Port 3696 sits in the registered port range (1024–49151) and carries a real IANA assignment, even if you've almost certainly never encountered it. Since February 2003, it's been assigned to telnetcpcd — the Telnet Com Port Control Daemon — a service for managing serial port communication over TCP networks.
What It Does
To understand port 3696, you need to understand the problem it was solving.
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, serial ports were everywhere. Modems, industrial sensors, medical monitors, cash registers, serial printers — all of them spoke RS-232. The problem was that serial cables have a hard physical limit: roughly 15 meters. If your serial device was across the building, or across the country, you needed a way to tunnel that serial connection over a network.
RFC 2217, published in 1997, defined the Telnet Com Port Control Option — a protocol extension that lets two endpoints negotiate serial port parameters (baud rate, parity, stop bits, flow control, signal pins) over a standard Telnet connection. One end has the physical serial port; the other end acts as if it does.
Port 3696's telnetcpcd is the control daemon for this setup — the process that manages those COM port connections on a terminal server or serial device gateway.
The Range It Lives In
The registered port range (1024–49151) is where services go when they need a stable, well-known address but aren't common enough to claim a spot below 1024. IANA maintains the registry, but registration has never required ongoing use. A port can be registered once and quietly retire — still technically claimed, rarely seen in the wild.
Port 3696 fits that description. The registration is real. The protocol it supports is real. But modern serial device connectivity has largely moved to other approaches: dedicated serial-over-IP software, USB adapters, industrial protocols like Modbus TCP, or simply replacing the serial device entirely.
Who Still Uses It
If you see traffic on port 3696 today, it's likely:
- Legacy terminal servers managing older serial equipment in industrial or medical environments
- Serial device servers from vendors that implemented RFC 2217 for COM port redirection
- Network-attached serial gateways bridging old hardware to modern infrastructure
It's niche, but in manufacturing plants, hospitals, and telecommunications infrastructure, "niche" often means "critical to one specific thing that cannot be updated."
How to Check What's on This Port
If port 3696 shows up on your network, identify it before assuming the worst.
Linux / macOS:
Windows:
Take the PID from the output and look it up in Task Manager or with tasklist /FI "PID eq <pid>".
If you find something unexpected listening on 3696 — not a serial device manager, not a known terminal server application — treat it as worth investigating. Unexpected listeners are always worth investigating.
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