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Date:      Sat, 11 Dec 1999 00:30:52 -0800
From:      "Craig Critchley" <craigc@nwlink.com>
To:        <freebsd-security@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: port 5632
Message-ID:  <03d201bf43b2$0979a530$0201010a@fuzzer.com>
References:  <00d001bf435e$d9040790$42baefce@inet-serv.symmetron.com>

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Does anyone maintain a list of commonly used/probed ports beyond the
"official" assigned ports the IANA has?  There's a handful of ports not on
the list that seemed to get probed from time to time, for things like Netbus
and BO, and I'd like to know what some of the others are...

Thanks,

                    ...Craig

----- Original Message -----
From: John A. Shue <John.Shue@symmetron.com>
To: J. A. Sigler <jsigler@verio.net>; Lomion <lomion@anais-nin.org>;
<freebsd-security@FreeBSD.ORG>
Sent: Friday, December 10, 1999 2:35 PM
Subject: RE: port 5632


> On Friday, December 10, 1999 3:44 PM, J. A. Sigler wrote:
> > PCAnywhere uses 5632 I seem to recall.
>
> Yeah, I was just looking this up the other day while writing a security
> policy for a firewall.  Symantec has a document in their pcAnywhere
> knowledge base that talks about their usage of IP ports (TCP and UDP).
>
> Look in their knowledge base for "pcAnywhere IP Ports and Firewalls".
>
> This is a cut and paste of the important parts:
>
> pcAnywhere uses either of two sets of ports depending on the version of
> pcAnywhere you are using. One set uses ports 65301 and 22. The second set
> uses the registered ports 5631 and 5632.
>
> pcANYWHERE TCP UDP
> version port port
> 2.0 65301 22
> 7.0 65301 22
> 7.50,7.51 65301 22
> CE 65301 22
> 7.52 5631 5632
> 8.x,9.x 5631 5632
>
>
> -john
>
>
>
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