Karel Galuska wrote:
p1 and p2 are always the same.
58453 always to 80
K.

...
It is not easy to explain. On PCs are special custom based aplications which changes destination port of outcoming traffic and I need put it back to port
80.

As a casual reader of this thread, I'm wondering if someone could enlighten me as to why you'd want a custom application to take the "standard" destination port an app (web browser) has requested and remap it to some random high port which the destination server has no hope of understanding, therefore requiring said port to be re-translated back to its original by a proxy or firewall anyhow? It seems a completely pointless and futile exercise. I hope it's not some kind of attempt at security through obscurity, but for the life of me I couldn't think of some other reason why you'd want to do this.

Thanks for any clarity someone might send my way,
Mark

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