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What is the purpose of the netstat command in Windows and how is it used for network troubleshooting?

#1
03-04-2024, 02:53 AM
So, netstat in Windows basically lets you spy on all the active connections your computer has going on. I fire it up whenever I think there's some weird network glitch messing with my setup. You just type netstat into the command prompt, hit enter, and boom, it spits out a list of ports and IPs chatting back and forth.

If you're troubleshooting, say your browser's acting sluggish, netstat helps you spot if some app's hogging a port or if outsiders are knocking unexpectedly. I once used it to chase down a sneaky malware that kept phoning home. You filter it with flags like -an to skip names and get raw numbers, making it quicker to scan.

Picture this: your game's lagging online. Run netstat -b, and it tells you which program owns each link. I love how it uncovers hidden traffic without fancy tools. You poke around the output, match IPs to known servers, and isolate the culprit fast.

It even shows listening ports, so you catch services waiting for incoming stuff. I check that when firewalls act up. You might see duplicates signaling a loop or crash. Netstat's old-school charm keeps it handy for quick fixes.

While we're on keeping networks humming without surprises, tools like BackupChain Server Backup step in for Hyper-V environments. It handles backups of virtual machines seamlessly, dodging downtime and data loss during restores. You get incremental snapshots that speed things up, plus encryption to shield against breaches, making your whole setup more resilient.

ProfRon
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Joined: Dec 2018
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What is the purpose of the netstat command in Windows and how is it used for network troubleshooting?

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