Ports in computer networking is an application-specific or process-specific software construct serving as a communications endpoint. It is used by Transport Layer protocols of the Internet Protocol Suite, such as Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and User Datagram Protocol (UDP). A specific port is identified by its number, commonly known as the port number, the IP address with which it is associated, and the protocol used for communication.
The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) is responsible for maintaining the official assignments of port numbers for specific uses. However, many unofficial uses of both well-known and registered port numbers occur in practice.
The port numbers are divided into three ranges:
Well-Known/Standard Ports (Range: 0 to 1023 )
Used by system processes that provide widely-used types of network services such as SSH, Telnet, SMTP, FTP etc
Registered Ports, and (Range: 1024 to 49151 )
Used by specific service upon applications such as Oracle database listener (1521), MySql (3306), Microsoft Terminal server (3389) etc.
Dynamic and/or Private Ports. (Range: 49152 to 65535 )
These ports can’t be registered by IANA. This is used for custom or temporary purposes and for automatic allocation of short-lived (or ephemeral ) ports which is used internally by application/processes. You can see these ports by running ‘netstat’ command under “Local address” column.
In Linux, the port details can be viewed by checking the /etc/services file and the non-standard (un-registered) ports used by the server can be find using /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range file.
[adevaraju@host01 ~]$ cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
32768 61000
[adevaraju@host01 ~]$
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