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I know that ping'ing into Azure VMs is disabled. The following page shows how to use Sysinternals' PsPing to do a TCP-based ping:

https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/mast/2014/06/22/use-port-pings-instead-of-icmp-to-test-azure-vm-connectivity/

Unfortunately, I cannot get PsPing to work from my premises to the Azure VM I have. I created an inbound rule in the Network Security Group through the Azure portal:

enter image description here

My Azure VM is a Windows 2012 Datacenter server. I added the following rule to its firewall:

enter image description here

Nevertheless, I can't get PsPing to work when targeting port 80. Incidentally, PsPing to port 3389 (the RDP port) works.

What else should I try?

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  • You could install telnet on your VM, telnet 127.0.0.1 80, could it succeed? May 11, 2017 at 2:21

1 Answer 1

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You should check whether your port is listening. According to your description, it seems that port 80 is not listening on your VM. You could use the following command to check.

netstat -ant|findstr 80

Please ensure the port 80 is listening on tcp, the result should be like below:

 TCP    0.0.0.0:80           0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING       InHost

Also, you should check your NSG. NSG could be associated to a subnet or a VM nic.

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  • Walter, a huge Thank You! As you guessed correctly, there was no listener, so instead of fiddling w/ IIS, I downloaded and ran Mongoose, and it worked. Much appreciated.
    – Sabuncu
    May 11, 2017 at 3:06

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