What Port Range This Is
Port 10219 falls in the registered ports range (1024–49151), assigned by IANA to specific services upon request.1 Unlike well-known ports (0–1023) which are reserved for established protocols, registered ports are allocated as applications and services need them.
The Unassigned State
Port 10219 has no official IANA assignment.2 It's not SSH. Not HTTP. Not anything with a name and an RFC. It exists in the registry as a number with no claim to it.
This is common. The registered range holds 48,127 addresses. Only a fraction are assigned. The rest are available—potential, unclaimed, waiting for someone to build something that needs a port number and bothers to register it.
Known Unofficial Uses
Port 10219 doesn't appear in security databases, threat intelligence feeds, or malware analysis as a commonly exploited or occupied port.3 No standard application is known to use it. If something is running on 10219 on your system, it's likely:
- A custom application built in-house
- A service configured to a non-standard port for obscurity
- A legacy system you forgot about
- Something that shouldn't be there
How to Check What's Listening
If you need to know what's on port 10219:
Linux/macOS:
Windows:
Cross-platform:
Why Unassigned Ports Matter
The registered range exists so that nobody can accidentally use the same port. When you register a port number with IANA, you're publishing a contract: "This application uses this port. If you see traffic here, it's us." Without this system, every software company would pick arbitrary numbers and collisions would happen. The Internet would break.
Port 10219, unassigned, is part of that system working exactly as designed. It's reserved. Available. Honest about its emptiness.
If you're building something and need a port, you can request one through IANA. Or you can use an ephemeral port (49152–65535) that the OS gives you automatically. Port 10219 will wait either way.
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