Skip to content

ncrocfer/whatportis

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

59a1718 · Jun 22, 2021

History

54 Commits
Jun 22, 2021
Jun 22, 2021
Jun 22, 2021
May 11, 2019
May 10, 2019
May 11, 2019
May 11, 2019
Jun 22, 2021
Jun 22, 2021
May 11, 2019

Repository files navigation

whatportis

It's a common task to search the default port number of a service. Some ports are available in the /etc/services file, but the list is not complete and this solution is not portable.

Whatportis is a simple tool that downloads the Iana.org database and uses it to explore the official list of ports.

Usage

Whatportis allows you to find what port is associated with a service:

$ whatportis redis
+-------+------+----------+---------------------------------------+
| Name  | Port | Protocol | Description                           |
+-------+------+----------+---------------------------------------+
| redis | 6379 |   tcp    | An advanced key-value cache and store |
+-------+------+----------+---------------------------------------+

Or, conversely, what service is associated with a port number:

$ whatportis 5432
+------------+------+----------+---------------------+
| Name       | Port | Protocol | Description         |
+------------+------+----------+---------------------+
| postgresql | 5432 | tcp, udp | PostgreSQL Database |
+------------+------+----------+---------------------+

You can also search a pattern without knowing the exact name by adding the --like option:

$ whatportis mysql --like
+----------------+-------+----------+-----------------------------------+
| Name           |  Port | Protocol | Description                       |
+----------------+-------+----------+-----------------------------------+
| mysql-cluster  |  1186 | tcp, udp | MySQL Cluster Manager             |
| mysql-cm-agent |  1862 | tcp, udp | MySQL Cluster Manager Agent       |
| mysql-im       |  2273 | tcp, udp | MySQL Instance Manager            |
| mysql          |  3306 | tcp, udp | MySQL                             |
| mysql-proxy    |  6446 | tcp, udp | MySQL Proxy                       |
| mysqlx         | 33060 |   tcp    | MySQL Database Extended Interface |
+----------------+-------+----------+-----------------------------------+

Installation

$ pip install whatportis

Database Sync

Whatportis uses a local JSON file (~/.whatportis_db.json) to explore the list of ports. The first usage will create it for you, then you can use the --update option to synchronize it :

$ whatportis --update
Previous database will be updated, do you want to continue? [y/N]: y
Downloading https://www.iana.org/assignments/service-names-port-numbers/service-names-port-numbers.csv...
Populating database...
14145 ports imported.

JSON output

You can display the results as JSON, using the --json option :

$ whatportis 5432 --json
[
    {
        "name": "postgresql",
        "port": "5432",
        "protocol": "tcp, udp",
        "description": "PostgreSQL Database"
    }
]

REST API

Whatportis can also be started as a RESTful API server. This feature is not enabled by default, you must install an extra package :

$ pip install whatportis[server]
$ whatportis --server localhost 8080
 * Serving Flask app "whatportis.server" (lazy loading)
 * Environment: prod
 * Debug mode: off
 * Running on http://127.0.0.1:8080/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)

The endpoints are /ports for the whole list (can be long) and /ports/<search> to search a specific port :

$ curl http://127.0.0.1:8080/ports/3306
{"ports":[{"description":"MySQL","name":"mysql","port":"3306","protocol":"tcp, udp"}]}

$ curl http://localhost:8080/ports/redis
{"ports":[{"description":"An advanced key-value cache and store","name":"redis","port":"6379","protocol":"tcp"}]}

You can use the ?like parameter to search a pattern.

About

Whatportis : explore IANA's list of ports

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages