Firebind was a tools app developed by Firebind. It was removed from Google Play Sep 14, 2014 and is no longer available for download.
Download Statistics
Firebind had been downloaded 22 thousand times before it became unavailable.
User Ratings
Firebind was rated 3.80 out of 5 stars, based on 94 ratings.
App Information
Firebind was free to download. The APK download size was 146.59 kB. The last available version was 1.3. The last update was on March 30, 2012.
Technical Requirements
Firebind required Android 2.0+ or higher. The app had a content rating of Everyone. The app had been available on Google Play March 2011.
Description
Based on Java technology, Firebind enables a user to test any TCP or UDP port(s) in the outbound direction to determine whether they are being blocked by a firewall. Internet users can encounter blocked ports on a regular basis, whether it's their own client firewall (such as Windows Firewall), a home or enterprise router/firewall, or their ISP's firewall doing the blocking.
By using a client/server architecture, the Firebind Server can listen on any of the 65535 TCP or UDP ports. The client then sends unique data to the chosen port that the server is listening on. The server then returns the data, and if it arrives back at the client unchanged, the port is not blocked.
If a port is blocked, Firebind can categorize each port failure into one of the following types of error cases:
Firebind is useful for many types of end users, including:
- IT Administrators who would like to validate their outbound corporate firewall rules or who need a tool to help their mobile users validate Internet connectivity - Home users trying to troubleshoot application connectivity to the Internet - Traveling users on public wired broadband or WiFi who may be subject to very restrictive Internet access
Before Firebind, users could try to telnet to the port in question, but the results weren't conclusive and that trick was only useful (if at all) for TCP. Tools like yougetsignal.com, canyouseeme.org, and grc.com are meant to test inbound connections (from Internet to client machine), usually to validate whether a user has set up their port forwarding rules in their firewall correctly. Other tools like NMAP are port scanners which are designed to probe for open ports on a target machine using a specific IP address. A port scanner is only useful to test a single IP address for vulnerabilities and doesn't help a user determine whether their path to the Internet is being blocked.
Firebind is a "Path Scanner". With Firebind, any Internet user can now test for firewall blocking that until now only networking experts could determine, if at all.
Firebind - if you can't connect, you can't communicate...
Recent changes: Enhanced handling of failed UDP ports. Updated for latest Android SDK.
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★★★★★
This appp is extremely valuable when you can't get a connection...it finds the port that is open! Works great
★★★★★
Holo style, please! Please add Android 4.0 UI, and give us that beautiful red icon you use in the play store in the app drawer. I get an ugly white one instead :-(
Technologies used by Firebind
Firebind is requesting 2 permissions and is using 2 libraries.
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