Port 2351 has no officially assigned service. IANA — the organization that manages port number assignments — lists it as unassigned in the registered port range.1
What Range This Port Belongs To
Port 2351 falls in the registered ports range (1024–49151), sometimes called user ports. This range sits between the well-known ports (0–1023), which are reserved for foundational protocols like HTTP, HTTPS, SSH, and DNS, and the ephemeral ports (49152–65535), which operating systems assign dynamically to outgoing connections.
Registered ports are meant to be claimed. Organizations and developers apply to IANA to officially associate a service name with a port number. This lets software, firewalls, and network teams know what traffic to expect on a given port.2
Port 2351 was never claimed. It's open space.
What You Might Find Here
Some third-party port reference sites associate port 2351 with Symantec Endpoint Protection Manager — the server component of Symantec's enterprise antivirus product. The claim appears to have spread from database to database without a clear primary source. Broadcom's own documentation for Symantec Endpoint Protection doesn't list port 2351 as a required communication port.3
This is how port folklore works. One reference site lists something, others copy it, and a rumor calcifies into "fact." If you see port 2351 mentioned in a firewall guide or network diagram, verify it against the software vendor's actual documentation before acting on it.
In practice, any software can use any unassigned port. Port 2351 might be serving a custom application, an internal service, or nothing at all.
How to Check What's Listening on This Port
If you want to know what's actually using port 2351 on a machine:
Linux / macOS:
Windows:
The output will show you the process ID (PID) using the port. From there, you can match it to a process name in your task manager or with ps aux on Linux.
Why Unassigned Ports Matter
The port registry only works if people use it. When software quietly occupies an unassigned port without registering it, two things can happen: a future service gets officially assigned that same number and creates a conflict, or two pieces of software on the same machine both expect to own the port.
For firewall administrators, unassigned ports like 2351 require judgment rather than lookup. There's no authoritative reference that says "this is safe to block" or "this must stay open." You have to investigate what's actually running.
That uncertainty is a feature of the system working correctly — unassigned means genuinely unknown, and genuinely unknown means you should check.
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