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  1. How do I interpret 'netstat -a' output - Stack Overflow

    3 This link has helped me a lot to interpret netstat -a A copy from there - TCP Connection States Following is a brief explanation of this handshake. In this context the "client" is the peer …

  2. How do I find out which process is listening on a TCP or UDP port …

    Netstat: -a displays all connection and listening ports -b displays executables -n stop resolve hostnames (numerical form) -o owning process netstat -bano | findstr "7002" netstat -ano > …

  3. Command line for looking at specific port - Stack Overflow

    Aug 17, 2012 · Is there a way to examine the status of a specific port from the Windows command line? I know I can use netstat to examine all ports but netstat is slow and looking at a specific …

  4. windows - Strange entries in Netstat output - Super User

    You can get more useful information from the Netstat command by adding the and parameters, like this: netstat -f -b According to the help () the switch: Displays Fully Qualified Domain …

  5. What is ::: in the Local Address of netstat output? - Super User

    The command line parameters shown, and the example output shown, might have come from Linux, and different operating systems might display things slightly different. However, about …

  6. Windows Kill Process By PORT Number - Stack Overflow

    Mar 23, 2019 · Option 2 PowerShell Get-Process -Id (Get-NetTCPConnection -LocalPort portNumber).OwningProcess cmd C:\> netstat -a -b (Add -n to stop it trying to resolve …

  7. What are CLOSE_WAIT and TIME_WAIT states? - Super User

    When I do netstat -a on my Windows machine, I get a listing of the ports with one of the four states: - LISTENING - CLOSE_WAIT - TIME_WAIT - ESTABLISHED What do CLOSE_WAIT …

  8. windows - How can I see all active connections? - Super User

    0 I am not a computer scientist but I find that netstat is a bit slow and many connections pass through unrecorded, wireshark is fast but has too many packets to filter through and windows …

  9. How do I find which program is using port 80 in Windows?

    Type in the command: netstat -aon | findstr :80 It will show you all processes that use port 80. Notice the pid (process id) in the right column. If you would like to free the port, go to Task …

  10. How to close TCP and UDP ports via windows command line

    Dec 31, 2011 · Does somebody knows how to close a TCP or UDP socket for a single connection via windows command line? Googling about this, I saw some people asking the same thing. …