What This Port Is
Port 60742 belongs to the dynamic port range (49152-65535), also called ephemeral ports. These port numbers are officially unassigned and uncontrolled. The Internet's designers left them undefined on purpose.1
What This Range Means
When you open a web browser or send an email, your computer needs to send data from somewhere to somewhere else. The destination uses a well-known port—443 for HTTPS, 25 for SMTP. But where does your browser send from?
Your machine picks an ephemeral port. It might be 60742. It might be 54821. The number doesn't matter because you'll never use it again. After the connection closes—seconds, minutes, or hours later—that port number dies and becomes available for the next process that needs it.2
This is the Internet's way of being generous. Instead of carefully assigning every single port to some service, the designers said: "Take what you need from this range. Use it. Discard it. We have plenty."
Known Informal Uses
Port 60742 appears in some gRPC service configurations, particularly in Dapr (Distributed Application Runtime) environments, but this is an informal, unofficial use.3 There is no official Internet service assigned to this port number.
If you see port 60742 listening on your machine, it's something a local process chose—not something the Internet agreed on.
How to Check What's Listening on This Port
On Linux or macOS:
On Windows:
If nothing is listening, the port sits empty—waiting for some process to claim it temporarily.
Why Unassigned Ports Matter
The ephemeral range represents something important about the Internet's design philosophy: there's room for the unexpected.
The well-known ports (0-1023) are carefully guarded. Port 443 is HTTPS forever. Port 25 is SMTP forever. These are the Internet's permanent fixtures.
But ports 49152-65535? Those are the Commons. They're for anyone, anything, any temporary need. A monitoring tool might grab port 60742 for an internal health check. A developer might hardcode it in a test. A gRPC service might use it for microservice communication that lasts microseconds.
No one asked permission. No one registered it. That's the point.
Related Reading
- Ephemeral ports — The Wikipedia explanation of how temporary ports work
- RFC 6056: Recommendations for Transport-Protocol Port Randomization — How operating systems should assign ephemeral ports securely
- TCP/IP Port Exhaustion Troubleshooting — What happens when a system runs out of ephemeral ports
Frequently Asked Questions
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