This is a little tool I created for testing the required TCP ports on SCCM client systems. It will check that the required inbound ports are open and that the client can communicate to its management point, distribution point and software update point on the required ports. It also includes a custom port checker for testing any inbound or outbound port.
The default ports are taken from the Microsoft documentation, but these can be edited in the case that non-default ports are being used, or additional ports need to be tested.
To use the tool, extract the ZIP file, right-click the ‘ConfigMgr Client TCP Port Tester.ps1′and run with PowerShell.
Checking Inbound Ports
Select Local Ports in the drop-down box and click GO to test the required inbound ports.
Checking Outbound Ports
Select the destination in the drop-down box (ie management point, distribution point, software update point).
Enter the destination server name if not populated by the defaults and click GO. The tool will test ICMP connectivity first, then port connectivity.
Custom Port Checking
To test a custom port, select Custom Port Test from the drop-down box. Enter the port number, direction (ie Inbound or Outbound) and destination (Outbound only). Click Add to add the test to the grid. You can add several tests. Click GO.
Adding Default Servers
You can pre-populate server names by editing the Defaults.xml file found in the defaults directory. For example, to add a default management point:
Press the Windows key + R, then type "cmd.exe" and click OK. Enter "telnet + IP address or hostname + port number" (e.g., telnet www.example.com 1723 or telnet 10.17. xxx. xxx 5000) to run the telnet command in Command Prompt and test the TCP port status.
It checks the local ports required by the SCCM client as well as connectivity to management point, distribution point and sofware update point servers. In addition, there is a custom port tester for testing any inbound or outbound port to any destination.
To check connectivity between clients and Configuration Manager site systems, you can check the statuses of your Configuration Manager site systems and use the Network Connectivity tab in this dashboard to filter by device name, entity, or location and check for connectivity issues.
Press the 'windows' key and type 'cmd'. Press “Command Prompt”. Step 3: On the command prompt, type the command “telnet + IP address or hostname + port number” and check the status of the provided TCP port. Step 4: If only the blinking cursor is visible, then the port is open.
The default values for client request ports are 80 for HTTP traffic and 443 for HTTPS traffic. Change them only if you don't want to use these default values.
If you would like to test ports on your computer, use the Windows command prompt and the CMD command netstat -ano. Windows will show you all currently existing network connections via open ports or open, listening ports that are currently not establishing a connection.
Press the Windows key + R, then type "cmd.exe" and click OK. Enter "telnet + IP address or hostname + port number" (e.g., telnet www.example.com 1723 or telnet 10.17. xxx. xxx 5000) to run the telnet command in Command Prompt and test the TCP port status.
To monitor TCP and UDP traffic, you need to use tools that can capture and analyze the packets that are sent and received over the network. Some of the common tools are Wireshark, tcpdump, nmap, netstat, and iperf.
If you would like to test ports on your computer, use the Windows command prompt and the CMD command netstat -ano. Windows will show you all currently existing network connections via open ports or open, listening ports that are currently not establishing a connection.
YuIP.org - Check TCP port online on WEB page. Use the YuIP website to find out your IP, check for open ports, test the latency for multiple servers in the world, and give the PING command online.
Introduction: My name is Arielle Torp, I am a comfortable, kind, zealous, lovely, jolly, colorful, adventurous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
We notice you're using an ad blocker
Without advertising income, we can't keep making this site awesome for you.