![]() ![]() It used to be possible to poke at the ARP tables on an iPhone, but that was discouraged. When a port is open and otherwise inactive with no open connections, fingerprinting is sometimes possible, but not particularly reliable. That’ll tell you connection source IP and port, and destination IP and port, when a connection is established. Nmap won’t tell you much about that activity, and getting the routing information (for an iPhone, which doesn’t expose routing info) usually involves the information available on an intermediate router, such as a firewall router. There are VNC/RDP apps around for iPhone. Wouldn’t surprise that iTunes sync was associated with UPnP. TCP 62078 was usually UPnP, when last I checked. Which means you’re probably looking at some local app with a TCP port open. Though technically, 1025 to 65535 was RFC-permissible as an ephemeral range, when last I checked. That iOS follows that same range would not surprise. MacOS uses the following range for ephemeral ports: .portrange.first: 49152 It’s not unheard of for a malicious app to spoof another legitimate (but transient) app. Looking at open ports tells you nothing about what is actually running on those ports. Here are the official ports: TCP and UDP ports used by Apple software products - Apple Support Scroll To: Reset your Network Settings.Go Here: If your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch won't Connect to a Wi-Fi network - Apple Support.Wi-Fi: If your iPhone won’t Connect to a Wi-Fi Network - Apple Support Go Here: Clear your Safari Browser History and Set Up Content Blockers on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch - Apple Support If connecting is unsuccessful, try clearing out your Temporary Internet Files: History, Cache, and Cookies It controls access by app, instead of by port." As it Reads: " The application firewall in macOS is not a port-based firewall.As it Reads: " 49152–65535 - TCP - Xsan - Xsan Filesystem Access".See here: TCP and UDP Ports Used by Apple Software Products - Apple Support.So, any Security Software or other things connected your iPhone that you can think of? Security Software just gets in the way on an Apple device, and this is a pure example of how and why. Are you using an app with a Firewall on it? Are you using a firewall in your router? This seems to be a firewall issue, and is cause by that of a third-party app. ![]() This is not a builtin port-based firewall. " i thought i get hacked ,i scanned ports and found some suspicious ports: yes sir, i can reset if ports is not normal but i dont know this is normal or un-normal espacially port 49152 i have no idea what is it" ![]()
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