What application runs on port 8094?
Hi, Using netflow based monitor tool, I noticed there is a lot of traffic on 8094/UDP and 4662/TCP( both exceed 1Gbps, and exist all the time) What application use that port? Is there any P2P application use UDP as transportation protocol? thanks in advance. Joe __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - 1GB free storage! http://sg.whatsnew.mail.yahoo.com
On 8/17/05, Joe Shen <joe_hznm@yahoo.com.sg> wrote:
Hi,
Using netflow based monitor tool, I noticed there is a lot of traffic on 8094/UDP and 4662/TCP( both exceed 1Gbps, and exist all the time)
What application use that port? Is there any P2P application use UDP as transportation protocol?
eMule uses 4662. quick google search (which I hope you already did before posting) turns up nothing interesting for 8094 (I'm thinkin BitTorrent, personally) aaron.glenn
On Wed, 17 Aug 2005, Aaron Glenn wrote:
On 8/17/05, Joe Shen <joe_hznm@yahoo.com.sg> wrote:
Hi,
Using netflow based monitor tool, I noticed there is a lot of traffic on 8094/UDP and 4662/TCP( both exceed 1Gbps, and exist all the time)
What application use that port? Is there any P2P application use UDP as transportation protocol?
eMule uses 4662. quick google search (which I hope you already did before posting) turns up nothing interesting for 8094 (I'm thinkin BitTorrent, personally)
Since the traffic was 8094/UDP it is definitely not BitTorrent, who uses TCP transport. /leg
--On August 18, 2005 4:25:53 PM +0200 Lars Erik Gullerud <lerik@nolink.net> wrote:
Since the traffic was 8094/UDP it is definitely not BitTorrent, who uses TCP transport.
Azureus, a very popular BT client, has a distributed tracker database mechanism, to get around overloaded/unreliable trackers....it might run on that port by default, I honestly don't know. -- "Genius might be described as a supreme capacity for getting its possessors into trouble of all kinds." -- Samuel Butler
participants (4)
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Aaron Glenn
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Joe Shen
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Lars Erik Gullerud
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Michael Loftis