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PowerFolder needs the following ports to be opened:
The above mentioned ports can be changed of course. You can either change them as an administrator in the web interface or via the Server Configuration File.
You might ask yourself, why there is a need for a port opened which serves the web interface without a SSL certificate.
In case the client is behind a firewall, which blocks all ports except port 80, the client encrypts his data packets for exchange with the server using the PowerFolder-internal transfer protocol (same procedure as for packets being directly exchange via the normal data port) and sends his data packets via HTTP POST against the non-SSL URL of the server. If the client would send it against the SSL-protected URL (e.g. http://powerfolder.example.com/rpc), the data exchange would be encrypted twice, which means the data transfer would slow down, because the data packets would be encrypted by the PowerFolder-internal protocol and the SSL connection.
On Linux-based systems it's not possible for a non-root user to bind to ports below 1024 as those ports are considered "privileged". Therefore you need to either put a web server like Apache or Nginx in front ( recommended) or choose PowerFolder ports higher than 1024 .
Operating Systems | |
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Microsoft Windows | 2008 R2 / 2012 / 2012 R2 / 2016 /7 / 8.1 / 10 |
Linux / Unix / Solaris | Debian, Redhat, SLES, Ubuntu |
Databases | |
Microsoft SQL | 2012 / 2014 / 2016 / 2017 |
MySQL | 5.7 |
PostgreSQL | 9.3 |
Browsers | |
Edge | 42 and higher |
Internet Explorer | 11 and higher** |
Mozilla Firefox | 3.6 and higher |
Google Chrome | 10 and higher |
Safari | 5 and higher |
*Because of the huge amount of distributions we are limiting our support and tests to Gentoo and Ubuntu LTS distributions.
** Some functions aren't working correctly on Internet Explorer 11. Especially the settings can't get configured with this browser. Please use for configuration Firefox, Chrome, Edge or Safari.