | Official |
| 1025/TCP | NFS-or-IIS | Unofficial |
| 1026/TCP | Often utilized by Microsoft DCOM services | Unofficial |
| 1029/TCP | Often utilized by Microsoft DCOM services | Unofficial |
| 1058/TCP,UDP | nim, IBM AIX Network Installation Manager (NIM) | Official |
| 1059/TCP,UDP | nimreg, IBM AIX Network Installation Manager (NIM) | Official |
| 1080/TCP | SOCKS proxy | Official |
| 1085/TCP,UDP | WebObjects | Official |
| 1098/TCP,UDP | rmiactivation, RMI Activation | Official |
| 1099/TCP,UDP | rmiregistry, RMI Registry | Official |
| 1109/TCP,UDP | Reserved[1] | Official |
| 1109/TCP | Kerberos Post Office Protocol (KPOP) | Unofficial |
| 1111/UDP | EasyBits School network discovery protocol (for Intel’s CMPC platform) | Unofficial |
| 1140/TCP,UDP | AutoNOC protocol | Official |
| 1167/UDP | phone, conference calling | Unofficial |
| 1169/TCP,UDP | Tripwire | Official |
| 1176/TCP | Perceptive Automation Indigo Home automation server | Official |
| 1182/TCP,UDP | AcceleNet Intelligent Transfer Protocol | Official |
| 1194/TCP,UDP | OpenVPN | Official |
| 1198/TCP,UDP | The cajo project Free dynamic transparent distributed computing in Java | Official |
| 1200/TCP | scol, protocol used by SCOL 3D virtual worlds server to answer world name resolution client request[27] | Official |
| 1200/UDP | scol, protocol used by SCOL 3D virtual worlds server to answer world name resolution client request | Official |
| 1200/UDP | Steam Friends Applet | Unofficial |
| 1214/TCP | Kazaa | Official |
| 1220/TCP | QuickTime Streaming Server administration | Official |
| 1223/TCP,UDP | TGP, TrulyGlobal Protocol, also known as “The Gur Protocol” (named for Gur Kimchi of TrulyGlobal) | Official |
| 1234/UDP | VLC media player Default port for UDP/RTP stream | Unofficial |
| 1236/TCP | Symantec BindView Control UNIX Default port for TCP management server connections | Unofficial |
| 1241/TCP,UDP | Nessus Security Scanner | Official |
| 1248/TCP | NSClient/NSClient++/NC_Net (Nagios) | Unofficial |
| 1270/TCP,UDP | Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM) (formerly Microsoft Operations Manager (MOM)) agent | Official |
| 1293/TCP,UDP | IPSec (Internet Protocol Security) | Official |
| 1311/TCP | Dell Open Manage HTTPS | Unofficial |
| 1313/TCP | Xbiim (Canvii server) | Unofficial |
| 1337/TCP | PowerFolder P2P Encrypted File Synchronization Program | Unofficial |
| 1337/TCP | WASTE Encrypted File Sharing Program | Unofficial |
| 1352/TCP | IBM Lotus Notes/Domino Remote Procedure Call (RPC) protocol | Official |
| 1387/TCP,UDP | cadsi-lm, LMS International (formerly Computer Aided Design Software, Inc. (CADSI)) LM | Official |
| 1414/TCP | IBM WebSphere MQ (formerly known as MQSeries) | Official |
| 1417/TCP,UDP | Timbuktu Service 1 Port | Official |
| 1418/TCP,UDP | Timbuktu Service 2 Port | Official |
| 1419/TCP,UDP | Timbuktu Service 3 Port | Official |
| 1420/TCP,UDP | Timbuktu Service 4 Port | Official |
| 1431/TCP | Reverse Gossip Transport Protocol (RGTP), used to access a General-purpose Reverse-Ordered Gossip Gathering System (GROGGS) bulletin board, such as that implemented on the Cambridge University‘s Phoenix system | Official |
| 1433/TCP | MSSQL (Microsoft SQL Server database management system) Server | Official |
| 1434/UDP | MSSQL (Microsoft SQL Server database management system) Monitor | Official |
| 1494/TCP | Citrix XenApp Independent Computing Architecture (ICA) thin client protocol | Official |
| 1500/TCP | NetGuard GuardianPro firewall (NT4-based) Remote Management | Unofficial |
| 1501/UDP | NetGuard GuardianPro firewall (NT4-based) Authentication Client | Unofficial |
| 1503/TCP,UDP | Windows Live Messenger (Whiteboard and Application Sharing) | Unofficial |
| 1512/TCP,UDP | Microsoft Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) | Official |
| 1521/TCP | nCube License Manager | Official |
| 1521/TCP | Oracle database default listener, in future releases official port 2483 | Unofficial |
| 1524/TCP,UDP | ingreslock, ingres | Official |
| 1526/TCP | Oracle database common alternative for listener | Unofficial |
| 1533/TCP | IBM Sametime IM—Virtual Places Chat Microsoft SQL Server | Official |
| 1547/TCP,UDP | Laplink | Official |
| 1550 | Gadu-Gadu (direct client-to-client) | Unofficial |
| 1581/UDP | MIL STD 2045-47001 VMF | Official |
| 1589/UDP | Cisco VQP (VLAN Query Protocol) / VMPS | Unofficial |
| 1645/TCP,UDP | radius/radacct, RADIUS authentication protocol (default for Cisco and Juniper Networks RADIUS servers) | Unofficial |
| 1627 | iSketch | Unofficial |
| 1677/TCP,UDP | Novell GroupWise clients in client/server access mode | Official |
| 1701/UDP | Layer 2 Forwarding Protocol (L2F) & Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP) | Official |
| 1716/TCP | America’s Army Massively multiplayer online game (MMO) | Unofficial |
| 1719/UDP | H.323 Registration and alternate communication | Official |
| 1720/TCP | H.323 Call signalling | Official |
| 1723/TCP,UDP | Microsoft Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) | Official |
| 1725/UDP | Valve Steam Client | Unofficial |
| 1755/TCP,UDP | Microsoft Media Services (MMS, ms-streaming) | Official |
| 1761/TCP,UDP | cft-0 | Official |
| 1761/TCP | Novell Zenworks Remote Control utility | Unofficial |
| 1762–1768/TCP,UDP | cft-1 to cft-7 | Official |
| 1812/TCP,UDP | radius, RADIUS authentication protocol | Official |
| 1813/TCP,UDP | radacct, RADIUS accounting protocol | Official |
| 1863/TCP | MSNP (Microsoft Notification Protocol), used by the .NET Messenger Service and a number of Instant Messaging clients | Official |
| 1900/UDP | Microsoft SSDP Enables discovery of UPnP devices | Official |
| 1920/TCP | IBM Tivoli Monitoring Console (https) | Unofficial |
| 1935/TCP | Adobe Systems Macromedia Flash Real Time Messaging Protocol (RTMP) “plain” protocol | Official |
| 1947/TCP | hasplm, Aladdin HASP Licenz Manager | Official |
| 1970/TCP,UDP | Danware NetOp Remote Control | Official |
| 1971/TCP,UDP | Danware NetOp School | Official |
| 1972/TCP,UDP | InterSystems Caché | Official |
| 1975–1977/UDP | Cisco TCO (Documentation) | Official |
| 1984/TCP | Big Brother—network monitoring tool | Official |
| 1985/UDP | Cisco HSRP | Official |
| 1994/TCP,UDP | Cisco STUN-SDLC (Serial Tunneling—Synchronous Data Link Control) protocol | Official |
| 1998/TCP,UDP | Cisco X.25 over TCP (XOT) service | Official |
| 2000/TCP,UDP | Cisco SCCP (Skinny) | Official |
| 2001/UDP | CAPTAN Test Stand System | Unofficial |
| 2002/TCP | Secure Access Control Server (ACS) for Windows | Unofficial |
| 2030 | Oracle Services for Microsoft Transaction Server | Unofficial |
| 2031/TCP,UDP | mobrien-chat—obsolete (ex-http://www.mobrien.com) | Official |
| 2041/TCP | Mail.Ru Agent communication protocol | Unofficial |
| 2049/UDP | Network File System | Official |
| 2049/UDP | shilp | Official |
| 2053/UDP | lot105-ds-upd Lot105 DSuper Updates | Official |
| 2053/TCP | lot105-ds-upd Lot105 DSuper Updates | Official |
| 2053/TCP | knetd Kerberos de-multiplexor | Unofficial |
| 2056/UDP | Civilization 4 multiplayer | Unofficial |
| 2073/TCP,UDP | DataReel Database | Official |
| 2074/TCP,UDP | Vertel VMF SA (i.e. App.. SpeakFreely) | Official |
| 2082/TCP | Infowave Mobility Server | Official |
| 2082/TCP | CPanel default | Unofficial |
| 2083/TCP | Secure Radius Service (radsec) | Official |
| 2083/TCP | CPanel default SSL | Unofficial |
| 2086/TCP | GNUnet | Official |
| 2086/TCP | WebHost Manager default | Unofficial |
| 2087/TCP | WebHost Manager default SSL | Unofficial |
| 2095/TCP | CPanel default Web mail | Unofficial |
| 2096/TCP | CPanel default SSL Web mail | Unofficial |
| 2102/TCP,UDP | zephyr-srv Project Athena Zephyr Notification Service server | Official |
| 2103/TCP,UDP | zephyr-clt Project Athena Zephyr Notification Service serv-hm connection | Official |
| 2104/TCP,UDP | zephyr-hm Project Athena Zephyr Notification Service hostmanager | Official |
| 2105/TCP,UDP | IBM MiniPay | Official |
| 2105/TCP,UDP | eklogin Kerberos encrypted remote login (rlogin) | Unofficial |
| 2105/TCP,UDP | zephyr-hm-srv Project Athena Zephyr Notification Service hm-serv connection (should use port 2102) | Unofficial |
| 2144/TCP | Iron Mountain LiveVault Agent | UnOfficial |
| 2145/TCP | Iron Mountain LiveVault Agent | UnOfficial |
| 2161/TCP | APC Agent | Official |
| 2181/TCP,UDP | EForward-document transport system | Official |
| 2190/UDP | TiVoConnect Beacon | Unofficial |
| 2200/UDP | Tuxanci game server[28] | Unofficial |
| 2210/TCP,UDP | NOAAPORT Broadcast Network | Official |
| 2210/TCP | MikroTik Remote management for “The Dude” | Unofficial |
| 2211/TCP,UDP | EMWIN | Official |
| 2211/TCP | MikroTik Secure management for “The Dude” | Unofficial |
| 2212/TCP,UDP | LeeCO POS Server Service | Official |
| 2212/TCP | Port-A-Pour Remote WinBatch | Unofficial |
| 2219/TCP,UDP | NetIQ NCAP Protocol | Official |
| 2220/TCP,UDP | NetIQ End2End | Official |
| 2222/TCP | DirectAdmin default & ESET | Unofficial |
| 2223/UDP | Microsoft Office OS X antipiracy network monitor | Unofficial |
| 2301/TCP | HP System Management Redirect to port 2381 | Unofficial |
| 2302/UDP | ArmA multiplayer (default for game) | Unofficial |
| 2302/UDP | Halo: Combat Evolved multiplayer | Unofficial |
| 2303/UDP | ArmA multiplayer (default for server reporting) (default port for game +1) | Unofficial |
| 2305/UDP | ArmA multiplayer (default for VoN) (default port for game +3) | Unofficial |
| 2369/TCP | Default for BMC Software CONTROL-M/Server—Configuration Agent, though often changed during installation | Official |
| 2370/TCP | Default for BMC Software CONTROL-M/Server—to allow the CONTROL-M/Enterprise Manager to connect to the CONTROL-M/Server, though often changed during installation | Official |
| 2381/TCP | HP Insight Manager default for Web server | Unofficial |
| 2401/TCP | CVS version control system | Unofficial |
| 2404/TCP | IEC 60870-5-104, used to send electric power telecontrol messages between two systems via directly connected data circuits | Official |
| 2420/UDP | Westell Remote Access | Official |
| 2427/UDP | Cisco MGCP | Official |
| 2447/TCP,UDP | ovwdb—OpenView Network Node Manager (NNM) daemon | Official |
| 2483/TCP,UDP | Oracle database listening for unsecure client connections to the listener, replaces port 1521 | Official |
| 2484/TCP,UDP | Oracle database listening for SSL client connections to the listener | Official |
| 2500/TCP | THEÒSMESSENGER listening for TheòsMessenger client connections | Official |
| 2546/TCP,UDP | EVault—Data Protection Services | Unofficial |
| 2593/TCP,UDP | RunUO—Ultima Online server | Unofficial |
| 2598/TCP | new ICA—when Session Reliability is enabled, TCP port 2598 replaces port 1494 | Unofficial |
| 2610/TCP | Dark Ages | Unofficial |
| 2612/TCP,UDP | QPasa from MQSoftware | Official |
| 2638/TCP | Sybase database listener | Unofficial |
| 2700–2800/TCP | KnowShowGo P2P | Official |
| 2710/TCP | XBT Bittorrent Tracker | Unofficial |
| 2710/UDP | XBT Bittorrent Tracker experimental UDP tracker extension | Unofficial |
| 2710/TCP | Knuddels.de | Unofficial |
| 2713/TCP,UDP | Raven Trinity Broker Service | Official |
| 2714/TCP,UDP | Raven Trinity Data Mover | Official |
| 2735/TCP,UDP | NetIQ Monitor Console | Official |
| 2809/TCP | corbaloc:iiop URL, per the CORBA 3.0.3 specification | Official |
| 2809/TCP | IBM WebSphere Application Server (WAS) Bootstrap/rmi default | Unofficial |
| 2809/UDP | corbaloc:iiop URL, per the CORBA 3.0.3 specification. | Official |
| 2868/TCP,UDP | Norman Proprietary Event Protocol NPEP | Official |
| 2944/UDP | Megaco Text H.248 | Unofficial |
| 2945/UDP | Megaco Binary (ASN.1) H.248 | Unofficial |
| 2948/TCP,UDP | WAP-push Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) | Official |
| 2949/TCP,UDP | WAP-pushsecure Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) | Official |
| 2967/TCP | Symantec AntiVirus Corporate Edition | Unofficial |
| 3000/TCP | Miralix License server | Unofficial |
| 3000/UDP | Distributed Interactive Simulation (DIS), modifiable default | Unofficial |
| 3001/TCP | Miralix Phone Monitor | Unofficial |
| 3002/TCP | Miralix CSTA | Unofficial |
| 3003/TCP | Miralix GreenBox API | Unofficial |
| 3004/TCP | Miralix InfoLink | Unofficial |
| 3005/TCP | Miralix TimeOut | Unofficial |
| 3006/TCP | Miralix SMS Client Connector | Unofficial |
| 3007/TCP | Miralix OM Server | Unofficial |
| 3017/TCP | Miralix IVR and Voicemail | Unofficial |
| 3025/TCP | netpd.org | Unofficial |
| 3030/TCP,UDP | NetPanzer | Unofficial |
| 3050/TCP,UDP | gds_db (Interbase/Firebird) | Official |
| 3051/TCP,UDP | Galaxy Server (Gateway Ticketing Systems) | Official |
| 3074/TCP,UDP | Xbox LIVE and/or Games for Windows – LIVE | Official |
| 3100/TCP | HTTP used by Tatsoft as the default listen port | Unofficial |
| 3101/TCP | Blackberry Enterprise Server communcation to cloud | Unofficial |
| 3128/TCP | HTTP used by Web caches and the default for the Squid cache | Unofficial |
| 3128/TCP | HTTP used by Tatsoft as the default client connection | Unofficial |
| 3225/TCP,UDP | FCIP (Fiber Channel over Internet Protocol) | Official |
| 3233/TCP,UDP | WhiskerControl research control protocol | Official |
| 3235/TCP,UDP | Galaxy Network Service (Gateway Ticketing Systems) | Official |
| 3260/TCP,UDP | iSCSI target | Official |
| 3268/TCP,UDP | msft-gc, Microsoft Global Catalog (LDAP service which contains data from Active Directory forests) | Official |
| 3269/TCP,UDP | msft-gc-ssl, Microsoft Global Catalog over SSL (similar to port 3268, LDAP over SSL) | Official |
| 3283/TCP | Apple Remote Desktop reporting (officially Net Assistant, referring to an earlier product) | Official |
| 3299/TCP | SAP-Router (routing application proxy for SAP R/3) | Unofficial |
| 3300/TCP | TripleA game server | Unofficial |
| 3300/TCP,UDP | Debate Gopher backend database system | Unofficial |
| 3305/TCP,UDP | odette-ftp, Odette File Transfer Protocol (OFTP) | Official |
| 3306/TCP,UDP | MySQL database system | Official |
| 3333/TCP | Network Caller ID server | Unofficial |
| 3386/TCP,UDP | GTP’ 3GPP GSM/UMTS CDR logging protocol | Official |
| 3389/TCP | Microsoft Terminal Server (RDP) officially registered as Windows Based Terminal (WBT) | Official |
| 3396/TCP,UDP | Novell NDPS Printer Agent | Official |
| 3455/TCP,UDP | [RSVP] Reservation Protocol | Official |
| 3423/TCP | Xware xTrm Communication Protocol | Official |
| 3424/TCP | Xware xTrm Communication Protocol over SSL | Official |
| 3478/TCP,UDP | STUN, a protocol for NAT traversal | Official |
| 3483/UDP | Slim Devices discovery protocol | Official |
| 3483/TCP | Slim Devices SlimProto protocol | Official |
| 3516/TCP,UDP | Smartcard Port | Official |
| 3532/TCP,UDP | Raven Remote Management Control | Official |
| 3533/TCP,UDP | Raven Remote Management Data | Official |
| 3537/TCP,UDP | ni-visa-remote | Unofficial |
| 3544/UDP | Teredo tunneling | Official |
| 3632/TCP | distributed compiler | Official |
| 3689/TCP | Digital Audio Access Protocol (DAAP)—used by Apple’s iTunes and AirPort Express | Official |
| 3690/TCP,UDP | Subversion version control system | Official |
| 3702/TCP,UDP | Web Services Dynamic Discovery (WS-Discovery), used by various components of Windows Vista | Official |
| 3723/TCP,UDP | Used by many Battle.net Blizzard games (Diablo II, Warcraft II, Warcraft III, StarCraft) | Unofficial |
| 3724/TCP,UDP | World of Warcraft Online gaming MMORPG | Unofficial |
| 3724/TCP | Club Penguin Disney online game for kids | Unofficial |
| 3784/TCP,UDP | Ventrilo VoIP program used by Ventrilo | Unofficial |
| 3785/UDP | Ventrilo VoIP program used by Ventrilo | Unofficial |
| 3868/TCP,SCTP | Diameter base protocol (RFC 3588) | Official |
| 3872/TCP | Oracle Management Remote Agent | Unofficial |
| 3899/TCP | Remote Administrator | Unofficial |
| 3900/TCP | udt_os, IBM UniData UDT OS[29] | Official |
| 3945/TCP,UDP | EMCADS service, a Giritech product used by G/On | Official |
| 3978/UDP | OpenTTD game serverlist masterserver | Unofficial |
| 3979/TCP,UDP | OpenTTD game | Unofficial |
| 3999/TCP,UDP | Norman distributed scanning service | Official |
| 4000/TCP,UDP | Diablo II game | Unofficial |
| 4001/TCP | Microsoft Ants game | Unofficial |
| 4007/TCP | PrintBuzzer printer monitoring socket server | Unofficial |
| 4018/TCP,UDP | protocol information and warnings | Official |
| 4069/UDP | Minger Email Address Verification Protocol[30] | Official |
| 4089/TCP,UDP | OpenCORE Remote Control Service | Official |
| 4093/TCP,UDP | PxPlus Client server interface ProvideX | Official |
| 4096/TCP,UDP | Bridge-Relay Element ASCOM | Official |
| 4100 | WatchGuard Authentication Applet—default | Unofficial |
| 4111/TCP | Xgrid | Official |
| 4116/TCP,UDP | Smartcard-TLS | Official |
| 4125/TCP | Microsoft Remote Web Workplace administration | Unofficial |
| 4201/TCP | TinyMUD and various derivatives | Unofficial |
| 4226/TCP,UDP | Aleph One (game) | Unofficial |
| 4224/TCP | Cisco Audio Session Tunneling | Unofficial |
| 4321/TCP | Referral Whois (RWhois) Protocol[31] | Official |
| 4323/UDP | Lincoln Electric’s ArcLink/XT | Unofficial |
| 4500/UDP | IPSec NAT Traversal (RFC 3947) | Official |
| 4534/UDP | Armagetron Advanced default server port | Unofficial |
| 4569/UDP | Inter-Asterisk eXchange | Unofficial |
| 4610–4640/TCP | QualiSystems TestShell Suite Services | Unofficial |
| 4662/TCP,UDP | OrbitNet Message Service | Official |
| 4662/TCP | often used by eMule | Unofficial |
| 4664/TCP | Google Desktop Search | Unofficial |
| 4672/UDP | eMule—often used | Unofficial |
| 4747/TCP | Apprentice | Unofficial |
| 4750/TCP | BladeLogic Agent | Unofficial |
| 4840/TCP,UDP | OPC UA TCP Protocol for OPC Unified Architecture from OPC Foundation | Official |
| 4843/TCP,UDP | OPC UA TCP Protocol over TLS/SSL for OPC Unified Architecture from OPC Foundation | Official |
| 4847/TCP,UDP | Web Fresh Communication, Quadrion Software & Odorless Entertainment | Official |
| 4993/TCP,UDP | Home FTP Server web Interface Default Port | |
| 4894/TCP,UDP | LysKOM Protocol A | Official |
| 4899/TCP,UDP | Radmin remote administration tool (program sometimes used by a Trojan horse) | Official |
| 5000/TCP | commplex-main | Official |
| 5000/TCP | UPnP—Windows network device interoperability | Unofficial |
| 5000/TCP,UDP | VTun—VPN Software | Unofficial |
| 5001/TCP | commplex-link | Official |
| 5001/TCP,UDP | Iperf (Tool for measuring TCP and UDP bandwidth performance) | Unofficial |
| 5001/TCP | Slingbox and Slingplayer | Unofficial |
| 5003/TCP,UDP | FileMaker | Official |
| 5004/TCP,UDP,DCCP | RTP (Real-time Transport Protocol) media data (RFC 3551, RFC 4571) | Official |
| 5005/TCP,UDP,DCCP | RTP (Real-time Transport Protocol) control protocol (RFC 3551, RFC 4571) | Official |
| 5031/TCP,UDP | AVM CAPI-over-TCP (ISDN over Ethernet tunneling) | Unofficial |
| 5050/TCP | Yahoo! Messenger | Unofficial |
| 5051/TCP | ita-agent Symantec Intruder Alert[32] | Official |
| 5060/TCP,UDP | Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) | Official |
| 5061/TCP | Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) over TLS | Official |
| 5093/UDP | SPSS (Statistical Package for the Social Sciences) License Administrator | Unofficial |
| 5104/TCP | IBM Tivoli Framework NetCOOL/Impact[33] HTTP Service | Unofficial |
| 5106/TCP | A-Talk Common connection | Unofficial |
| 5107/TCP | A-Talk Remote server connection | Unofficial |
| 5110/TCP | ProRat Server | Unofficial |
| 5121/TCP | Neverwinter Nights | Unofficial |
| 5151/TCP | ESRI SDE Instance | Official |
| 5151/UDP | ESRI SDE Remote Start | Official |
| 5154/TCP,UDP | BZFlag | Official |
| 5176/TCP | ConsoleWorks default UI interface | Unofficial |
| 5190/TCP | ICQ and AOL Instant Messenger | Official |
| 5222/TCP | Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) client connection (RFC 3920) | Official |
| 5223/TCP | Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) client connection over SSL | Unofficial |
| 5269/TCP | Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) server connection (RFC 3920) | Official |
| 5298/TCP,UDP | Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) JEP-0174: Link-Local Messaging / XEP-0174: Serverless Messaging | Official |
| 5310/TCP,UDP | Ginever.net data communication port | Unofficial |
| 5311/TCP,UDP | Ginever.net data communication port | Unofficial |
| 5312/TCP,UDP | Ginever.net data communication port | Unofficial |
| 5313/TCP,UDP | Ginever.net data communication port | Unofficial |
| 5314/TCP,UDP | Ginever.net data communication port | Unofficial |
| 5315/TCP,UDP | Ginever.net data communication port | Unofficial |
| 5351/TCP,UDP | NAT Port Mapping Protocol—client-requested configuration for inbound connections through network address translators | Official |
| 5353/UDP | Multicast DNS (mDNS) | Official |
| 5355/TCP,UDP | LLMNR—Link-Local Multicast Name Resolution, allows hosts to perform name resolution for hosts on the same local link (only provided by Windows Vista and Server 2008) | Official |
| 5402/TCP,UDP | mftp, Stratacache OmniCast content delivery system MFTP file sharing protocol | Official |
| 5405/TCP,UDP | NetSupport | Official |
| 5421/TCP,UDP | Net Support 2 | Official |
| 5432/TCP,UDP | PostgreSQL database system | Official |
| 5433/TCP | Bouwsoft file/webserver (http://www.bouwsoft.be) | Unofficial |
| 5445/UDP | Cisco Unified Video Advantage | Unofficial |
| 5450/TCP | OSIsoft PI Server Client Access | Unofficial |
| 5495/TCP | Applix TM1 Admin server | Unofficial |
| 5498/TCP | Hotline tracker server connection | Unofficial |
| 5499/UDP | Hotline tracker server discovery | Unofficial |
| 5500/TCP | VNC remote desktop protocol—for incoming listening viewer, Hotline control connection | Unofficial |
| 5501/TCP | Hotline file transfer connection | Unofficial |
| 5517/TCP | Setiqueue Proxy server client for SETI@Home project | Unofficial |
| 5550/TCP | Hewlett-Packard Data Protector | Unofficial |
| 5555/TCP | Freeciv versions up to 2.0, Hewlett-Packard Data Protector, SAP | Unofficial |
| 5556/TCP,UDP | Freeciv | Official |
| 5631/TCP | pcANYWHEREdata, Symantec pcAnywhere (version 7.52 and later[34])[35] data | Official |
| 5632/UDP | pcANYWHEREstat, Symantec pcAnywhere (version 7.52 and later) status | Official |
| 5666/TCP | NRPE (Nagios) | Unofficial |
| 5667/TCP | NSCA (Nagios) | Unofficial |
| 5723/TCP | Operations Manager | Unofficial |
| 5800/TCP | VNC remote desktop protocol—for use over HTTP | Unofficial |
| 5814/TCP,UDP | Hewlett-Packard Support Automation (HP OpenView Self-Healing Services) | Official |
| 5850/TCP | COMIT SE (PCR) | Unofficial |
| 5852/TCP | Adeona client: communications to OpenDHT | Unofficial |
| 5900/TCP,UDP | Virtual Network Computing (VNC) remote desktop protocol (used by Apple Remote Desktop and others) | Official |
| 5938/TCP,UDP | TeamViewer[36] remote desktop protocol | Unofficial |
| 5984/TCP,UDP | CouchDB database server | Official |
| 5999/TCP | CVSup [37] file update tool | Official |
| 6000/TCP | X11—used between an X client and server over the network | Official |
| 6001/UDP | X11—used between an X client and server over the network | Official |
| 6005/TCP | Default for BMC Software CONTROL-M/Server—Socket used for communication between CONTROL-M processes—though often changed during installation | Official |
| 6005/TCP | Default for Camfrog Chat & Cam Client http://www.camfrog.com | Unofficial |
| 6050/TCP | Brightstor Arcserve Backup | Unofficial |
| 6050/TCP | Nortel Software | Unofficial |
| 6051/TCP | Brightstor Arcserve Backup | Unofficial |
| 6072/TCP | iOperator Protocol Signal Port | Unofficial |
| 6086/TCP | PDTP—FTP like file server in a P2P network | Official |
| 6100/TCP | Vizrt System | Unofficial |
| 6101/TCP | Backup Exec Agent Browser | Unofficial |
| 6110/TCP,UDP | softcm, HP Softbench CM | Official |
| 6111/TCP,UDP | spc, HP Softbench Sub-Process Control | Official |
| 6112/TCP,UDP | “dtspcd”—a network daemon that accepts requests from clients to execute commands and launch applications remotely | Official |
| 6112/TCP | Blizzard‘s Battle.net gaming service, ArenaNet gaming service | Unofficial |
| 6112/TCP | Club Penguin Disney online game for kids | Unofficial |
| 6113/TCP | Club Penguin Disney online game for kids | Unofficial |
| 6129/TCP | DameWare Remote Control | Official |
| 6257/UDP | WinMX (see also 6699) | Unofficial |
| 6262/TCP | Sybase Advantage Database Server | Unofficial |
| 6346/TCP,UDP | gnutella-svc, Gnutella (FrostWire, Limewire, Shareaza, etc.) | Official |
| 6347/TCP,UDP | gnutella-rtr, Gnutella alternate | Official |
| 6389/TCP | EMC Clariion | Unofficial |
| 6432/TCP | PgBouncer – A connection pooler for PostgreSQL | Official |
| 6444/TCP,UDP | Sun Grid Engine—Qmaster Service | Official |
| 6445/TCP,UDP | Sun Grid Engine—Execution Service | Official |
| 6502/TCP,UDP | Danware Data NetOp Remote Control | Unofficial |
| 6522/TCP | Gobby (and other libobby-based software) | Unofficial |
| 6523/TCP | Gobby 0.5 (and other libinfinity-based software) | Unofficial |
| 6543/UDP | Paradigm Research & Development Jetnet[38] default | Unofficial |
| 6566/TCP | SANE (Scanner Access Now Easy)—SANE network scanner daemon | Unofficial |
| 6571 | Windows Live FolderShare client | Unofficial |
| 6600/TCP | Music Playing Daemon (MPD) | Unofficial |
| 6619/TCP,UDP | odette-ftps, Odette File Transfer Protocol (OFTP) over TLS/SSL | Official |
| 6646/UDP | McAfee Network Agent | Unofficial |
| 6660–6664/TCP | Internet Relay Chat | Unofficial |
| 6665–6669/TCP | Internet Relay Chat | Official |
| 6679/TCP | IRC SSL (Secure Internet Relay Chat)—often used | Unofficial |
| 6697/TCP | IRC SSL (Secure Internet Relay Chat)—often used | Unofficial |
| 6699/TCP | WinMX (see also 6257) | Unofficial |
| 6771/UDP | Polycom server broadcast | Unofficial |
| 6789/TCP | Datalogger Support Software Campbell Scientific Loggernet Software | Unofficial |
| 6881–6887/TCP,UDP | BitTorrent part of full range of ports used most often | Unofficial |
| 6888/TCP,UDP | MUSE | Official |
| 6888/TCP,UDP | BitTorrent part of full range of ports used most often | Unofficial |
| 6889–6890/TCP,UDP | BitTorrent part of full range of ports used most often | Unofficial |
| 6891–6900/TCP,UDP | BitTorrent part of full range of ports used most often | Unofficial |
| 6891–6900/TCP,UDP | Windows Live Messenger (File transfer) | Unofficial |
| 6901/TCP,UDP | Windows Live Messenger (Voice) | Unofficial |
| 6901/TCP,UDP | BitTorrent part of full range of ports used most often | Unofficial |
| 6902–6968/TCP,UDP | BitTorrent part of full range of ports used most often | Unofficial |
| 6969/TCP,UDP | acmsoda | Official |
| 6969/TCP | BitTorrent tracker | Unofficial |
| 6970–6999/TCP,UDP | BitTorrent part of full range of ports used most often | Unofficial |
| 7000/TCP | Default for Vuze‘s built in HTTPS Bittorrent Tracker | Unofficial |
| 7001/TCP | Default for BEA WebLogic Server‘s HTTP server, though often changed during installation | Unofficial |
| 7002/TCP | Default for BEA WebLogic Server‘s HTTPS server, though often changed during installation | Unofficial |
| 7005/TCP | Default for BMC Software CONTROL-M/Server and CONTROL-M/Agent for Agent-to-Server, though often changed during installation | Official |
| 7006/TCP | Default for BMC Software CONTROL-M/Server and CONTROL-M/Agent for Server-to-Agent, though often changed during installation | Official |
| 7010/TCP | Default for Cisco AON AMC (AON Management Console) [2] | Unofficial |
| 7025/TCP | Zimbra LMTP [mailbox]—local mail delivery | Unofficial |
| 7047/TCP | Zimbra conversion server | Unofficial |
| 7133/TCP | Enemy Territory: Quake Wars | Unofficial |
| 7171/TCP | Tibia | Unofficial |
| 7306/TCP | Zimbra mysql [mailbox] | Unofficial |
| 7307/TCP | Zimbra mysql [logger] | Unofficial |
| 7312/UDP | Sibelius License Server | Unofficial |
| 7400/TCP,UDP | RTPS (Real Time Publish Subscribe) DDS Discovery | Official |
| 7401/TCP,UDP | RTPS (Real Time Publish Subscribe) DDS User-Traffic | Official |
| 7402/TCP,UDP | RTPS (Real Time Publish Subscribe) DDS Meta-Traffic | Official |
| 7670/TCP | BrettspielWelt BSW Boardgame Portal | Unofficial |
| 7676/TCP | Aqumin AlphaVision Remote Command Interface | Unofficial |
| 7777/TCP | iChat server file transfer proxy | Unofficial |
| 7777/TCP | Default used by Windows backdoor program tini.exe | Unofficial |
| 7777-7788/TCP,udp | Unreal Tournament 2004 default server | Unofficial |
| 7831/TCP | Default used by Smartlaunch Internet Cafe Administration[39] software | Unofficial |
| 7915/TCP | Default for YSFlight server [3] | Unofficial |
| 8000/TCP,UDP | iRDMI (Intel Remote Desktop Management Interface)[40]—sometimes erroneously used instead of port 8080 | Official |
| 8000–8001/TCP | Commonly used for internet radio streams such as those using SHOUTcast | Unofficial |
| 8002/TCP | Cisco Systems Unified Call Manager Intercluster | Unofficial |
| 8008/TCP | HTTP Alternate | Official |
| 8008/TCP | IBM HTTP Server administration default | Unofficial |
| 8009/TCP | ajp13 – Apache JServ Protocol AJP Connector | Unofficial |
| 8010/TCP | XMPP File transfers | Unofficial |
| 8074/TCP | Gadu-Gadu | Unofficial |
| 8080/TCP | HTTP alternate (http_alt)—commonly used for Web proxy and caching server, or for running a Web server as a non-root user | Official |
| 8080/TCP | Apache Tomcat | Unofficial |
| 8080/UDP | FilePhile Master/Relay | Unofficial |
| 8081/TCP | HTTP alternate, e.g. McAfee ePolicy Orchestrator (ePO) | Unofficial |
| 8086/TCP | HELM Web Host Automation Windows Control Panel | Unofficial |
| 8086/TCP | Kaspersky AV Control Center | Unofficial |
| 8087/TCP | Hosting Accelerator Control Panel | Unofficial |
| 8087/TCP | Parallels Plesk Control Panel | Unofficial |
| 8087/UDP | Kaspersky AV Control Center | Unofficial |
| 8090/TCP | HTTP Alternate (http_alt_alt)—used as an alternative to port 8080 | Unofficial |
| 8116/UDP | Check Point Cluster Control Protocol | Unofficial |
| 8118/TCP | Privoxy—advertisement-filtering Web proxy | Official |
| 8123/TCP | Polipo Web proxy | Official |
| 8192/TCP | Sophos Remote Management System | Unofficial |
| 8193/TCP | Sophos Remote Management System | Unofficial |
| 8194/TCP | Sophos Remote Management System | Unofficial |
| 8200/TCP | GoToMyPC | Unofficial |
| 8222 | VMware Server Management User Interface (insecure Web interface)[41]. See also port 8333 | Unofficial |
| 8243/TCP,UDP | HTTPS listener for Apache Synapse [42] | Official |
| 8280/TCP,UDP | HTTP listener for Apache Synapse [42] | Official |
| 8291/TCP | Winbox—Default on a MikroTik RouterOS for a Windows application used to administer MikroTik RouterOS | Unofficial |
| 8333 | VMware Server Management User Interface (secure Web interface)[41]. See also port 8222 | Unofficial |
| 8400/TCP,UDP | cvp, Commvault Unified Data Management | Official |
| 8443/TCP | SW Soft Plesk Control Panel, Apache Tomcat SSL, Promise WebPAM SSL | Unofficial |
| 8484/TCP,UDP | MapleStory | Unofficial |
| 8500/TCP,IPX | ColdFusion Macromedia/Adobe ColdFusion default and Duke Nukem 3D—default | Unofficial |
| 8501/TCP | [4] DukesterX —default | Unofficial |
| 8691/TCP | Ultra Fractal default server port for distributing calculations over network computers | Unofficial |
| 8701/UDP | SoftPerfect Bandwidth Manager | Unofficial |
| 8702/UDP | SoftPerfect Bandwidth Manager | Unofficial |
| 8767/UDP | TeamSpeak—default | Unofficial |
| 8768/UDP | TeamSpeak—alternate | Unofficial |
| 8880/UDP | cddbp-alt, CD DataBase (CDDB) protocol (CDDBP) alternate | Official |
| 8880/TCP | cddbp-alt, CD DataBase (CDDB) protocol (CDDBP) alternate | Official |
| 8880/TCP | WebSphere Application Server SOAP connector default | Unofficial |
| 8881/TCP | Atlasz Informatics Research Ltd [5] Secure Application Server | Unofficial |
| 8882/TCP | Atlasz Informatics Research Ltd [6] Secure Application Server | Unofficial |
| 8888/TCP,UDP | NewsEDGE server | Official |
| 8888/TCP | Sun Answerbook dwhttpd server (deprecated by docs.sun.com) | Unofficial |
| 8888/TCP | GNUmp3d HTTP music streaming and Web interface | Unofficial |
| 8888/TCP | LoLo Catcher HTTP Web interface (www.optiform.com) | Unofficial |
| 8888/TCP | D2GS Admin Console Telnet administration console for D2GS servers (Diablo 2) | Unofficial |
| 8888/TCP | Earthland Relams 2 Server (AU1_2) | Unofficial |
| 8889/TCP | Earthland Relams 2 Server (AU1_1) | Unofficial |
| 9000/TCP | Buffalo LinkSystem Web access | Unofficial |
| 9000/TCP | DBGp | Unofficial |
| 9000/TCP | SqueezeCenter web server & streaming | Unofficial |
| 9000/UDP | UDPCast | Unofficial |
| 9001 | Microsoft Sharepoint Authoring Environment | Official |
| 9001 | cisco-xremote router configuration | Unofficial |
| 9001 | Tor network default | Unofficial |
| 9001/TCP | DBGp Proxy | Unofficial |
| 9009/TCP,UDP | Pichat Server—Peer to peer chat software | Official |
| 9030/TCP | Tor often used | Unofficial |
| 9043/TCP | WebSphere Application Server Administration Console secure | Unofficial |
| 9050/TCP | Tor | Unofficial |
| 9051/TCP | Tor | Unofficial |
| 9060/TCP | WebSphere Application Server Administration Console | Unofficial |
| 9080/UDP | glrpc, Groove Collaboration software GLRPC | Official |
| 9080/TCP | glrpc, Groove Collaboration software GLRPC | Official |
| 9080/TCP | WebSphere Application Server HTTP Transport (port 1) default | Unofficial |
| 9090/TCP | Openfire Administration Console | Unofficial |
| 9090/TCP | SqueezeCenter control (CLI) | Unofficial |
| 9091/TCP | Openfire Administration Console (SSL Secured) | Unofficial |
| 9100/TCP | PDL Data Stream | Official |
| 9101 | Bacula Director | Official |
| 9102 | Bacula File Daemon | Official |
| 9103 | Bacula Storage Daemon | Official |
| 9105/TCP,UDP | Xadmin Control Daemon | Official |
| 9110/UDP | SSMP Message protocol | Unofficial |
| 9119/TCP,UDP | MXit Instant Messenger | Official |
| 9300/TCP | IBM Cognos 8 SOAP Business Intelligence and Performance Management | Unofficial |
| 9418/TCP,UDP | git, Git pack transfer service | Official |
| 9420/TCP | MooseFS distributed file system – master server to chunk servers | Unofficial |
| 9421/TCP | MooseFS distributed file system – master server to clients | Unofficial |
| 9422/TCP | MooseFS distributed file system – chunk servers to clients | Unofficial |
| 9535/TCP | mngsuite, LANDesk Management Suite Remote Control | Official |
| 9535/UDP | mngsuite, LANDesk Management Suite Remote Control | Official |
| 9800/TCP,UDP | WebDAV Source | Official |
| 9800 | WebCT e-learning portal | Unofficial |
| 9875/TCP | Club Penguin Disney online game for kids | Unofficial |
| 9898/TCP,UDP | MonkeyCom | Official |
| 9898/TCP | Tripwire – File Integrity Monitoring Software | Unofficial |
| 9996/TCP,UDP | The Palace “The Palace” Virtual Reality Chat software. – 5 | Official |
| 9999 | Hydranode—edonkey2000 TELNET control | Unofficial |
| 9999/TCP | Lantronix UDS-10/UDS100[43] RS-485 to Ethernet Converter TELNET control | Unofficial |
| 9999 | Urchin Web Analytics | Unofficial |
| 10000 | Webmin—Web-based Linux admin tool | Unofficial |
| 10000 | BackupExec | Unofficial |
| 10000 | Ericsson Account Manager (avim) | Unofficial |
| 10001/TCP | Lantronix UDS-10/UDS100[44] RS-485 to Ethernet Converter default | Unofficial |
| 10008/TCP,UDP | Octopus Multiplexer, primary port for the CROMP protocol, which provides a platform-independent means for communication of objects across a network | Official |
| 10010/TCP | Open Object Rexx (ooRexx) rxapi daemon | Official |
| 10017 | AIX,NeXT, HPUX—rexd daemon control | Unofficial |
| 10024/TCP | Zimbra smtp [mta]—to amavis from postfix | Unofficial |
| 10025/TCP | Ximbra smtp [mta]—back to postfix from amavis | Unofficial |
| 10050/TCP,UDP | Zabbix-Agent | Official |
| 10051/TCP,UDP | Zabbix-Trapper | Official |
| 10113/TCP,UDP | NetIQ Endpoint | Official |
| 10114/TCP,UDP | NetIQ Qcheck | Official |
| 10115/TCP,UDP | NetIQ Endpoint | Official |
| 10116/TCP,UDP | NetIQ VoIP Assessor | Official |
| 10200/TCP | FRISK Software International‘s fpscand virus scanning daemon for Unix platforms [7] | Unofficial |
| 10200–10204/TCP | FRISK Software International‘s f-protd virus scanning daemon for Unix platforms [8] | Unofficial |
| 10308 | Lock-on: Modern Air Combat | Unofficial |
| 10480 | SWAT 4 Dedicated Server | Unofficial |
| 11211 | memcached | Unofficial |
| 11235 | Savage:Battle for Newerth Server Hosting | Unofficial |
| 11294 | Blood Quest Online Server | Unofficial |
| 11371 | OpenPGP HTTP key server | Official |
| 11576 | IPStor Server management communication | Unofficial |
| 12012/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, Korea Server – Status/Version Check | Unofficial |
| 12013/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, Korea Server | Unofficial |
| 12035/UDP | Linden Lab viewer to sim | Unofficial |
| 12345 | NetBus—remote administration tool (often Trojan horse). Also used by NetBuster. Little Fighter 2 (TCP). | Unofficial |
| 12975/TCP | LogMeIn Hamachi (VPN tunnel software; also port 32976)—used to connect to Mediation Server (bibi.hamachi.cc); will attempt to use SSL (TCP port 443) if both 12975 & 32976 fail to connect | Unofficial |
| 12998–12999/UDP | Takenaka RDI Mirror World on SL | Unofficial |
| 13000–13050/UDP | Linden Lab viewer to sim | Unofficial |
| 13076/TCP | Default for BMC Software CONTROL-M/Enterprise Manager Corba communication, though often changed during installation | Official |
| 13720/TCP,UDP | Symantec NetBackup—bprd (formerly VERITAS) | Official |
| 13721/TCP,UDP | Symantec NetBackup—bpdbm (formerly VERITAS) | Official |
| 13724/TCP,UDP | Symantec Network Utility—vnetd (formerly VERITAS) | Official |
| 13782/TCP,UDP | Symantec NetBackup—bpcd (formerly VERITAS) | Official |
| 13783/TCP,UDP | Symantec VOPIED protocol (formerly VERITAS) | Official |
| 13785/TCP,UDP | Symantec NetBackup Database—nbdb (formerly VERITAS) | Official |
| 13786/TCP,UDP | Symantec nomdb (formerly VERITAS) | Official |
| 14439/TCP | APRS UI-View Amateur Radio[45] UI-WebServer | Unofficial |
| 14567/UDP | Battlefield 1942 and mods | Unofficial |
| 15000/TCP | psyBNC | Unofficial |
| 15000/TCP | Wesnoth | Unofficial |
| 15000/TCP | Kaspersky Network Agent | Unofficial |
| 15000/TCP | hydap, Hypack Hydrographic Software Packages Data Acquisition | Official |
| 15000/UDP | hydap, Hypack Hydrographic Software Packages Data Acquisition | Official |
| 15567/UDP | Battlefield Vietnam and mods | Unofficial |
| 15345/TCP,UDP | XPilot Contact | Official |
| 16000/TCP | shroudBNC | Unofficial |
| 16080/TCP | Mac OS X Server Web (HTTP) service with performance cache[46] | Unofficial |
| 16384/UDP | Iron Mountain Digital online backup | Unofficial |
| 16567/UDP | Battlefield 2 and mods | Unofficial |
| 18010/TCP | Super Dancer Online Extreme(SDO-X) – CiB Net Station Malaysia Server | Unofficial |
| 18180/TCP | DART Reporting server | Unofficial |
| 18200/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, AsiaSoft Thailand Server – Status/Version Check | Unofficial |
| 18201/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, AsiaSoft Thailand Server | Unofficial |
| 18206/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, AsiaSoft Thailand Server – FAM Database | Unofficial |
| 18300/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, AsiaSoft SEA Server – Status/Version Check | Unofficial |
| 18301/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, AsiaSoft SEA Server | Unofficial |
| 18306/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, AsiaSoft SEA Server – FAM Database | Unofficial |
| 18400/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, KAIZEN Brazil Server – Status/Version Check | Unofficial |
| 18401/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, KAIZEN Brazil Server | Unofficial |
| 18505/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, Nexon Server – Status/Version Check | Unofficial |
| 18506/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, Nexon Server | Unofficial |
| 18605/TCP,UDP | X-BEAT – Status/Version Check | Unofficial |
| 18606/TCP,UDP | X-BEAT | Unofficial |
| 19000/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, G10/alaplaya Server – Status/Version Check | Unofficial |
| 19001/TCP,UDP | Audition Online Dance Battle, G10/alaplaya Server | Unofficial |
| 19226/TCP | Panda Software AdminSecure Communication Agent | Unofficial |
| 19283/TCP,UDP | K2 – KeyAuditor & KeyServer, Sassafras Software Inc. Software Asset Management tools | Official |
| 19315/TCP,UDP | KeyShadow for K2 – KeyAuditor & KeyServer, Sassafras Software Inc. Software Asset Management tools | Official |
| 19638/TCP | Ensim Control Panel | Unofficial |
| 19771/TCP,UDP | Softros LAN Messenger | Unofficial |
| 19813/TCP | 4D database Client Server Communication | Unofficial |
| 19880/TCP | Softros LAN Messenger | Unofficial |
| 20000 | DNP (Distributed Network Protocol), a protocol used in SCADA systems between communicating RTU‘s and IED‘s | Official |
| 20000 | Usermin, Web-based user tool | Unofficial |
| 20014/TCP | DART Reporting server | Unofficial |
| 20720/TCP | Symantec i3 Web GUI server | Unofficial |
| 22347/TCP,UDP | WibuKey, WIBU-SYSTEMS AG Software protection system | Official |
| 22350/TCP,UDP | CodeMeter, WIBU-SYSTEMS AG Software protection system | Official |
| 23073 | Soldat Dedicated Server | Unofficial |
| 23399 | Skype Default Protocol | Unofficial |
| 23513 | [9] Duke Nukem Ports | Unofficial |
| 24444 | NetBeans integrated development environment | Unofficial |
| 24465/TCP,UDP | Tonido Directory Server for Tonido which is a Personal Web app and peer-to-peer platform | Official |
| 24554/TCP,UDP | BINKP, Fidonet mail transfers over TCP/IP | Official |
| 24800 | Synergy: keyboard/mouse sharing software | Unofficial |
| 24842 | StepMania: Online: Dance Dance Revolution Simulator | Unofficial |
| 25888/UDP | Xfire (Firewall Report, UDP_IN) IP Address (206.220.40.146) resolves to gameservertracking.xfire.com. Use unknown. | Unofficial |
| 25999/TCP | Xfire | Unofficial |
| 26000/TCP,UDP | id Software‘s Quake server | Official |
| 26000/TCP | CCP‘s EVE Online Online gaming MMORPG | Unofficial |
| 26900/TCP | CCP‘s EVE Online Online gaming MMORPG | Unofficial |
| 26901/TCP | CCP‘s EVE Online Online gaming MMORPG | Unofficial |
| 27000/UDP | (through 27006) id Software‘s QuakeWorld master server | Unofficial |
| 27000/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27001/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27002/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27003/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27004/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27005/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27006/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27007/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27008/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27009/TCP | FlexNet Publisher‘s License server (from the range of default ports) | Unofficial |
| 27010 | Source engine dedicated server port | Unofficial |
| 27015 | GoldSrc and Source engine dedicated server port | Unofficial |
| 27374 | Sub7 default. Most script kiddies do not change from this. | Unofficial |
| 27500/UDP | (through 27900) id Software‘s QuakeWorld | Unofficial |
| 27888/UDP | Kaillera server | Unofficial |
| 27900 | (through 27901) Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection | Unofficial |
| 27901/UDP | (through 27910) id Software‘s Quake II master server | Unofficial |
| 27960/UDP | (through 27969) Activision‘s Enemy Territory and id Software‘s Quake III Arena and Quake III and some ioquake3 derived games | Unofficial |
| 28000 | Bitfighter Common/default Bitfighter Server | Unofficial |
| 28001 | Starsiege: Tribes Common/default Tribes v.1 Server | Unofficial |
| 28395/TCP | www.SmartSystemsLLC.com Used by Smart Sale 5.0 | Unofficial |
| 28910 | Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection | Unofficial |
| 28960/UDP | Call of Duty – Call of Duty: United Offensive – Call of Duty 2 – Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare – Call of Duty: World at War (PC Version) | Unofficial |
| 29900 | (through 29901) Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection | Unofficial |
| 29920 | Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection | Unofficial |
| 30000 | Pokémon Netbattle | Unofficial |
| 30301 | BitTorrent | Unofficial |
| 30564/TCP | Multiplicity: keyboard/mouse/clipboard sharing software | Unofficial |
| 31337/TCP | Back Orifice—remote administration tool (often Trojan horse) | Unofficial |
| 31415 | ThoughtSignal—Server Communication Service (often Informational) | Unofficial |
| 31456/TCP | TetriNET IRC gateway on some servers | Unofficial |
| 31457/TCP | TetriNET | Official |
| 31458/TCP | TetriNET Used for game spectators | Unofficial |
| 32245/TCP | MMTSG-mutualed over MMT (encrypted transmission) | Unofficial |
| 32976/TCP | LogMeIn Hamachi (VPN tunnel software; also port 12975)—used to connect to Mediation Server (bibi.hamachi.cc); will attempt to use SSL (TCP port 443) if both 12975 & 32976 fail to connect | Unofficial |
| 33434/TCP,UDP | traceroute | Official |
| 34443 | Linksys PSUS4 print server | Unofficial |
| 36963 | Counter Strike 2D multiplayer (2D clone of popular CounterStrike computer game) | Unofficial |
| 37777/TCP | Digital Video Recorder hardware | Unofficial |
| 40000/TCP,UDP | SafetyNET p Real-time Industrial Ethernet protocol | Official |
| 43047/TCP | TheòsMessenger second port for service TheòsMessenger | Official |
| 43594–43595/TCP | RuneScape | Unofficial |
| 47808/TCP,UDP | BACnet Building Automation and Control Networks | Official |
| 49151/TCP,UDP | Reserved[1] | Official |
Wireless LAN Sniffer Applications and Scanners for Linux
Listado de aplicaciones wlan para linux
Wireless LAN Sniffer Applications and Scanners for Linux
TuxMobil: Wireless LAN Sniffer Applications and Scanners for Linux
Trabajo Práctico: Virtualización
Trabajo Práctico: Virtualización
Normas de entrega
1. La fecha y hora de entrega para este trabajo practico es la segunda semana de septiembre. Se alienta y acepta la entrega del trabajo, en su totalidad, en forma anticipada.
2. No se aceptarán trabajos incompletos.
3. No se aceptarán trabajos que no contengan las pruebas utilizadas por los alumnos para cotejar sus resultados (en los casos requeridos) ni las distintas passwords necesarias para ingresar al sistema y las cuentas. Esta información deberá estar claramente indicada en el informe.
Formato de entrega
Se deberá entregar la imagen de disco utilizada en el sistema de virtualización, con las resoluciones de los ejercicios y sus pruebas incorporadas, así como también los archivos que resuelven las consignas, fuera de la imagen, para poder ser eventualmente revisados por separado.
Se deberá entregar además un documento online. Ese documento debe reunir las siguientes características:
1. Formato de presentación: hojas de tamaño A4 .
2. Secciones obligatorias del documento:
a) Carátula
1) Asignatura
2) Número y descripción del trabajo práctico.
3) Año
4) Identificación del grupo.
5) Nombre, apellido y dirección de correo electrónico de todos los integrantes del grupo.
b) Sección principal: Aquí debe incluirse la resolución de cada uno de los problemas planteados y sus correspondientes pruebas. Para cada respuesta debe indicarse el número y título del problema al que corresponde tal como aparece en el enunciado y los comandos y/o programas utilizados para resolverlo.
Consignas
1- Conceptos básicos
1- Definición de virtualización
2- Elementos que componen la virtualización
3- “El VMM maneja, gestiona y arbitra los cuatro recursos principales de una computadora”, Cuáles son?
4- Cúal es la diferencia entre instalar un SO y virtualizarlo?
5- Porque virtualizamos y que beneficios trae?
6- Que contras acarrea el uso de máquinas virtuales?
7- Relizar un listado de los programas para virtualizar sistemas operativos (alguno son VMware, EasyVMX!, Parallels Virtuozzo Containers, Virtual PC, Xen, OpenVZ y VirtualBox) donde se muestre el nombre, el sitio web, características generales, pago, gratuito, de código libre, Windows, GNU/Linux, Requerimientos Mínimos De Hardware y Software
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtualizaci%C3%B3n http://observatorio.cnice.mec.es/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=4628- Detallar las características de VirtualBox
¿Qué Es Virtualbox?
Licencia De Virtualbox
Requerimientos Mínimos De Hardware Y Software
Descarga
Instalación
Configuración
2. Instalación de Ubuntu
Instalaremos una versión liviana de Ubuntu Linux en el sistema de virtualización VirtualBox.
VirtualBox nos provee una máquina virtual que permite instalar un sistema operativo (al que llamaremos guest) en un archivo del disco rígido y ejecutarlo dentro de una ventana en nuestra máquina real. La ventaja de VirtualBox comparado con Bochs o QEMU es que brinda un rendimiento muy superior. VirtualBox es multiplataforma por lo tanto es posible usarlo tanto en Windows (XP o superior) o Linux.
1. Baje la ISO de Ubuntu de:
http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/download o tambien podes probrar con ubuntustudio
http://ubuntustudio.org/downloads
2. Baje VirtualBox de http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads.
Recuerde elegir la versión para su sistema operativo.
3. Instale VirtualBox de acuerdo a su sistema operativo.
4. Ejecute VirtualBox. Seleccione la opción de crear una nueva máquina virtual.
5. Ingrese un nombre y seleccione Ubuntu como sistema operativo
6. Seleccione la cantidad de memoria para el sistema operativo guest
7. Ahora deber a crear un disco rígido virtual, haciendo click en New…
8. Se abre el asistente para crear nuevos discos rígidos virtuales La siguiente pantalla permite a medida que el guest use más espacio en el disco. Recomendamos usar la primera opción
9. Finalmente, debe seleccionar el tamaño del disco virtual . Si se seleccionó la opción Dinamically expanding image en la pantalla anterior, el archivo inicialmente pesará pocos megabytes, para luego irá
aumentando a medida que el disco se llena. En otro caso, el archivo ocupará el tamaño del disco desde el primer momento. Recomendamos alrededor de 600 MB para el disco, ya que deberá entregar la imagen con el Trabajo Práctico. En la siguiente pantalla se pueden revisar los datos del disco rígido virtual y terminar el proceso , para volver al asistente principal y terminar la creación de la máquina virtual .
10. Para terminar la configuración de la máquina virtual debe especificar que la ISO de Ubuntu bajada al comienzo se utilice como CDROM virtual. En la ventana principal de VirtualBox haga click en
CD/DVD-ROM para ver la configuración de la máquina virtual. VirtualBox seleccionará automáticamente la entrada correspondiente al CD-ROM . Haga click en la casilla Mount CD/DVD drive, seleccione la opción ISO Image File y finalmente seleccione la carpeta a la derecha de la pantalla para especificar el archivo ISO bajado al inicio.
11. Se abrirá el administrador de discos virtuales de VirtualBox, Virtual Disk Manager en la solapa CD/DVD Imágenes. Agregue una imagen haciendo click en Add, de manera de poder seleccionarla con Select. De esta manera podrá cerrar la configuración de la máquina virtual.
12. Inicie la máquina virtual haciendo doble clic sobre ella o utilizando el botón Start. La máquina virtual deberá bootear por defecto desde el CDROM virtual, y de esta manera iniciar la instalación del sistema operativo.
El menú de inicio de Ubuntu (previo al inicio propiamente dicho del sistema operativo) le solicitar a que seleccione el idioma y luego mostrará el menú . Inicie el sistema operativo seleccionando Install Ubuntu
13. Una vez que haya iniciado el sistema en modo LiveCD, seleccione el idioma que desea utilizar en el sistema . Luego deber a elegir su país, primero seleccionando other y luego (probablemente)
Argentina
.
14. El siguiente paso es especificar la distribución del teclado. Seleccione la elección manual, y luego elija su distribución, probablemente Latin American en su versión plana (sin dead keys).
15. Luego de que el instalador detecte el hardware de la máquina virtual y cargue los componentes a instalar, se configurará la placa de red automáticamente con DHCP. El siguiente paso es configurar el nombre de la máquina virtual, puede elegir cualquier nombre ya que es meramente administrativo.
16. El instalador detectará el disco rígido virtual y deberá particionarlo. Aquí empezamos a ver las ventajas de tener una máquina virtual: dado que el disco es también virtual, podrá particionarlo entero sin preocuparse por pisar otro sistema operativo. Seleccione entonces la primera opción . En la pantalla que sigue seleccione el disco virtual y confirme la elección en la tercera pantalla .
17. Luego de que el instalador termine de particionar el disco virtual procederá a instalar los paquetes básicos de la distribución. Cuando este proceso termine se le pedirá que ingrese el nombre completo del nuevo usuario . Esto no es el nombre de usuario. El nombre de usuario se especifica en la pantalla siguiente. Finalmente, deber a especificar y confirmar el password.
18. El instalador luego buscar a actualizaciones en la web, para lo cual pedirá especificar un proxy, de ser necesario. En caso de no necesitar ninguno (lo más probable) deje el campo en blanco. El instalador buscar a actualizaciones en la web.
19. Ya terminando la instalación, se le pedirá especificar si el reloj del sistema está configurado en UTC o en la hora local. Nuevamente, como este sistema no comparte la máquina virtual, seleccione UTC ( Figura 34). La instalación termina y pide reiniciar la máquina virtual (Figura 35).
20. Para terminar la configuración de la máquina virtual, desconfigure el archivo ISO como CDROM, de manera inversa a como hizo en un principio: click en CD/DVD-ROM de la pantalla principal, y luego click en Mount CD/DVD Drive para desactivar.
La máquina virtual está lista para ser booteada.
3- Instalación Chrome OS
Cree una nueva máquina virtual e instale y pruebe Chrome OS siguiendo algunos de estos links
http://www.datatrv.net/cmo-instalar-google-chrome-os-utilizando-virtualbox-en-5-pasos/
http://www.genbeta.com/paso-a-paso/como-instalar-chrome-os-en-tu-ordenador
http://www.lifehacker.com.au/2009/12/the-humans-guide-to-running-google-chrome-os/














