I’m not sure what you mean by being “forwarded properly”, but hopefully this example will do the trick:
$host="stackoverflow.com";
$ports = array(21, 25, 80, 81, 110, 443, 3306);
foreach ($ports as $port)
{
$connection = @fsockopen($host, $port);
if (is_resource($connection))
{
echo '<h2>' . $host . ':' . $port . ' ' . '(' . getservbyport($port, 'tcp') . ') is open.</h2>' . "\n";
fclose($connection);
}
else
{
echo '<h2>' . $host . ':' . $port . ' is not responding.</h2>' . "\n";
}
}
Output:
stackoverflow.com:21 is not responding.
stackoverflow.com:25 is not responding.
stackoverflow.com:80 (http) is open.
stackoverflow.com:81 is not responding.
stackoverflow.com:110 is not responding.
stackoverflow.com:443 is not responding.
stackoverflow.com:3306 is not responding.
See http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers for a complete list of port numbers.