this post was submitted on 09 Apr 2024
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Not OP but wondered the same thing for ages. Thanks for your concise reply. Am I right in thinking ports aren't actually physical things but entirely logical instead ? I always assumed they were physical "pipes" because of the name but in the light of replies here it feels like I assumed wrong
They're defined by the software that listens for incoming connections. For example, a web server will (by default) open a listening port on port 80, as that's what is defined in the http standard. If said server supports https (which most of them do) it will also open a listening socket on 443.
It's easy to reconfigure a webserver (or any other server) to listen on any other port instead, provided that it's not already claimed by a different server software. The only caveat is that any clients that want to connect will have to specify the correct port. For example, if the webserver is instead running on port 1234, you'd type http://example.com:1234/ in the address field.
Ports are identified by their number which is in the range of 1 through 65535. The first 1024 ports are "official", which can often be observed by the fact that most of the fundamental protocols that makes the internet function is in this range (http, https, ftp, ssh, dns, smtp, pop3, imap just to name a few). And on linux systems, opening a listening socket on a port below 1024 requires root privileges.
It's worth noting that no port number is "better" than any other. Port 2 will work just as well as 22222. It's just a way for a server to know which server software should receive the incoming packets.
A bit beyond what you're asking, but I consider it a natural furtherance thereof: you can talk to a webserver manually by using telnet. It's easy, I just don't remember the syntax in my head, but it's an easy question for google.