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CurrPorts V1.81   
Suggested by Andrew Lee - Updated by Checker on 10 May 2010
86KB (uncompressed) - Popularity score (2983)
Website - Screenshot - Download - Comments (6) - Post comment - Permalink

 
Synopsis: CurrPorts displays the list of all currently opened TCP/IP and UDP ports on your local computer. For each port in the list, information about the process that opened the port is also displayed, including the process name, full path of the process, version information of the process (product name, file description, and so on), the time that the process was created, and the user that created it.

In addition, CurrPorts allows you to close unwanted TCP connections, kill the process that opened the ports, and save the TCP/UDP ports information to HTML file , XML file, or to tab-delimited text file.

CurrPorts also automatically mark with pink color suspicious TCP/UDP ports owned by unidentified applications (Applications without version information and icons).
Writes settings to: Application folder
How to extract: Download the ZIP package and extract to a folder of your choice. Launch cports.exe. Optionally, download IPToCountry.csv to the same folder to show the Country of origin for each IP address.
Stealth [?]: Yes
License: Freeware
System Requirements: Win98 / WinME / WinNT / Win2K / WinXP / Vista / Win7
What's new: >>
  • Added more include/exclude filter options in the context menu of CurrPorts

Posted comments:

[Anonymous] raphaelSure can see where that can come in handy :-) That's just the little app one might gladly add to his toolbox. Nice. [2006-12-05 04:22]

[Anonymous] Yuval M.v1.20: "The settings of CurrPorts utility is now saved to cfg file instead of using the Registry."
Actually, I liked the idea of using the registry better - it allowed me to put cports.exe directly in the root of my 'Programs' folder, along w/many other truely stand-alone tools - saves browsing through folders when you need a quick launch (I hate to setup & update portable launchers...;) - CurrPorts really doesn't have much of a configuration to deal with, so I never cared about its registry usage anyway...[keeping v1.11]
All in all, another one of the GREAT lightweight yet powerful utilities of Nir Sofer - you must visit his site for more freebies! Thanks Nir :)
 [2007-05-06 02:06]

[Anonymous] gbjSurely disagree with Yuval. NO need to trash up the registry when you can use an ini file and keep the app totally portable at the same time. Yuval should really try using the Start Menu instead of browsing through folders to start the app. :-))))))) [2007-05-06 04:00]

[Anonymous] Crazy JohnnySweet! Exactly what I was looking for, testing to see which programs are phoning home. [2008-04-04 06:35]

[Anonymous] semiRocketWhat this tool can that Mark Russinovich's TCPView can't do, I don't understand :?

I think that TCPView is better in any form.

@Yuval M.
You should try Sysinternals applications
 [2009-04-23 06:16]

[Anonymous] rangai was looking for port number list that brought me here.

nothing bad, i will try this out

ranga of http://www.bangla-choti-online.blogspot.com
 [2010-05-25 09:37]


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All HTML tags will be removed from your comment. URLs (http, https, ftp) will be automatically detected and hyperlinked. I reserve the right to delete irrelevant, frivolous or offensive comments. For more general topics (eg. whether apps that write to the registry, leave traces on the host machine, rely on certain versions of IE etc. can be considered portable), please post to the Portable Freeware Discussion forum. If your virus scanner has detected a virus in the application, please email the author directly or post to the forum. Note that false positives (i.e. flagging a virus when there is actually none) are extremely common for virus scanners. When in doubt, try an online scanner like Online Malware Scanner or VirusTotal, which scans files using multiple anti-virus engines. It is very likely to be a false positive if only a few engines raise the red flag.

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