The port4me tool:
-
finds a free TCP port in [1024,65535] that the user can open
-
is designed to work in multi-user environments
-
gives different users, different ports
-
gives the user the same port over time with high probability
-
gives different ports for different software tools
-
requires no configuration
-
can be reproduced perfectly on all operating systems and in all common programming languages
-
Available for Bash, Python, and R
There are many tools to identify a free TCP port, where most of them return a random port. Although it works technically, it might add a fair bit of friction if a new random port number has to be entered by the user each time they need to use a specific tool.
In contrast, port4me attempts, with high probability, to provide
the user with the same port each time, even when used on different
days. It achieves this by scanning the same deterministic,
pseudo-random sequence of ports and return the first free port
detected. Each user gets their own random port sequence, lowering the
risk for any two users to request the same port. The randomness is
initiated with a random seed that is a function of the user's name
(USER
), and, optionally, the name of the software where we use the
port.
The port4me algorithm can be implemented in most known programming languages, producing perfectly reproducable sequencing regardless of implementation language.
Assuming we're logged in as user alice
in a Bash shell, calling
port4me
without arguments gives us a free port:
{alice}$ port4me
30845
As we will see later, each user on the system is likely to get their own unique port. Because of this, it can be used to specifying a port that some software tool should use, e.g.
{alice}$ jupyter notebook --port "$(port4me)"
As long as this port is available, alice
will always get the same
port across shell sessions and over time. For example, if they return
next week and retry, it's likely they still get:
{alice}$ port4me
30845
{alice}$ port4me
30845
However, if port 30845 is already occupied, the next port in the pseudo-random sequence is considered, e.g.
{alice}$ port4me
19654
To see the first five ports scanned, run:
{alice}$ port4me --list=5
30845
19654
32310
63992
15273
This random sequence is initiated by a random seed that can be set via
the hashcode of a seed string. By default, it is based on the name of
the current user (e.g. environment variable $USER
). For example,
when user bob
uses the port4me
tool, they see another set of ports
being scanned:
{bob}$ port4me --list=5
54242
4930
42139
14723
55707
For testing and demonstration purposes, one can emulate another user
by specifying option --user
, e.g.
{alice}$ port4me
30845
{alice}$ port4me --user=bob
54242
{alice}$ port4me --user=carol
34307
Sometimes a user would like to use two, or more, ports at the same
time, e.g. one port for RStudio Server and another for Jupyter
Notebook. In such case, they can specify option --tool
, which
results in a port sequence that is unique to both the user and the
tool. For example,
{alice}$ port4me
30845
{alice}$ port4me --tool=rstudio
22486
{alice}$ port4me --tool=jupyter-notebook
29525
For conveniency, if the first option is unnamed, then it is assumed it
specifies the --tool
option. This means we can use the following
sort form as well:
{alice}$ port4me jupyter-notebook
47467
This allows us to get different ports for different software tools, e.g.
{alice}$ rserver --www-port "$(port4me rstudio)"
and
{alice}$ jupyter notebook --port "$(port4me jupyter-notebook)"
Since there is a limited set of ports available (1024-65535), there is
always a risk that another process occupies any given port. The more
users there are on the same machine, the higher the risk is for this
to happen. If a user is unlucky, they might experience this
frequently. For example, alice
might find that the first port
(30845) works only one out 10 times, the second port (19654) works 99
out 100 times, and the third one (32310) works rarely. If so, they
might choose to exclude the ports that are most likely to be occupied
by specifying them as a comma-separated values via option --exclude
,
e.g.
{alice}$ port4me --exclude=30845,32310
19654
An alternative to specify them via a command-line option, is to
specify them via environment variable PORT4ME_EXCLUDE
, e.g.
{alice}$ PORT4ME_EXCLUDE=30845,32310 port4me
19654
To set this permanently, append:
## port4me customization
## /~https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/port4me
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE=30845,32310
export PORT4ME_EXCLUDE
to the shell startup script, e.g. ~/.bashrc
.
This increases the chances for the user to end up with the same port over time, which is convenient, because then they can reuse the same call, which is available in the command-line history, each time without having to change the port parameter.
The environment variable PORT4ME_EXCLUDE
is intended to be used by
the individual user. To specify a set of ports to be excluded
regardless of user, set PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE
. For example, the
systems administrator, can choose to exclude an additional set of
ports by adding the following to file /etc/profile.d/port4me.sh
:
## port4me: always exclude commonly used ports
## /~https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/port4me
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE=
## MySQL
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE=$PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE,3306
## ZeroMQ
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE=$PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE,5670
## Redis
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE=$PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE,6379
## Jupyter
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE=$PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE,8888
export PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE
In addition to ports excluded via above mechanisms, port4me
excludes ports that are considered unsafe by the Chrome and Firefox
web browsers. This behavior can be controlled by environment variable
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_UNSAFE
, which defaults to {chrome},{firefox}
.
Token {chrome}
expands to the value of
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_UNSAFE_CHROME
, which defaults to the set of ports
that Chrome blocks, and {firefox}
expands to to the value of
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_UNSAFE_FIREFOX
, which defaults to the set of ports
that Firefox blocks.
Analogously to excluding a set of ports, one can limit the set of
ports to be scanned by specifying command-line option --include
,
e.g.
{alice}$ port4me --include=2000-2123,4321,10000-10999
10451
where the default corresponds to --include=1024-65535
. Analogously
to --exclude
, --include
can be specified via environment variables
PORT4ME_INCLUDE
and PORT4ME_INCLUDE_SITE
.
In addition to scanning the user-specific, pseudo-random port sequence
for a free port, it is possible to also consider a predefined set of
ports prior to the random ones by specifying command-line option
--prepend
, e.g.
{alice}$ port4me --prepend=4321,11001 --list=5
4321
11001
30845
19654
32310
An alternative to specify them via a command-line option, is to
specify them via environment variable PORT4ME_PREPEND
, e.g.
{alice}$ PORT4ME_PREPEND=4321,11001 port4me --list=5
4321
11001
30845
19654
32310
The environment variable PORT4ME_PREPEND
is intended to be used by
the individual user. To specify a set of ports to be prepended
regardless of user, set PORT4ME_PREPEND_SITE
.
All port4me implementations output the identified port to standard
output (stdout). This makes it easy to capture by standard shell
methods, e.g. port="$(port4me)"
. If you'd like to see which port
number was generated, use tee
to send the port also to the standard
error (stderr), which can be seen in the terminal. For example,
{alice}$ jupyter notebook --port "$(port4me --tool=jupyter-notebook | tee /dev/stderr)"
29525
To install the Bash version of portme, do:
VERSION=0.7.1
curl -L -O /~https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/port4me/archive/refs/tags/"${VERSION}.tar.gz"
tar -x -f "${VERSION}.tar.gz"
export PREFIX=/path/to/port4me/ ## must be an absolute path to a folder
(cd "port4me-${VERSION}/bash"; make install)
Then run it as:
$ export PATH=/path/to/port4me/bin:$PATH
$ port4me --version
0.7.1
To install the R portme package, which is available on CRAN, call the following from within R:
install.packages("port4me")
To try it out, call:
> port4me::port4me("jupyter-notebook")
[1] 47467
or
$ Rscript -e port4me::port4me jupyter-notebook
29525
The Python package port4me is available PyPI. To install the Python portme package to your personal Python package library, call the following from the command line:
$ pip install --user port4me
To install it to a Python virtual environment, drop option --user
.
To try it out, call:
>>> from port4me import port4me
>>> port4me("jupyter-notebook")
29525
or
$ python -m port4me --tool=jupyter-notebook
29525
-
It should be possible to implement the algorithm using 32-bit unsigned integer arithmetic. One must not assume that the largest represented integer can exceed
$2^{32} - 1$ . -
The pseudo-randomized port sequence should sample ports uniformly over
$[1024, 65535]$ . -
At a minimum, it should be possible to implement the algorithm in vanilla Sh*, Csh, Bash, C, C++, Fortran, Lua, Python, R, and Ruby, with no need for add-on packages beyond what is available from their core distribution. (*) Shells that do not support integer arithmetic may use tools such as
expr
,dc
,bc
, andawk
for these calculations. -
All programming languages should produce the exact same pseudo-random port sequences given the same random seed.
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The implementations should be written such that they work also when sourced, or copy'and'pasted into source code elsewhere, e.g. in R and Python scripts.
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The identified, free port should be outputted to the standard output (stdout) as digits only, without any prefix or suffix symbols.
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The user should be able to exclude a pre-defined set of ports by specifying environment variable
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE
, e.g.PORT4ME_EXCLUDE=8080,4321
. -
The system administrator should be able to specify a pre-defined set of ports to be excluded by specifying environment variable
PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE
, e.g.PORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE=8080,4321
. This works complementary toPORT4ME_EXCLUDE
. -
The user should be able to skip a certain number of random ports at their will by specifying environment variable
PORT4ME_SKIP
, e.g.PORT4ME_SKIP=5
. The default is to not skip, which corresponds toPORT4ME_SKIP=0
. Skipping should apply after ports are excluding byPORT4ME_EXCLUDE
andPORT4ME_EXCLUDE_SITE
. -
New implementations should perfectly reproduce the port sequences produced by already existing implementations.
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A Linear congruential generator (LCG) will be used to generate the pseudo-random port sequence
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the next seed,
$s_{n+1}$ is calculated based on the current seed$s_n$ and parameters$a, c, m > 1$ as$s_{n+1} = (a * s_{n} + c) % m$ -
the LCG algorithm must not assume that the current LCG seed is within
$[0,m-1]$ , i.e. it should apply modulo$m$ on the seed first to avoid integer overflow -
the LCG algorithm may produce the same output seed as input seed, which may happen when the seed is
$s_n = m - (a - c)$ . To avoid this resulting in a constant LCG stream, increment the seed by one and recalculate whenever this happens -
LCG parameters should be
$m = 2^{16} + 1$ ,$a = 75$ , and$c = 74$ ("ZX81")-
this requires only 32-bit integer arithmetic, because
$m < 2^{32}$ -
if the initial seed is
$s_0 = m - (a - c)$ , which here is$m - 1 = 2^{16}$ , then the next LCG seed will be the same, which is then handled by the above increment-by-one workaround
-
-
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A 32-bit integer string hashcode will be used to generate an integer in
$[0,2^{32}-1]$ from an ASCII string with any number of characters. The hashcode algorithm is based on the Java hashcode algorithm, but uses unsigned 32-bit integers in$[0,2^{32}-1]$ , instead of signed ones in$[-2^{31},2^{31}-1]$ -
The string hashcode is used as the initial LCG seed:
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the LCG seed should be in
$[0,m-1]$ -
given hashcode
$h$ , we can generate the initial LCG seed as$h$ modulo$m$
-