Specifically, I have a Windows server (Windows 7), but the netstat -an
command only shows whether ports are TCP or UDP. I thought these were the only kinds of ports, but node.js seems to distinguish between HTTP ports and TCP ports (example at bottom of linked page). I'm currently using node.js in a program that will run on my server, and it opens HTTP ports by default. These appear as TCP ports under netstat -an
.
Is there a command line trick for distinguishing whether an open port on this server is HTTP or TCP? I make requests to my Information Technology office about ports that I need on this server, and they need to know whether these ports will be TCP, UDP, etc.
If necessary to use a remote client, I have a Mac that can do the job.
telnet
to connect to the Windows machine remotely. However, when I run the server-side program on my local machine on port 9005,telnet localhost 9005
works fine. When I trytelnet [Windows hostname] [my valid port]
, no connection is made; I get a timeout.