Nmap network security scanner man page



NMAP(1)                                                                NMAP(1)




NAME

       nmap - Network exploration tool and security scanner


SYNOPSIS

       nmap [Scan Type(s)] [Options] <host or net #1 ... [#N]>


DESCRIPTION

       Nmap is designed to allow system administrators and curious individuals
       to scan large networks to determine which hosts are up  and  what  ser-
       vices  they  are  offering.   nmap  supports a large number of scanning
       techniques such as: UDP, TCP connect(), TCP SYN (half open), ftp  proxy
       (bounce  attack),  ICMP  (ping  sweep),  FIN, ACK sweep, Xmas Tree, SYN
       sweep, IP Protocol, and Null scan.  See the Scan Types section for more
       details.  nmap also offers a number of advanced features such as remote
       OS detection via TCP/IP fingerprinting, stealth scanning, dynamic delay
       and  retransmission  calculations, parallel scanning, detection of down
       hosts via parallel pings, decoy  scanning,  port  filtering  detection,
       direct (non-portmapper) RPC scanning, fragmentation scanning, and flex-
       ible target and port specification.

       Significant effort has been put into decent nmap performance  for  non-
       root  users.   Unfortunately,  many critical kernel interfaces (such as
       raw sockets) require root privileges.  nmap should be run as root when-
       ever possible (not setuid root, of course).

       The  result  of  running nmap is usually a list of interesting ports on
       the machine(s) being scanned (if any).  Nmap always  gives  the  port’s
       "well  known"  service name (if any), number, state, and protocol.  The
       state is either "open", "filtered", or "unfiltered".  Open  means  that
       the  target  machine  will accept() connections on that port.  Filtered
       means that a firewall, filter, or other network  obstacle  is  covering
       the port and preventing nmap from determining whether the port is open.
       Unfiltered means that the port is known by nmap to  be  closed  and  no
       firewall/filter  seems to be interfering with nmap’s attempts to deter-
       mine this.  Unfiltered ports are the common case  and  are  only  shown
       when most of the scanned ports are in the filtered state.

       Depending  on  options used, nmap may also report the following charac-
       teristics of the remote host: OS in use, TCP  sequentiality,  usernames
       running  the  programs  which  have  bound  to each port, the DNS name,
       whether the host is a smurf address, and a few others.


OPTIONS

       Options that make sense  together  can  generally  be  combined.   Some
       options  are  specific  to certain scan modes.  nmap tries to catch and
       warn the user about psychotic or unsupported option combinations.

       If you are impatient, you can skip to the examples section at the  end,
       which  demonstrates common usage.  You can also run nmap -h for a quick
       reference page listing all the options.

       SCAN TYPES

       -sS    TCP SYN scan: This technique is often referred to as "half-open"
              scanning, because you don’t open a full TCP connection. You send
              a SYN packet, as if you are going to open a real connection  and
              you wait for a response. A SYN|ACK indicates the port is listen-
              ing. A RST is indicative of a non-listener.   If  a  SYN|ACK  is
              received,  a RST is immediately sent to tear down the connection
              (actually our OS kernel does this for us). The primary advantage
              to  this  scanning  technique  is  that fewer sites will log it.
              Unfortunately you need root privileges to build these custom SYN
              packets.  This is the default scan type for privileged users.

       -sT    TCP connect() scan: This is the most basic form of TCP scanning.
              The connect() system call provided by your operating  system  is
              used  to  open  a  connection  to  every interesting port on the
              machine. If the port is listening, connect() will succeed,  oth-
              erwise  the  port  isn’t reachable. One strong advantage to this
              technique is that you don’t need  any  special  privileges.  Any
              user on most UNIX boxes is free to use this call.

              This  sort of scan is easily detectable as target host logs will
              show a bunch of connection and error messages for  the  services
              which  accept() the connection just to have it immediately shut-
              down.  This is the default scan type for unprivileged users.

       -sF -sX -sN
              Stealth FIN, Xmas Tree, or Null scan modes: There are times when
              even  SYN  scanning isn’t clandestine enough. Some firewalls and
              packet filters watch for SYNs to restricted ports, and  programs
              like Synlogger and Courtney are available to detect these scans.
              These advanced scans, on the other hand, may  be  able  to  pass
              through unmolested.

              The  idea  is  that  closed  ports are required to reply to your
              probe packet with an RST, while open ports must ignore the pack-
              ets  in  question (see RFC 793 pp 64).  The FIN scan uses a bare
              (surprise) FIN packet as the probe, while  the  Xmas  tree  scan
              turns  on the FIN, URG, and PUSH flags.  The Null scan turns off
              all flags.  Unfortunately Microsoft (like usual) decided to com-
              pletely  ignore  the standard and do things their own way.  Thus
              this scan type  will  not  work  against  systems  running  Win-
              dows95/NT.   On the positive side, this is a good way to distin-
              guish between the two platforms.  If the scan finds open  ports,
              you  know the machine is not a Windows box.  If a -sF,-sX,or -sN
              scan shows all ports closed, yet a SYN (-sS)  scan  shows  ports
              being  opened,  you are probably looking at a Windows box.  This
              is less useful now that nmap has proper OS detection  built  in.
              There  are  also a few other systems that are broken in the same
              way Windows is.  They include Cisco, BSDI, HP/UX, MVS, and IRIX.
              All  of  the  above  send  resets  from the open ports when they
              should just drop the packet.

       -sP    Ping scanning: Sometimes you only want to know which hosts on  a
              network  are  up.  Nmap can do this by sending ICMP echo request
              packets to every IP address on the networks you specify.   Hosts
              that   respond  are  up.   Unfortunately,  some  sites  such  as
              microsoft.com block echo request packets.  Thus  nmap  can  also
              send a TCP ack packet to (by default) port 80.  If we get an RST
              back, that machine is up.  A third technique involves sending  a
              SYN  packet  and  waiting  for a RST or a SYN/ACK.  For non-root
              users, a connect() method is used.

              By default (for root users), nmap uses both  the  ICMP  and  ACK
              techniques  in parallel.  You can change the -P option described
              later.

              Note that pinging is done by default anyway, and only hosts that
              respond  are  scanned.  Only use this option if you wish to ping
              sweep without doing any actual port scans.

       -sV    Version detection: Afer TCP  and/or  UDP  ports  are  discovered
              using  one of the other scan methods, version detection communi-
              cates with those ports to try and determine more about  what  is
              actually  running.  A file called nmap-service-probes is used to
              determine the best probes for detecting various services and the
              match  strings  to  expect.  Nmap tries to determine the service
              protocol (e.g. ftp, ssh, telnet,  http),  the  application  name
              (e.g. ISC Bind, Apache httpd, Solaris telnetd), the version num-
              ber, and sometimes  miscellaneous  details  like  whether  an  X
              server  is open to connections or the SSH protocol version).  If
              Nmap was compiled with OpenSSL support, it will connect  to  SSL
              servers  to  deduce the service listening behind the encryption.
              When RPC services are discovered, the Nmap RPC grinder  is  used
              to  determine  the  RPC  program  and version numbers.  Some UDP
              ports are left in the "open|filtered" state after a UDP scan  is
              unable  to determine whether the port is open or filtered.  Ver-
              sion detection will try to elicit a response  from  these  ports
              (just  as it does with open ports), and change the state to open
              if it succeeds. Note that the Nmap -A option also  enables  this
              feature.   For  a much more detailed description of Nmap service
              detection, read our paper  at  http://www.insecure.org/nmap/ver-
              sionscan.html .  There is a related --version_trace option which
              causes Nmap to print out extensive  debugging  info  about  what
              version  scanning  is  doing (this is a subset of what you would
              get with --packet_trace).

       -sU    UDP scans: This method is used  to  determine  which  UDP  (User
              Datagram Protocol, RFC 768) ports are open on a host.  The tech-
              nique is to send 0 byte UDP packets to each port on  the  target
              machine.   If  we receive an ICMP port unreachable message, then
              the port is closed.  If a UDP response is received to the  probe
              (unusual),  the port is open.  If we get no response at all, the
              state is "open|filtered", meaning that the port is  either  open
              or packet filters are blocking the communication.  Versions scan
              (-sV) can be used to help differentiate  the  truly  open  ports
              from the filtered ones.

              Some  people  think  UDP scanning is pointless. I usually remind
              them of the Solaris rpcbind hole. Rpcbind can be found hiding on
              an  undocumented  UDP  port somewhere above 32770. So it doesn’t
              matter that 111 is blocked by the firewall.  But  can  you  find
              which  of  the  more  than 30,000 high ports it is listening on?
              With a UDP scanner you can!  There is also the cDc Back  Orifice
              backdoor  program which hides on a configurable UDP port on Win-
              dows machines.  Not to mention the many commonly vulnerable ser-
              vices that utilize UDP such as snmp, tftp, NFS, etc.

              Unfortunately  UDP  scanning  is  sometimes painfully slow since
              most hosts implement a suggestion in RFC 1812 (section  4.3.2.8)
              of limiting the ICMP error message rate.  For example, the Linux
              kernel (in net/ipv4/icmp.h) limits destination unreachable  mes-
              sage  generation  to 80 per 4 seconds, with a 1/4 second penalty
              if that is exceeded.  Solaris has much more strict limits (about
              2 messages per second) and thus takes even longer to scan.  nmap
              detects this rate limiting and slows  down  accordingly,  rather
              than flood the network with useless packets that will be ignored
              by the target machine.

              As is typical, Microsoft ignored the suggestion of the  RFC  and
              does  not  seem  to  do any rate limiting at all on Win95 and NT
              machines.  Thus we can scan all 65K ports of a  Windows  machine
              very quickly.  Whoop!


       -sO    IP  protocol  scans:  This  method is used to determine which IP
              protocols are supported on a host.  The technique is to send raw
              IP packets without any further protocol header to each specified
              protocol on the target machine.  If we receive an ICMP  protocol
              unreachable message, then the protocol is not in use.  Otherwise
              we assume it is open.  Note that some hosts (AIX, HP-UX, Digital
              UNIX)  and firewalls may not send protocol unreachable messages.
              This causes all of the protocols to appear "open".

              Because the implemented technique is very similar  to  UDP  port
              scanning,  ICMP  rate limit might apply too. But the IP protocol
              field has only 8 bits, so at most 256 protocols  can  be  probed
              which should be possible in reasonable time anyway.

       -sI <zombie host[:probeport]>
              Idlescan: This advanced scan method allows for a truly blind TCP
              port scan of the target (meaning no packets are sent to the tar-
              get  from your real IP address).  Instead, a unique side-channel
              attack exploits predictable "IP fragmentation ID" sequence  gen-
              eration  on  the zombie host to glean information about the open
              ports on the target.  IDS systems will display the scan as  com-
              ing  from  the  zombie machine you specify (which must be up and
              meet certain criteria).  I wrote an informal  paper  about  this
              technique at http://www.insecure.org/nmap/idlescan.html .

              Besides   being  extraordinarily  stealthy  (due  to  its  blind
              nature), this scan type permits mapping out IP-based trust rela-
              tionships  between  machines.  The port listing shows open ports
              from the perspective of the zombie host.  So you can  try  scan-
              ning  a  target  using  various  zombies that you think might be
              trusted (via router/packet filter  rules).   Obviously  this  is
              crucial  information  when  prioritizing attack targets.  Other-
              wise, you penetration testers might have to expend  considerable
              resources "owning" an intermediate system, only to find out that
              its IP isn’t even trusted by the  target  host/network  you  are
              ultimately after.

              You  can  add  a  colon followed by a port number if you wish to
              probe a particular port on the zombie  host  for  IPID  changes.
              Otherwise  Nmap  will  use  the port it uses by default for "tcp
              pings".

       -sA    ACK scan: This advanced method is usually used to map out  fire-
              wall  rulesets.   In particular, it can help determine whether a
              firewall is stateful or just a simple packet filter that  blocks
              incoming SYN packets.

              This scan type sends an ACK packet (with random looking acknowl-
              edgment/sequence numbers) to the  ports  specified.   If  a  RST
              comes back, the ports is classified as "unfiltered".  If nothing
              comes back (or if an ICMP unreachable is returned), the port  is
              classified  as "filtered".  Note that nmap usually doesn’t print
              "unfiltered" ports, so getting no ports shown in the  output  is
              usually  a  sign  that  all the probes got through (and returned
              RSTs). This scan will obviously never show ports in  the  "open"
              state.

       -sW    Window scan: This advanced scan is very similar to the ACK scan,
              except that it can sometimes detect open ports as well  as  fil-
              tered/unfiltered  due  to  an  anomaly  in  the  TCP window size
              reporting by some operating systems.  Systems vulnerable to this
              include  at least some versions of AIX, Amiga, BeOS, BSDI, Cray,
              Tru64 UNIX, DG/UX, OpenVMS, Digital UNIX, FreeBSD, HP-UX,  OS/2,
              IRIX,  MacOS,  NetBSD,  OpenBSD,  OpenStep, QNX, Rhapsody, SunOS
              4.X, Ultrix, VAX, and VxWorks.   See  the  nmap-hackers  mailing
              list archive for a full list.

       -sR    RPC  scan.   This  method  works in combination with the various
              port scan methods of Nmap.  It takes all the TCP/UDP ports found
              open  and  then floods them with SunRPC program NULL commands in
              an attempt to determine whether they are RPC ports, and  if  so,
              what  program  and  version  number they serve up.  Thus you can
              effectively obtain the same info as "rpcinfo  -p"  even  if  the
              target’s  portmapper  is  behind a firewall (or protected by TCP
              wrappers).  Decoys do not currently work with RPC scan, at  some
              point I may add decoy support for UDP RPC scans.

       -sL    List scan.  This method simply generates and prints a list of IP
              addresses or hostnames without actually pinging or port scanning
              them.   DNS name resolution will be performed unless you use -n.

       -b <ftp relay host>
              FTP bounce attack: An interesting "feature" of the ftp  protocol
              (RFC  959)  is  support  for  "proxy"  ftp connections. In other
              words, I should be able to connect  from  evil.com  to  the  FTP
              server  of  target.com  and  request that the server send a file
              ANYWHERE on the Internet!  Now this may have worked well in 1985
              when the RFC was written. But in today’s Internet, we can’t have
              people hijacking ftp servers and requesting that  data  be  spit
              out  to arbitrary points on the Internet. As *Hobbit* wrote back
              in 1995, this protocol flaw  "can  be  used  to  post  virtually
              untraceable  mail  and news, hammer on servers at various sites,
              fill up disks, try to hop firewalls, and generally  be  annoying
              and  hard  to track down at the same time." What we will exploit
              this for is to  (surprise,  surprise)  scan  TCP  ports  from  a
              "proxy"  ftp  server.  Thus  you  could connect to an ftp server
              behind a firewall, and then scan ports that are more  likely  to
              be blocked (139 is a good one). If the ftp server allows reading
              from and writing to some directory (such as /incoming), you  can
              send arbitrary data to ports that you do find open (nmap doesn’t
              do this for you though).

              The argument passed to the "b" option is the host  you  want  to
              use  as a proxy, in standard URL notation.  The format is: user-
              name:password@server:port.  Everything but server  is  optional.
              To determine what servers are vulnerable to this attack, you can
              see my article in Phrack 51.  An updated version is available at
              the nmap URL (http://www.insecure.org/nmap).

       GENERAL OPTIONS
              None  of  these are required but some can be quite useful.  Note
              that the -P options can now be combined -- you can increase your
              odds of penetrating strict firewalls by sending many probe types
              using different TCP ports/flags and ICMP codes.

       -P0    Do not try to ping hosts at  all  before  scanning  them.   This
              allows  the  scanning  of  networks  that  don’t allow ICMP echo
              requests (or responses) through their  firewall.   microsoft.com
              is  an example of such a network, and thus you should always use
              -P0 or -PS80 when portscanning microsoft.com.  Note  tht  "ping"
              in  this context may involve more than the traditional ICMP echo
              request packet.  Nmap supports many such probes, including arbi-
              trary  combinations  of  TCP, UDP, and ICMP probes.  By default,
              Nmap sends an ICMP echo request and a TCP ACK packet to port 80.

       -PA [portlist]
              Use  TCP  ACK "ping" to determine what hosts are up.  Instead of
              sending ICMP echo request packets and waiting for a response, we
              spew  out TCP ACK packets throughout the target network (or to a
              single machine) and then wait for  responses  to  trickle  back.
              Hosts  that  are up should respond with a RST.  This option pre-
              serves the efficiency of only scanning hosts that are  up  while
              still  allowing you to scan networks/hosts that block ping pack-
              ets.  For non root UNIX users, we use connect() and thus  a  SYN
              is  actually  being  sent.   To set the destination ports of the
              probe packets use -PA<port1>[,port2][...].  The default port  is
              80,  since  this port is often not filtered out.  Note that this
              option now accepts multiple, comma-separated port numbers.

       -PS [portlist]
              This option uses SYN (connection request) packets instead of ACK
              packets for root users.  Hosts that are up should respond with a
              RST (or, rarely, a SYN|ACK).  You can set the destination  ports
              in the same manner as -PA above.

       -PU [portlist]
              This  option  sends UDP probes to the specified hosts, expecting
              an ICMP port unreachable packet (or possibly a UDP  response  if
              the  port  is  open) if the host is up.  Since many UDP services
              won’t reply to an empty packet, your best bet might be  to  send
              this to expected-closed ports rather than open ones.

       -PE    This  option  uses  a  true ping (ICMP echo request) packet.  It
              finds hosts that are  up  and  also  looks  for  subnet-directed
              broadcast  addresses  on  your  network.  These are IP addresses
              which are externally reachable and translate to a  broadcast  of
              incoming  IP  packets to a subnet of computers.  These should be
              eliminated if found as they allow for numerous denial of service
              attacks (Smurf is the most common).

       -PP    Uses  an ICMP timestamp request (type 13) packet to find listen-
              ing hosts.

       -PM    Same as -PE and -PP except uses a  netmask  request  (ICMP  type
              17).

       -PB    This is the default ping type.  It uses both the ACK ( -PA ) and
              ICMP echo request ( -PE ) sweeps in parallel.  This way you  can
              get  firewalls  that  filter either one (but not both).  The TCP
              probe destination port can be set in the same manner as with -PA
              above.   Note that this flag is now deprecated as pingtype flags
              can now be used in combination.  So you should use both "PE" and
              "PA"  (or  rely  on  the  default behavior) to achieve this same
              effect.

       -O     This option activates remote host identification via TCP/IP fin-
              gerprinting.   In  other words, it uses a bunch of techniques to
              detect subtleties in the  underlying  operating  system  network
              stack  of the computers you are scanning.  It uses this informa-
              tion to create  a  "fingerprint"  which  it  compares  with  its
              database  of  known  OS  fingerprints  (the nmap-os-fingerprints
              file) to decide what type of system you are scanning.

              If Nmap is unable to guess the OS of a machine,  and  conditions
              are  good (e.g. at least one open port), Nmap will provide a URL
              you can use to submit the fingerprint if you know (for sure) the
              OS  running on the machine.  By doing this you contribute to the
              pool of operating systems known to nmap and thus it will be more
              accurate  for everyone.  Note that if you leave an IP address on
              the form, the machine may be scanned when we add the fingerprint
              (to validate that it works).

              The  -O  option  also  enables  several other tests.  One is the
              "Uptime" measurement, which uses the TCP timestamp  option  (RFC
              1323)  to  guess when a machine was last rebooted.  This is only
              reported for machines which provide this information.

              Another test enabled by -O is TCP Sequence Predictability  Clas-
              sification.   This is a measure that describes approximately how
              hard it is to establish a  forged  TCP  connection  against  the
              remote  host.   This  is  useful  for exploiting source-IP based
              trust relationships (rlogin, firewall filters, etc) or for  hid-
              ing  the  source  of an attack.  The actual difficulty number is
              based on statistical sampling and may fluctuate.  It  is  gener-
              ally  better  to  use the English classification such as "worthy
              challenge" or "trivial joke".  This is only reported  in  normal
              output with -v.

              When  verbose  mode (-v) is on with -O, IPID Sequence Generation
              is also reported.  Most machines are in the "incremental" class,
              which  means that they increment the "ID" field in the IP header
              for each packet they send.  This makes them vulnerable  to  sev-
              eral advanced information gathering and spoofing attacks.

       -A     This  option  enables  _a_dditional  _a_dvanced and _a_ggressive
              options.  I haven’t decided exactly which it stands for yet  :).
              Presently  this  enables  OS Detection (-O) and version scanning
              (-sV).  More features may be added in the future.  The point  is
              to  enable  a  comprehensive  set of scan options without people
              having to remember a large  set  of  flags.   This  option  only
              enables  features,  and not timing options (such as -T4) or ver-
              bosity options (-v) that you might wan’t as well.

       -6     This options enables IPv6 support.  All targets must be IPv6  if
              this  option  is  used, and they can be specified via normal DNS
              name  (AAAA  record)  or  as  a  literal  IP  address  such   as
              3ffe:501:4819:2000:210:f3ff:fe03:4d0 .  Currently, connect() TCP
              scan and TCP connect() Ping scan are supported.  If you need UDP
              or  other  scan  types,  have  a  look  at  http://nmap6.source-
              forge.net/ .

       -f     This option causes the requested SYN, FIN, XMAS, or NULL scan to
              use tiny fragmented IP packets.  The idea is to split up the TCP
              header over several packets to make it harder  for  packet  fil-
              ters,  intrusion  detection  systems,  and  other  annoyances to
              detect what you are doing. Be careful with this!  Some  programs
              have  trouble  handling  these tiny packets. My favorite sniffer
              segmentation  faulted  immediately  upon  receiving  the   first
              36-byte  fragment.  After  that  comes a 24 byte one! While this
              method won’t get by packet filters and firewalls that queue  all
              IP  fragments  (like  the  CONFIG_IP_ALWAYS_DEFRAG option in the
              Linux kernel), some networks can’t afford  the  performance  hit
              this causes and thus leave it disabled.

              Note  that I do not yet have this option working on all systems.
              It works fine for my Linux, FreeBSD, and OpenBSD boxes and  some
              people have reported success with other *NIX variants.

       -v     Verbose  mode.  This is a highly recommended option and it gives
              out more information about what is going on.   You  can  use  it
              twice  for  greater  effect.  You can also use -d a few times if
              you really want to get crazy with scrolling the screen!

       -h     This handy option display a quick reference screen of nmap usage
              options.   As you may have noticed, this man page is not exactly
              a "quick reference" :)

       -oN <logfilename>
              This logs the results of your scans in a normal  human  readable
              form into the file you specify as an argument.

       -oX <logfilename>
              This  logs  the  results of your scans in XML form into the file
              you specify as an argument.  This allows programs to easily cap-
              ture  and interpret Nmap results.  You can give the argument "-"
              (without  quotes)  to  shoot  output  into  stdout  (for   shell
              pipelines, etc).  In this case normal output will be suppressed.
              Watch out for error messages if you use this (they will still go
              to  stderr).   Also note that "-v" may cause some extra informa-
              tion to be printed.  The Document Type Definition (DTD) defining
              the  XML  output  structure  is  available  at  http://www.inse-
              cure.org/nmap/data/nmap.dtd .

       -oG <logfilename>
              This logs the results of your scans in a grepable form into  the
              file  you  specify  as an argument.  This simple format provides
              all the information on one line (so you can easily grep for port
              or  OS  information  and  see  all the IPs.  This used to be the
              preferred mechanism for programs to interact with Nmap, but  now
              we  recommend  XML output (-oX instead).  This simple format may
              not contain as much information as the other formats.   You  can
              give the argument "-" (without quotes) to shoot output into std-
              out (for shell pipelines, etc).  In this case normal output will
              be  suppressed.   Watch  out  for error messages if you use this
              (they will still go to stderr).  Also note that "-v" will  cause
              some extra information to be printed.

       -oA <basefilename>
              This  tells  Nmap  to  log  in  ALL  the  major formats (normal,
              grepable, and XML).  You give a base for the filename,  and  the
              output files will be base.nmap, base.gnmap, and base.xml.

       -oS <logfilename>
              thIs l0gz th3 r3suLtS of YouR ScanZ iN a s|<ipT kiDd|3 f0rM iNto
              THe fiL3 U sPecfy 4s an arGuMEnT!  U kAn gIv3 the  4rgument  "-"
              (wItHOUt qUOteZ) to sh00t output iNT0 stDouT!@!!

       --resume <logfilename>
              A  network  scan that is canceled due to control-C, network out-
              age, etc. can be resumed using  this  option.   The  logfilename
              must  be  either  a  normal (-oN) or grepable (-oG) log from the
              aborted scan.  No other options can be given (they will  be  the
              same as the aborted scan).  Nmap will start on the machine after
              the last one successfully scanned in the log file.

       --append_output
              Tells Nmap to append scan results to any output files  you  have
              specified rather than overwriting those files.

       -iL <inputfilename>
              Reads  target specifications from the file specified RATHER than
              from the command line.  The file should contain a list  of  host
              or  network  expressions separated by spaces, tabs, or newlines.
              Use a hyphen (-) as inputfilename if you want nmap to read  host
              expressions  from  stdin  (like  at the end of a pipe).  See the
              section target specification for more information on the expres-
              sions you fill the file with.

       -iR <num hosts>
              This option tells Nmap to generate its own hosts to scan by sim-
              ply picking random numbers :).  It  will  never  end  after  the
              given number of IPs has been scanned -- use 0 for a never-ending
              scan.  This option can be useful for statistical sampling of the
              Internet  to  estimate  various  things.  If you are ever really
              bored, try nmap -sS -PS80 -iR 0 -p 80 to find some  web  servers
              to look at.

       -p <port ranges>
              This  option specifies what ports you want to specify. For exam-
              ple "-p 23" will only try port 23 of the  target  host(s).   "-p
              20-30,139,60000-"  scans  ports between 20 and 30, port 139, and
              all ports greater than 60000.  The default is to scan all  ports
              between  1  and 1024 as well as any ports listed in the services
              file which comes with nmap.  For  IP  protocol  scanning  (-sO),
              this specifies the protocol number you wish to scan for (0-255).

              When scanning both TCP and UDP ports, you can specify a particu-
              lar protocol by preceding the port numbers by "T:" or "U:".  The
              qualifier lasts until you specify another qualifier.  For  exam-
              ple,  the  argument  "-p U:53,111,137,T:21-25,80,139,8080" would
              scan UDP ports 53,111,and 137, as well as the listed TCP  ports.
              Note that to scan both UDP & TCP, you have to specify -sU and at
              least one TCP scan type (such as -sS, -sF, or -sT).  If no  pro-
              tocol qualifier is given, the port numbers are added to all pro-
              tocol lists.

       -F Fast scan mode.
              Specifies that you only wish to scan for  ports  listed  in  the
              services  file  which comes with nmap (or the protocols file for
              -sO).  This is obviously much faster  than  scanning  all  65535
              ports on a host.

       -D <decoy1 [,decoy2][,ME],...>
              Causes a decoy scan to be performed which makes it appear to the
              remote host that the host(s) you specify as decoys are  scanning
              the  target  network too.  Thus their IDS might report 5-10 port
              scans from unique IP addresses, but they won’t know which IP was
              scanning them and which were innocent decoys.  While this can be
              defeated through router  path  tracing,  response-dropping,  and
              other  "active"  mechanisms, it is generally an extremely effec-
              tive technique for hiding your IP address.

              Separate each decoy host with commas, and you can optionally use
              "ME"  as  one  of  the decoys to represent the position you want
              your IP address to be used.  If you put "ME" in the 6th position
              or  later,  some  common  port  scan  detectors  (such  as Solar
              Designer’s excellent scanlogd) are  unlikely  to  show  your  IP
              address  at  all.  If you don’t use "ME", nmap will put you in a
              random position.

              Note that the hosts you use as decoys should be up or you  might
              accidentally  SYN  flood  your  targets.  Also it will be pretty
              easy to determine which host is scanning if only one is actually
              up  on  the network.  You might want to use IP addresses instead
              of names (so the decoy networks don’t see  you  in  their  name-
              server logs).

              Also  note  that  some  "port scan detectors" will firewall/deny
              routing to hosts that attempt port scans.  The problem  is  that
              many scan types can be forged (as this option demonstrates).  So
              attackers can cause such a machine to  sever  connectivity  with
              important  hosts  such as its internet gateway, DNS TLD servers,
              sites like Windows  Update,  etc.   Most  such  software  offers
              whitelist capabilities, but you are unlikely to enumerate all of
              the critical machines.  For this reason we never recommend  tak-
              ing  action against port scans that can be forged, including SYN
              scans, UDP scans, etc.  The machine you block could  just  be  a
              decoy.

              Decoys  are used both in the initial ping scan (using ICMP, SYN,
              ACK, or whatever) and during the  actual  port  scanning  phase.
              Decoys are also used during remote OS detection ( -O ).

              It is worth noting that using too many decoys may slow your scan
              and potentially even make it less  accurate.   Also,  some  ISPs
              will  filter  out your spoofed packets, although many (currently
              most) do not restrict spoofed IP packets at all.

       -S <IP_Address>
              In some circumstances, nmap may not be able  to  determine  your
              source  address  (  nmap will tell you if this is the case).  In
              this situation, use -S with your IP address  (of  the  interface
              you wish to send packets through).

              Another  possible  use of this flag is to spoof the scan to make
              the targets think that someone else is scanning them.  Imagine a
              company  being repeatedly port scanned by a competitor!  This is
              not a supported usage (or the main purpose)  of  this  flag.   I
              just  think  it  raises  an  interesting possibility that people
              should be aware of before they go accusing others of port  scan-
              ning  them.   -e  would  generally  be required for this sort of
              usage.

       -e <interface>
              Tells nmap what interface to send and receive packets on.   Nmap
              should be able to detect this but it will tell you if it cannot.

       --source_port <portnumber>
              Sets the source port number used in scans.  Many naive  firewall
              and packet filter installations make an exception in their rule-
              set to allow DNS (53) or FTP-DATA (20) packets to  come  through
              and  establish a connection.  Obviously this completely subverts
              the security advantages of the firewall since intruders can just
              masquerade  as FTP or DNS by modifying their source port.  Obvi-
              ously for a UDP scan you should  try  53  first  and  TCP  scans
              should  try  20  before 53.  Note that this is only a request --
              nmap will honor it only if and when it is able to.  For example,
              you  can’t  do  TCP  ISN  sampling all from one host:port to one
              host:port, so nmap changes the source port even if you used this
              option.   This is an alias for the shorter, but harder to remem-
              ber, -g option.

              Be aware that there is a small performance penalty on some scans
              for using this option, because I sometimes store useful informa-
              tion in the source port number.

       --data_length <number>
              Normally Nmap sends minimalistic packets  that  only  contain  a
              header.  So its TCP packets are generally 40 bytes and ICMP echo
              requests are just 28.  This option  tells  Nmap  to  append  the
              given  number  of  random bytes to most of the packets it sends.
              OS detection (-O) packets are not affected, but most pinging and
              portscan  packets  are.   This  slows  things  down,  but can be
              slightly less conspicuous.

       -n     Tells Nmap to NEVER do reverse DNS resolution on the  active  IP
              addresses  it  finds.   Since  DNS  is often slow, this can help
              speed things up.

       -R     Tells Nmap to ALWAYS do reverse DNS resolution on the target  IP
              addresses.   Normally  this is only done when a machine is found
              to be alive.

       -r     Tells Nmap NOT  to  randomize  the  order  in  which  ports  are
              scanned.

       --ttl <value>
              Sets  the  IPv4  time to live field in sent packets to the given
              value.

       --randomize_hosts
              Tells Nmap to shuffle each group of up to 2048 hosts  before  it
              scans  them.   This  can  make the scans less obvious to various
              network monitoring systems, especially when you combine it  with
              slow timing options (see below).

       -M <max sockets>
              Sets the maximum number of sockets that will be used in parallel
              for a TCP connect() scan (the default).  This is useful to  slow
              down  the  scan a little bit and avoid crashing remote machines.
              Another approach is to use -sS, which is  generally  easier  for
              machines to handle.

       --packet_trace
              Tells  Nmap  to  show all the packets it sends and receives in a
              tcpdump-like format.  This can be tremendously useful for debug-
              ging, and is also a good learning tool.

       --datadir [directoryname]
              Nmap  obtains  some special data at runtime in files named nmap-
              services, nmap-protocols,  nmap-rpc,  and  nmap-os-fingerprints.
              Nmap  first  searches  these  files  in  the directory option to
              --nmapdir.  Any files not found there, are searched for  in  the
              directory specified by the NMAPDIR environmental variable.  Next
              comes  ~/nmap,  and  then  a  compiled-in   location   such   as
              /usr/share/nmap  .   As  a  last  resort,  Nmap will look in the
              current directory.

       TIMING OPTIONS
              Generally Nmap does a good job at adjusting for Network  charac-
              teristics at runtime and scanning as fast as possible while min-
              imizing that chances of hosts/ports going undetected.   However,
              there  are same cases where Nmap’s default timing policy may not
              meet your objectives.  The  following  options  provide  a  fine
              level of control over the scan timing:

       -T <Paranoid|Sneaky|Polite|Normal|Aggressive|Insane>
              These  are  canned  timing  policies for conveniently expressing
              your priorities to Nmap.  Paranoid mode scans very slowly in the
              hopes  of  avoiding detection by IDS systems.  It serializes all
              scans (no parallel scanning) and generally waits at least 5 min-
              utes between sending packets.  Sneaky is similar, except it only
              waits 15 seconds between sending packets.  Polite  is  meant  to
              ease  load  on  the  network  and reduce the chances of crashing
              machines.  It serializes the probes and waits at least 0.4  sec-
              onds  between  them.   Note  that  this is generally at least an
              order of magnitude slower than default scans,  so  only  use  it
              when  you  need  to.  Normal is the default Nmap behavior, which
              tries to run as quickly as possible without overloading the net-
              work  or  missing  hosts/ports.  Aggressive This option can make
              certain scans (especially SYN  scans  against  heavily  filtered
              hosts)  much faster.  It is recommended for impatient folks with
              a fast net connection.  Insane is only suitable  for  very  fast
              networks  or  where  you don’t mind losing some information.  It
              times out hosts in 15 minutes and won’t wait more than 0.3  sec-
              onds  for  individual probes.  It does allow for very quick net-
              work sweeps though :).

              You can also reference these  by  number  (0-5).   For  example,
              "-T0" gives you Paranoid mode and "-T5" is Insane mode.

       --host_timeout <milliseconds>
              Specifies the amount of time Nmap is allowed to spend scanning a
              single host before giving up on that  IP.   The  default  timing
              mode has no host timeout.

       --max_rtt_timeout <milliseconds>
              Specifies the maximum amount of time Nmap is allowed to wait for
              a probe response before retransmitting or timing out  that  par-
              ticular probe.  The default mode sets this to about 9000.

       --min_rtt_timeout <milliseconds>
              When the target hosts start to establish a pattern of responding
              very quickly, Nmap will shrink the  amount  of  time  given  per
              probe.   This speeds up the scan, but can lead to missed packets
              when a response takes longer than usual.   With  this  parameter
              you  can guarantee that Nmap will wait at least the given amount
              of time before giving up on a probe.

       --initial_rtt_timeout <milliseconds>
              Specifies the initial probe timeout.   This  is  generally  only
              useful  when  scanning firewalled hosts with -P0.  Normally Nmap
              can obtain good RTT estimates from the ping and  the  first  few
              probes.  The default mode uses 6000.

       --max_hostgroup <numhosts>
              Specifies  the  maximum  number of hosts that Nmap is allowed to
              scan in parallel.  Most of  the  port  scan  techniques  support
              multi-host  operation, which makes them much quicker.  Spreading
              the load among multiple target hosts makes  the  scans  gentler.
              The  downside is increast results latency.  You need to wait for
              all hosts in a group to finish, rather than having them  pop  up
              one  by one.  Specify an argument of one for old-style (one host
              at a time) Nmap behavior.  Note that the  ping  scanner  handles
              its own grouping, and ignores this value.

       --min_hostgroup <milliseconds>
              Specifies  the  minimum  host  group  size (see previous entry).
              Large values (such as 50) are often  beneficial  for  unattended
              scans,  though  they  do take up more memory.  Nmap may override
              this preference when it needs to, because a group must  all  use
              the  same network interface, and some scan types can only handle
              one host at a time.

       --max_parallelism <number>
              Specifies the maximum number of scans Nmap is allowed to perform
              in  parallel.   Setting this to one means Nmap will never try to
              scan more than 1 port at a time.  It also effects other parallel
              scans such as ping sweep, RPC scan, etc.

       --min_parallelism <number>
              Tells  Nmap to scan at least the given number of ports in paral-
              lel.  This can speed up scans against certain  firewalled  hosts
              by an order of magnitude.  But be careful -- results will become
              unreliable if you push it too far.

       --scan_delay <milliseconds>
              Specifies the minimum amount of  time  Nmap  must  wait  between
              probes.  This is mostly useful to reduce network load or to slow
              the scan way down to sneak under IDS thresholds.



       TARGET SPECIFICATION
              Everything that isn’t an option (or option argument) in nmap  is
              treated  as  a  target host specification.  The simplest case is
              listing single hostnames or IP addresses on  the  command  line.
              If  you  want  to  scan a subnet of IP addresses, you can append
              /mask to the hostname or IP address.  mask  must  be  between  0
              (scan  the  whole  Internet) and 32 (scan the single host speci-
              fied).  Use /24 to scan a class "C" address and /16 for a  class
              "B".

              Nmap also has a more powerful notation which lets you specify an
              IP address using lists/ranges for each element.   Thus  you  can
              scan  the  whole  class  "B"  network  192.168.*.* by specifying
              "192.168.*.*"     or     "192.168.0-255.0-255"      or      even
              "192.168.1-50,51-255.1,2,3,4,5-255".   And of course you can use
              the mask notation: "192.168.0.0/16".  These are all  equivalent.
              If  you  use  asterisks ("*"), remember that most shells require
              you to escape them  with  back  slashes  or  protect  them  with
              quotes.

              Another  interesting thing to do is slice the Internet the other
              way.  Instead of scanning all the hosts in  a  class  "B",  scan
              "*.*.5.6-7"  to  scan every IP address that ends in .5.6 or .5.7
              Pick your own numbers.  For more information on specifying hosts
              to scan, see the examples section.


EXAMPLES

       Here  are some examples of using nmap, from simple and normal to a lit-
       tle more complex/esoteric.  Note that actual numbers  and  some  actual
       domain names are used to make things more concrete.  In their place you
       should substitute addresses/names from your  own  network.   I  do  not
       think  portscanning  other networks is illegal; nor should portscans be
       construed by others as an attack.  I have scanned hundreds of thousands
       of  machines  and  have  received  only  one complaint.  But I am not a
       lawyer and some (anal) people may be annoyed by nmap probes.  Get  per-
       mission first or use at your own risk.

       nmap -v target.example.com

       This  option  scans  all reserved TCP ports on the machine target.exam-
       ple.com .  The -v means turn on verbose mode.

       nmap -sS -O target.example.com/24

       Launches a stealth SYN scan against each machine that is up out of  the
       255  machines  on  class "C" where target.example.com resides.  It also
       tries to determine what operating system is running on each  host  that
       is  up  and  running.  This requires root privileges because of the SYN
       scan and the OS detection.

       nmap -sX -p 22,53,110,143,4564 198.116.*.1-127

       Sends an Xmas tree scan to the first half of each of the 255 possible 8
       bit  subnets  in  the  198.116 class "B" address space.  We are testing
       whether the systems run sshd, DNS, pop3d, imapd, or  port  4564.   Note
       that  Xmas  scan doesn’t work on Microsoft boxes due to their deficient
       TCP stack.  Same goes with CISCO, IRIX, HP/UX, and BSDI boxes.

       nmap -v --randomize_hosts -p 80 *.*.2.3-5

       Rather than focus on a specific IP range, it is  sometimes  interesting
       to  slice  up  the  entire  Internet  and scan a small sample from each
       slice.  This  command  finds  all  web  servers  on  machines  with  IP
       addresses  ending in .2.3, .2.4, or .2.5.  If you are root you might as
       well add -sS.  Also you will find more interesting machines starting at
       127.  so you might want to use "127-222" instead of the first asterisks
       because that section has a  greater  density  of  interesting  machines
       (IMHO).

       host -l company.com | cut  -d  -f 4 | ./nmap -v -iL -

       Do  a  DNS zone transfer to find the hosts in company.com and then feed
       the IP addresses to nmap.  The above commands are for my GNU/Linux box.
       You may need different commands/options on other operating systems.


BUGS

       Bugs?   What bugs?  Send me any that you find.  Patches are nice too :)
       Remember to also send in  new  OS  fingerprints  so  we  can  grow  the
       database.  Nmap will give you a submission URL when an appropriate fin-
       gerprint is found.


AUTHOR

       Fyodor <fyodor@insecure.org>


DISTRIBUTION

       The newest version  of  nmap  can  be  obtained  from  http://www.inse-
       cure.org/nmap/

       The  Nmap  Security  Scanner is (C) 1996-2004 Insecure.Com LLC. Nmap is
       also a registered trademark of Insecure.Com LLC.  This program is  free
       software;  you may redistribute and/or modify it under the terms of the
       GNU General Public License as published by the  Free  Software  Founda-
       tion; Version 2.  This guarantees your right to use, modify, and redis-
       tribute this software under certain conditions.  If you wish  to  embed
       Nmap  technology  into  proprietary software, we may be willing to sell
       alternative licenses (contact sales@insecure.com).  Many security scan-
       ner  vendors already license Nmap technology such as our remote OS fin-
       gerprinting database and code, version detection system, and port scan-
       ning code.

       Note that we consider aggregation/inclusion/integration of Nmap into an
       executable installer to constitute a derived work and thus  subject  to
       the  GPL  restrictions.  We also consider certain programs that tightly
       integrate with Nmap to constitute derivative works, even if  they  only
       interface  with  Nmap by executing the Nmap binary and interpreting its
       output rather than by direct linking.  If you are interested in includ-
       ing Nmap with your proprietary software or appliance, please contact us
       first to ensure proper licensing.

       Source is provided to this software because we  believe  users  have  a
       right to know exactly what a program is going to do before they run it.
       This also allows you to audit the software  for  security  holes  (none
       have been found so far).

       Source  code  also  allows you to port Nmap to new platforms, fix bugs,
       and add new features.  You are highly encouraged to send  your  changes
       to fyodor@insecure.org for possible incorporation into the main distri-
       bution.  By sending these changes to Fyodor  or  one  the  Insecure.Org
       development  mailing  lists, it is assumed that you are offering Fyodor
       and Insecure.Com LLC the unlimited, non-exclusive right to reuse,  mod-
       ify,  and  relicense  the  code.   Nmap  will  always be available Open
       Source, but this is important because the inability to  relicense  code
       has  caused devastating problems for other Free Software projects (such
       as KDE and NASM).  We also occasionally relicense  the  code  to  third
       parties  as  discussed  above.   If you wish to specify special license
       conditions of your contributions, just say so when you send them.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it  will  be  useful,  but
       WITHOUT  ANY  WARRANTY;  without  even  the  implied  warranty  of MER-
       CHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU  General
       Public  License for more details (it is in the COPYING file of the nmap
       distribution).

       It should also be noted that Nmap  has  been  known  to  crash  certain
       poorly written applications, TCP/IP stacks, and even operating systems.
       Nmap should never be run against mission critical  systems  unless  you
       are  prepared  to  suffer  downtime.  We acknowledge here that Nmap may
       crash your systems or networks and we disclaim all  liability  for  any
       damage or problems Nmap could cause.

       Because of the slight risk of crashes and because a few black hats like
       to use Nmap for reconnaissance prior to attacking  systems,  there  are
       administrators  who  become upset and may complain when their system is
       scanned.  Thus, it is often  advisable  to  request  permission  before
       doing even a light scan of a network.

       Nmap  should  never be installed with special privileges (eg suid root)
       for security reasons.


       This product includes software developed by the Apache Software Founda-
       tion  (http://www.apache.org/).   The  Libpcap  portable packet capture
       library is distributed along with nmap.  Libpcap was  originally  copy-
       righted  by  Van  Jacobson,  Craig Leres and Steven McCanne, all of the
       Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berke-
       ley, CA.  It is now maintained by http://www.tcpdump.org .

       Regular  expression  support  is  provided by the PCRE library package,
       which is open source software, written by Philip Hazel,  and  copyright
       by the University of Cambridge, England.  See http://www.pcre.org/ .

       US  Export  Control: Insecure.Com LLC believes that Nmap falls under US
       ECCN (export control classification number) 5D992.   This  category  is
       called  ’"Information  Security"  "software"  not controlled by 5D002’.
       The only restriction of this  classification  is  AT  (anti-terrorism),
       which  applies  to  almost  all goods and denies export to a handful of
       rogue nations such as Iran and North Korea.  Thus exporting  Nmap  does
       not  require  any special license, permit, or other governmental autho-
       rization.



                                                                       NMAP(1)

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