I Block all three profiles: public, private. ![]() I would drop using it altogether, but I find the filtering and UX a lot better/more friendly in TCPView so I'd like to be able to keep using it somehow. It looks nothing like the sample tcpview I found on line Also, the windows firewall will not let me block remote Ports (mentioned in another thread). Moreover, when using a similar app like CurrPorts, that one shows the addresses just fine - so i suppose it's not something wrong with my system, but with TCPView specifically. I've tried purging every entry of TCPView from the registry (it doesn't install so I can't uninstall it), redownloading, I've tried using an older version (4.0), and the problem is still there - I simply can't get it working again.Īs added info, after a PC reboot it does show the addresses immediately after I first open it for about 3-4 seconds, then it defaults back to showing :: or ::1. Running as administrator or not makes no difference, issue still happens in either case. I've searched online but resources on people with this same problem are sparse and with no resolution. ![]() One of the key things you need to remember about using TCPView with your Linux. It also provides details about the port number, source port, and destination port for every packet, so youll be able to easily understand the protocols in use on your system. Up until a few days ago it worked fine, but all of a sudden it simply stopped showing addresses, and instead showing either :: or ::1. TCPView will display the IP address of every known TCP connection on your computer. ![]() ![]() On Windows Server 2008, Vista, NT, 2000 and XP TCPView also reports the name of. I'm using TCPView 4.16 for Windows 10 (downloaded from ). Click on Remote Portto order connections by remote port and display the processes that are out of the ordinary. including the local and remote addresses and state of TCP connections.
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