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18 Cards in this Set

  • Front
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Port 21
FTP-File Transfer Protocol. FTP technology allows you to transfer files between two computers over the Internet.
Port 23
TELNET-The Internet standard protocol for remote login. Runs on top of TCP/IP. Defined in STD 8, RFC 854 and extended with options by many other RFCs. Unix BSD networking software includes a program, telnet, which uses the protocol and acts as a terminal emulator for the remote login session.
Port 25
SMTP-Simple Mail Transfer Protocol: a protocol for transferring e-mail messages over the Internet.
Port 53
DNS-domain name system
Port 80
HTTP-hypertext transfer protocol: the standard protocol for transferring hypertext documents on the World Wide Web. Compare HTML.
Port 110
POP3-messaging, protocol
Version 3 of the Post Office Protocol. POP3 is defined in RFC 1081, written in November 1988 by Marshall Rose, which is based on RFC 918 (since revised as RFC 937). POP3 allows a client computer to retrieve electronic mail from a POP3 server via a (temporary) TCP/IP or other[?] connection.
Port 143
IMAP- Internet Message Access Protocol: a way of accessing e-mail messages which are held on an internet server, rather than on an individual's computer
Port 443
HTTPS-HyperText Transmission Protocol, Secure
Port 3389
RDP -Reliable Data Protocol.
DHCP
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) is an autoconfiguration protocol used on IP networks.
DNS
The domain name system or domain name server (DNS) is a system that stores information associated with domain names in a distributed database on networks, such as the Internet.
LDAP
Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) is an application protocol for querying and modifying data of directory services over an Internet Protocol (IP) network
SNMP
Simple Network Management Protocol The Internet standard protocol, defined in STD 15, RFC 1157, developed to manage nodes on an IP network. SNMP is not limited to TCP/IP. It can be used to manage and monitor all sorts of equipment including computers, routers, wiring hubs, toasters and jukeboxes.
SMB
Server Message Block
SSH
Secure Shell A Unix shell program for logging into, and executing commands on, a remote computer. ssh is intended to replace rlogin and rsh, and provide secure encrypted communications between two untrusted hosts over an insecure network. X11 connections and arbitrary TCP/IP ports can also be forwarded over the secure channel.
SFTP
"Secure File Transfer Protocol" or Secure FTP. It is a program that uses SSH to transfer files.
TCP
TCP/IP stands for Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol, which is a set of networking protocols that allows two or more computers to communicate
UDP
User Datagram Protocol Internet standard network layer, transport layer and session layer protocols which provide simple but unreliable datagram services. UDP is defined in STD 6, RFC 768