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Port Scanner

Scan standard ports to audit security profiles of active host domains.

Computational Status

AI Diagnostic Specialist

Automatically analyze tool output and explain results in plain English

Configure Tool Params

Used 1,245 times todaySecure In-Browser Execution
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Educational Guide: Understanding Port Scanner

Step-by-Step Operation Guide

1

Input Target Address

Provide a valid IP address, hostname, or domain in the query input for Port Scanner.

2

Run Diagnostics

Initialize the query check to execute real-time network routes, lookup requests, or connection checks.

3

Analyze Parameters

Inspect response outputs, check routing details, and review the AI specialist explanation.

How to Interpret Diagnostic Results

Diagnostic parameters for Port Scanner return raw network payloads. Analyze standard fields to determine connectivity routing, response times, and target status.

Check IP geolocation mapping, dns record availability, routing paths, and latency parameters. Confirm standard status flags return successfully.

Troubleshooting & Industry Standards

Ensure input targets for Port Scanner are properly formatted. Resolve lookup timeouts by auditing DNS availability, network path blocks, and local firewalls.

Reference Standards & Protocols

RFC 791 (IPv4 Spec)RFC 1035 (DNS Implementation)RFC 2460 (IPv6 Standard)RFC 792 (ICMP protocol)

Frequently Asked Questions

Learn more about how this tool works and standard configurations

It checks standard ports such as HTTP (80), HTTPS (443), SSH (22), FTP (21), Telnet (23), SMTP (25), DNS (53), and RDP (3389).
Yes, scanning your public IP address will reveal which ports are exposed to the internet.
Scanning your own networks or publicly available services is legal for auditing purposes. Do not scan third-party networks without authorization.