On Tue, Aug 26, 2008 at 4:52 PM, Les Mikesell <lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Lanny Marcus wrote: >> >>>> I just did a port scan on one of my web sites. Shared Hosting. Looking >>>> at ports 1863, 3000 and 3001. Are those ports normally open or >>>> something I should file a support ticket about? TIA! >>>> >>>> Port State Service >>>> 21 open ftp >>>> 22 open ssh >>>> 25 open smtp >>>> 80 open http >>>> 110 open pop3 >>>> 143 open imap >>>> 443 open https >>>> 993 open imaps >>>> 995 open pop3s >>>> 1863 open msnp >>>> 3000 open hbci >>>> 3001 open redwood-broker >>>> 3306 open mysql >>>> 5190 open aol >>>> 5432 open postgres >>> >>> Ports are 'open' when you start programs that listen on them. lsof >>> should >>> tell you what those programs are. >> >> Les, I wondered why they have those ports open. 1863 is MSN Messenger. >> 3000 is RemoteWare Client and 3001 is Redwood Broker. >> Lanny > > Port usage is fairly arbitrary. That is, you can configure most programs to > listen on non-standard ports so the actual activity may have nothing to do > with the registered name for the port. If you don't have access to find the > program using the port you should ask about it. OK. I think I will put in a support ticket and ask them. It's a shared server, running chrootd. If they can close those 3 ports for this site, it should make it a little bit more secure. Also, there are other services I'm not using, and if they can stop them and close ports, fewer ports open. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos