The Port Range
Port 10382 falls in the registered ports range (1024–49151). These are the middle of the port system—not the famous well-known ports (0–1023) where SSH, HTTP, and DNS live, but not the ephemeral/dynamic ports (49152–65535) either. Registered ports are allocated by IANA on application, meant for services that need a persistent, documented home number.
There are 48,128 registered ports total. Port 10382 is one of them.
What's Actually There
Searches of the IANA registry, port databases, and documentation turn up nothing assigned to 10382. No RFC. No official service name. No standard. It's unassigned.
This is the honest truth: most ports are like this. You could look up any port between 10,000 and 20,000 and find mostly empty numbers. Port 10382 is generic. Interchangeable. There's nothing special about it except that it exists.
Unofficial Uses
Since it's unassigned, any application can claim it. You might find something listening on 10382 on your system—a development server, a proprietary tool, an old software package—but there's no standard service behind it. If it's running, it's because someone chose this number arbitrarily. They could have chosen 10381 or 10383 instead.
How to Check What's Listening
If you want to know what's actually using port 10382 on your machine, you need to ask your system directly:
On Linux/macOS:
On Windows:
These commands will tell you if anything is listening on 10382 and what process owns it. The port registry won't.
Why Unassigned Ports Matter
The port system works because it's finite. There are exactly 65,535 ports (1–65535), and each one has a purpose or potential. Most are unused. That's intentional.
Unassigned ports matter because they represent possibility. They're the reason new protocols can still find a home. They're the reason a developer can spin up a test service on an arbitrary port without fighting with the system. The emptiness is a feature—it proves there's still room for ideas.
Port 10382 will probably never be assigned. Thousands of ports like it never will be. They exist to be available. That's their entire job.
Sources:
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