The following table highlights the Enterprise Vault destination firewall ports:
Server | Destination ports | Comments |
Exchange Server | 135 for RPC, 80, 443 for OWA | RPC discovery. (DCOM). The returned port numbers to use will be above 1024 TCP |
File Server | 139 TCP, 445 TCP | CIFS and Microsoft DS |
SharePoint Server | 80 TCP for HTTP, 443 TCP for HTTPS | EV data archival access |
Enterprise Vault Web Server | 80 TCP for HTTP, 443 TCP for HTTPS | Client access and web search |
SQL Server | 1433 TCP | Microsoft SQL |
Enterprise Vault server | 135 TCP, 2101, 2103, 2105 RPC for MSMQ, 1801 UDP, 3527 UDP and TCP. 5114 (Enterprise Vault 10.0 and later.) | RPC discovery is port 135. (DCOM). The returned port numbers to use will be above 1024 TCP. Ports 2101, 2103, and 2105 are incremented by 11 if the initial choice is in use when Message Queuing initializes. Port 5114 is the official Enterprise Vault services port. |
On all Enterprise Vault servers you need to open the normal ports that are required for authentication within a Windows domain. For example, Kerberos (port 88), DNS (port 53 UDP), Active Directory (port 445).
Enterprise Vault servers and the servers with which they communicate may require other ports to be open, depending on the functionality that you require.