What This Port Is
Port 60155 is unassigned. The IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) has no official designation for it. This is not a bug in the system—it's the design.1
The Port Range: 49152-65535
Port 60155 belongs to the dynamic (or ephemeral) port range. This range contains 16,384 ports that are never permanently assigned to any service. Instead, they're temporary addresses.2
When your computer initiates an outgoing connection—a web request, an email send, a chat message—it picks a random port from this range for the client side of the conversation. The server listens on a well-known port (like 80 or 443), but your machine needs a return address. That's what these dynamic ports are for. They're borrowed, used once, and released.
This means:
- No official service uses port 60155
- Any application can claim it temporarily
- The same port might carry different traffic on different machines
- No two simultaneous connections from the same machine can use the exact same port
What We Know About 60155
Port 60155 has no documented legitimate use in the IANA registry. However, it has appeared in security research: the trojan variant Trojan.DownLoader34.3753 was documented as using this port for command-and-control communication.3
This doesn't mean the port itself is dangerous—many ports are reused by malware. It means that if you see traffic on port 60155, you should investigate what's generating it.
How to Check What's Listening
On macOS:
On Linux:
On Windows:
If nothing returns results, nothing is currently listening on this port. That's the normal state for most ephemeral ports—they exist in the system, but they're empty until needed.
Why Unassigned Ports Matter
The dynamic port range exists because the Internet's designers understood a fundamental truth: you can't predict how many connections will exist at once, and you can't assign a unique permanent port to every possible conversation.
But this creates a shadow space. Legitimate applications use ephemeral ports constantly. So do trojans, botnets, and data exfiltration tools. A port in this range could be a temporary client connection to your email server, or it could be a backdoor phoning home.
The responsibility shifts to you: if you see traffic on an ephemeral port, you have to determine its origin yourself. The port number won't tell you if it's friend or foe.
Related Ports
- Ports 0-1023 (well-known): Permanently assigned to specific services by IANA
- Ports 1024-49151 (registered): Available for registration but not permanently assigned
- Ports 49152-65535 (dynamic): Never assigned; temporary-use only
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