I was scanning my local network for ports and found 5001 tcp/commplex-link. What is it?












0















Apparently my home router is listening on port 5001:



Nmap scan report for 192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1)
Host is up (0.018s latency).
Not shown: 997 closed ports
PORT STATE SERVICE
80/tcp open http
5001/tcp open commplex-link
52869/tcp open unknown


I tried googleing for port number (5001) and protocol (commplex-link) but couldn't find any clarification.



Does any body know what is that protocol or if it exists as a standard? Link to documentation would be nice.










share|improve this question























  • What sort of router it is would help - also while its a well known port, ports are not always used for the registered protocol... so it might not actually be "commplex-link"

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:08











  • I agree, and thus I don't think it matters which router it is. I just want more info on the protocol itself. If nmap catched it I think it cannot be so "unknown". Nevertheless I couldn't find it.

    – harogaston
    Jan 22 at 2:12











  • It matters here simply because someone else might have come across it - alternative fun stuff to do is try using telnet and seeing what the response is... but if its something 'unique' to that router, it would narrow it down.

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:24











  • for example - wikipedia suggests slingbox/slingplayer and synology use it

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:25
















0















Apparently my home router is listening on port 5001:



Nmap scan report for 192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1)
Host is up (0.018s latency).
Not shown: 997 closed ports
PORT STATE SERVICE
80/tcp open http
5001/tcp open commplex-link
52869/tcp open unknown


I tried googleing for port number (5001) and protocol (commplex-link) but couldn't find any clarification.



Does any body know what is that protocol or if it exists as a standard? Link to documentation would be nice.










share|improve this question























  • What sort of router it is would help - also while its a well known port, ports are not always used for the registered protocol... so it might not actually be "commplex-link"

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:08











  • I agree, and thus I don't think it matters which router it is. I just want more info on the protocol itself. If nmap catched it I think it cannot be so "unknown". Nevertheless I couldn't find it.

    – harogaston
    Jan 22 at 2:12











  • It matters here simply because someone else might have come across it - alternative fun stuff to do is try using telnet and seeing what the response is... but if its something 'unique' to that router, it would narrow it down.

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:24











  • for example - wikipedia suggests slingbox/slingplayer and synology use it

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:25














0












0








0








Apparently my home router is listening on port 5001:



Nmap scan report for 192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1)
Host is up (0.018s latency).
Not shown: 997 closed ports
PORT STATE SERVICE
80/tcp open http
5001/tcp open commplex-link
52869/tcp open unknown


I tried googleing for port number (5001) and protocol (commplex-link) but couldn't find any clarification.



Does any body know what is that protocol or if it exists as a standard? Link to documentation would be nice.










share|improve this question














Apparently my home router is listening on port 5001:



Nmap scan report for 192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1)
Host is up (0.018s latency).
Not shown: 997 closed ports
PORT STATE SERVICE
80/tcp open http
5001/tcp open commplex-link
52869/tcp open unknown


I tried googleing for port number (5001) and protocol (commplex-link) but couldn't find any clarification.



Does any body know what is that protocol or if it exists as a standard? Link to documentation would be nice.







networking router nmap






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




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asked Jan 21 at 23:19









harogastonharogaston

15210




15210













  • What sort of router it is would help - also while its a well known port, ports are not always used for the registered protocol... so it might not actually be "commplex-link"

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:08











  • I agree, and thus I don't think it matters which router it is. I just want more info on the protocol itself. If nmap catched it I think it cannot be so "unknown". Nevertheless I couldn't find it.

    – harogaston
    Jan 22 at 2:12











  • It matters here simply because someone else might have come across it - alternative fun stuff to do is try using telnet and seeing what the response is... but if its something 'unique' to that router, it would narrow it down.

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:24











  • for example - wikipedia suggests slingbox/slingplayer and synology use it

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:25



















  • What sort of router it is would help - also while its a well known port, ports are not always used for the registered protocol... so it might not actually be "commplex-link"

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:08











  • I agree, and thus I don't think it matters which router it is. I just want more info on the protocol itself. If nmap catched it I think it cannot be so "unknown". Nevertheless I couldn't find it.

    – harogaston
    Jan 22 at 2:12











  • It matters here simply because someone else might have come across it - alternative fun stuff to do is try using telnet and seeing what the response is... but if its something 'unique' to that router, it would narrow it down.

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:24











  • for example - wikipedia suggests slingbox/slingplayer and synology use it

    – Journeyman Geek
    Jan 22 at 2:25

















What sort of router it is would help - also while its a well known port, ports are not always used for the registered protocol... so it might not actually be "commplex-link"

– Journeyman Geek
Jan 22 at 2:08





What sort of router it is would help - also while its a well known port, ports are not always used for the registered protocol... so it might not actually be "commplex-link"

– Journeyman Geek
Jan 22 at 2:08













I agree, and thus I don't think it matters which router it is. I just want more info on the protocol itself. If nmap catched it I think it cannot be so "unknown". Nevertheless I couldn't find it.

– harogaston
Jan 22 at 2:12





I agree, and thus I don't think it matters which router it is. I just want more info on the protocol itself. If nmap catched it I think it cannot be so "unknown". Nevertheless I couldn't find it.

– harogaston
Jan 22 at 2:12













It matters here simply because someone else might have come across it - alternative fun stuff to do is try using telnet and seeing what the response is... but if its something 'unique' to that router, it would narrow it down.

– Journeyman Geek
Jan 22 at 2:24





It matters here simply because someone else might have come across it - alternative fun stuff to do is try using telnet and seeing what the response is... but if its something 'unique' to that router, it would narrow it down.

– Journeyman Geek
Jan 22 at 2:24













for example - wikipedia suggests slingbox/slingplayer and synology use it

– Journeyman Geek
Jan 22 at 2:25





for example - wikipedia suggests slingbox/slingplayer and synology use it

– Journeyman Geek
Jan 22 at 2:25










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