port
Click on the red underlined text to get to the source
... known" Gopher server (this may be duplicated, details are discussed
later) listens at a well known port for the campus (much like a
domain-name server ...
... name server). The only configuration information the client
software retains is this server's name and port number (in this
example that machine is rawBits.micro.umn.edu and the port 70). In
...
... client
software retains is this server's name and port number (in this
example that machine is rawBits.micro.umn.edu and the port 70). In
the example below the F character denotes the TAB character.
...
... domain-name of the host
that has this document (or directory), and the port at which to
connect. If there are yet other tab delimited fields, the basic
Gopher ...
... Gopher". To retrieve this document, the client
software must send the retrieval string: "Stuff:About us" to
rawBits.micro.umn.edu at port 70. If the client does this, the
server will respond with the contents of the document, terminated by
...
...
Client: (Connects to pserver.bookstore.umn.edu at port 70)
Server: (Accepts connection but says nothing)
...
... over several servers. Departments that wish to put up their own
departmental servers need to register the machine name and port with
the administrators of the top-level ...
... address. There is nothing to prevent secondary
servers or services from running on otherwise named servers or ports
other than 70, however these should be reachable via a primary
server.
...
... Port ::= DigitSeq.
Note: Port corresponds the the TCP Port Number, its value should
be in the range ...
...
Note: Port corresponds the the TCP Port Number, its value should
be in the range [0..65535]; port ...
... TCP Port Number, its value should
be in the range [0..65535]; port 70 is officially assigned
to gopher.
...
