If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
(cross-post added to Win98 Networking)
"DJW" wrote in message oups.com... I am running windows 98SE and trying to use PC to PC calling in Yahoo messenger 8. As soon as I try to accept a call from someone running XP with a firewall Yahoo messenger crashes. I crash but not the other person. I went to yahoo messenger help and I quotethem: What ports are used by Yahoo! Voice services? Yahoo! Messenger will work if any one of these TCP ports are open: 5061 443 80 At least ONE of these ports must be open in order to make PC-to-PC or PC-to-phone (Phone Out) calls, or to receive calls (Phone In). Where on do I find if theses ports are open and how could I open one if I need to? Does that OS have netstat? (I think so but I suspect it is less capable than NTx's.) netstat -abo in XP would show me listening ports, the module name and PID of the program doing it. FWIW Robert Aldwinckle --- |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
Robert,
I am running Windows 98SE not NT or XP and yes I found netstat version 5.00.1515.1 in my windows folder. What is it and what do I do with it I did not double click on it yet to see it run or is it an application that runs always at start up? Robert Aldwinckle wrote: (cross-post added to Win98 Networking) "DJW" wrote in message oups.com... I am running windows 98SE and trying to use PC to PC calling in Yahoo messenger 8. As soon as I try to accept a call from someone running XP with a firewall Yahoo messenger crashes. I crash but not the other person. I went to yahoo messenger help and I quotethem: What ports are used by Yahoo! Voice services? Yahoo! Messenger will work if any one of these TCP ports are open: 5061 443 80 At least ONE of these ports must be open in order to make PC-to-PC or PC-to-phone (Phone Out) calls, or to receive calls (Phone In). Where on do I find if theses ports are open and how could I open one if I need to? Does that OS have netstat? (I think so but I suspect it is less capable than NTx's.) netstat -abo in XP would show me listening ports, the module name and PID of the program doing it. FWIW Robert Aldwinckle --- |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
Robert,
I am running Windows 98SE not NT or XP and yes I found netstat version 5.00.1515.1 in my windows folder. What is it and what do I do with it I did not double click on it yet to see it run or is it an application that runs always at start up? Robert Aldwinckle wrote: (cross-post added to Win98 Networking) "DJW" wrote in message oups.com... I am running windows 98SE and trying to use PC to PC calling in Yahoo messenger 8. As soon as I try to accept a call from someone running XP with a firewall Yahoo messenger crashes. I crash but not the other person. I went to yahoo messenger help and I quotethem: What ports are used by Yahoo! Voice services? Yahoo! Messenger will work if any one of these TCP ports are open: 5061 443 80 At least ONE of these ports must be open in order to make PC-to-PC or PC-to-phone (Phone Out) calls, or to receive calls (Phone In). Where on do I find if theses ports are open and how could I open one if I need to? Does that OS have netstat? (I think so but I suspect it is less capable than NTx's.) netstat -abo in XP would show me listening ports, the module name and PID of the program doing it. FWIW Robert Aldwinckle --- |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
"DJW" wrote in message
ups.com... Robert, I am running Windows 98SE not NT or XP and yes I found netstat version 5.00.1515.1 in my windows folder. What is it and what do I do with it You use it as a command in a command window. Does your OS have a Help facility? E.g. in XP you would press Win-F1 and then search for netstat Hmm.. in order to actually see how to use it XP users would then have to use the Related link in the article that finds. The article itself assumes that anybody reading it would know enough to open a cmd window. HTH Robert --- |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
"DJW" wrote in message
ups.com... Robert, I am running Windows 98SE not NT or XP and yes I found netstat version 5.00.1515.1 in my windows folder. What is it and what do I do with it You use it as a command in a command window. Does your OS have a Help facility? E.g. in XP you would press Win-F1 and then search for netstat Hmm.. in order to actually see how to use it XP users would then have to use the Related link in the article that finds. The article itself assumes that anybody reading it would know enough to open a cmd window. HTH Robert --- |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
On 2 Jan 2007 08:45:20 -0800, "DJW" wrote: Robert, I am running Windows 98SE not NT or XP and yes I found netstat version 5.00.1515.1 in my windows folder. What is it and what do I do with it I did not double click on it yet to see it run or is it an application that runs always at start up? If you want to look for listening ports try sysinternals (recently bought out by Microsoft) TCPview http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...utilities.mspx That, however, won't necessarily identify the problem. If the program you are using isn't working then it is likely that a firewall is blocking the listening port or maybe you need to enable port forwarding on a router? To determine this, you need to post more information about what equipment is used to connect your computer to the Internet. Jim. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
On 2 Jan 2007 08:45:20 -0800, "DJW" wrote: Robert, I am running Windows 98SE not NT or XP and yes I found netstat version 5.00.1515.1 in my windows folder. What is it and what do I do with it I did not double click on it yet to see it run or is it an application that runs always at start up? If you want to look for listening ports try sysinternals (recently bought out by Microsoft) TCPview http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...utilities.mspx That, however, won't necessarily identify the problem. If the program you are using isn't working then it is likely that a firewall is blocking the listening port or maybe you need to enable port forwarding on a router? To determine this, you need to post more information about what equipment is used to connect your computer to the Internet. Jim. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
"James Egan" wrote in message
... If you want to look for listening ports try sysinternals (recently bought out by Microsoft) TCPview http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...utilities.mspx That, however, won't necessarily identify the problem. Thanks, James. Good tip. http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...s/tcpview.mspx quotes TCPView works on Windows NT/2000/XP and Windows 98/Me. On Windows NT, 2000 and XP TCPView also reports the name of the process that owns the endpoint. TCPView Pro, a Winternals Software product, has a number of features that make it much more powerful and useful than TCPView: See what process has each endpoint opened (on Win9x as well) TCPView Pro is available as part of Winternals Administrator's Pak. /quotes Does the Win9x version at least have the netstat -o (PID) equivalent? Otherwise it looks like they need a priced product? Does it still exist? eg If the program you are using isn't working then it is likely that a firewall is blocking the listening port or maybe you need to enable port forwarding on a router? To determine this, you need to post more information about what equipment is used to connect your computer to the Internet. Good stuff! That's why I cross-posted this thread. ; ) Robert --- |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
"James Egan" wrote in message
... If you want to look for listening ports try sysinternals (recently bought out by Microsoft) TCPview http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...utilities.mspx That, however, won't necessarily identify the problem. Thanks, James. Good tip. http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...s/tcpview.mspx quotes TCPView works on Windows NT/2000/XP and Windows 98/Me. On Windows NT, 2000 and XP TCPView also reports the name of the process that owns the endpoint. TCPView Pro, a Winternals Software product, has a number of features that make it much more powerful and useful than TCPView: See what process has each endpoint opened (on Win9x as well) TCPView Pro is available as part of Winternals Administrator's Pak. /quotes Does the Win9x version at least have the netstat -o (PID) equivalent? Otherwise it looks like they need a priced product? Does it still exist? eg If the program you are using isn't working then it is likely that a firewall is blocking the listening port or maybe you need to enable port forwarding on a router? To determine this, you need to post more information about what equipment is used to connect your computer to the Internet. Good stuff! That's why I cross-posted this thread. ; ) Robert --- |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
TCP ports open or used?
Ok guys you are starting to speak a bit of Greek to me.
I looked in the help under the start menu for netstat and it said no topics were found. I also looked for TCP ports with the same results. Like I said above I found netstat version 5.00.1515.1 in my windows folder. Still not sure what to do with it as the above refer to: You use it as a command in a command window But I still have not started it up for I just don't run or change things with windows for that has gotten me in trouble before. I am a Mac user by trade not into PCs much. My sister is the user I am trying to communicate via yahoo messenger with web cams that work ok. But when we try to voice chat is when I crash just yahoo messenger nothing else. She knows less than me when it comes to PCs. She is using XP home addition with a cable broad band connection hard wired but through cable modem and a wireless router. The wireless router is used with a laptop not related to this problem running windows 98. If it is her fire wall or router giving us the problem would I be the one crashing while running a dial up internet connection running windows 98SE here at my end? I down loaded TCPView and the demo of Port Explorer demo for 30 days of use. I have not installed either yet however. Any suggestions as to there use as in which one would be best to see my TCP ports. And should I have my sister download and install one at her end to see what is what. Or does window XP home have a TCP port or firewall utility that she could see what is set. Are there any online step by step help for her or me in trying to track down the above mentioned applications. Robert Aldwinckle wrote: "James Egan" wrote in message ... If you want to look for listening ports try sysinternals (recently bought out by Microsoft) TCPview http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...utilities.mspx That, however, won't necessarily identify the problem. Thanks, James. Good tip. http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...s/tcpview.mspx quotes TCPView works on Windows NT/2000/XP and Windows 98/Me. On Windows NT, 2000 and XP TCPView also reports the name of the process that owns the endpoint. TCPView Pro, a Winternals Software product, has a number of features that make it much more powerful and useful than TCPView: See what process has each endpoint opened (on Win9x as well) TCPView Pro is available as part of Winternals Administrator's Pak. /quotes Does the Win9x version at least have the netstat -o (PID) equivalent? Otherwise it looks like they need a priced product? Does it still exist? eg If the program you are using isn't working then it is likely that a firewall is blocking the listening port or maybe you need to enable port forwarding on a router? To determine this, you need to post more information about what equipment is used to connect your computer to the Internet. Good stuff! That's why I cross-posted this thread. ; ) Robert --- |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Virtual Memory Problem | Nikki | General | 22 | June 20th 06 10:39 PM |
KB891711 | PCR | General | 136 | March 29th 05 05:52 AM |
Folders don't open w/Left Click | Me | General | 0 | January 14th 05 12:47 AM |
JPEG's open with notepad or workpad | Fruitlesspuppy | General | 5 | August 1st 04 07:25 AM |
Can't Open Downloaded Driver | bab | General | 5 | July 30th 04 01:51 AM |