
In programming you can use any numbers 0 to 65535 for your server, however you should stick to the ranges mentioned above, otherwise some system services or some applications will not run because of port conflict. (not used for the servers rather the clients e.g. it is not recommended to assign the port of MSSQL to your server otherwise if MSSQL is running then your server most probably will not run because of port conflict ) Dynamic/private ports: 49152 to 65535. ) Registered/user ports: 1024 to 49151 (you can use it for your server, but be careful some famous applications: like Microsoft SQL Server database management system (MSSQL) server or Apache Derby Network Server are already taking from this range i.e. However ports are divided into: Well-known ports: 0 to 1023 (used for system services e.g. That is because a port number is 16 bit length. Valid numbers for ports are: 0 to 2^16-1 = 0 to 65535 OS/driver) specific, however all, including 0, are valid ports in the RFC 793. So any limitation on using a port in the 0-65535 range, including 0, ephemeral reservation range etc, is implementation (i.e. So in most implementations, saying "listen on port 0" actually means "I don't care what port I use, just give me some random unassigned port to listen on".

Most implementations reserve 0 for a specific purpose - random port assignment. Likewise, even tho it is the standard that SMTP servers listen on port 25, you can run it on 80, 443, or others. You can, if you want to, run up a web server's TLS port on port 80, or 25, or 65535 instead of the standard 443. TCP/UDP implementations usually don't enforce reservations apart from 0. I say generally because, apart from port 0, there is usually no enforcement of the 0-1023 reservation. However, within that range, ports 0 - 1023 are generally reserved for specific purposes.
#Port range for limechat mac mac os x#
Version Date Size Minimum OS 2.38 2.4 MB Mac OS X 10.

MacUpdate stores previous versions of LimeChat for you since v.

According to RFC 793, the port is a 16 bit unsigned int. Download Old Versions of LimeChat: 2.38 If you experience any compatibility issues with LimeChat for Mac, consider downloading one of the older versions of LimeChat.
