# Network Discovery ## Summary - [Nmap](#nmap) - [Masscan](#masscan) - [Netdiscover](#netdiscover) - [Responder](#responder) - [Bettercap](#bettercap) - [Reconnoitre](#reconnoitre) - [References](#references) ## Nmap * Ping sweep (No port scan, No DNS resolution) ```powershell nmap -sn -n --disable-arp-ping 192.168.1.1-254 | grep -v "host down" -sn : Disable port scanning. Host discovery only. -n : Never do DNS resolution ``` * Basic NMAP ```bash sudo nmap -sSV -p- 192.168.0.1 -oA OUTPUTFILE -T4 sudo nmap -sSV -oA OUTPUTFILE -T4 -iL INPUTFILE.csv • the flag -sSV defines the type of packet to send to the server and tells Nmap to try and determine any service on open ports • the -p- tells Nmap to check all 65,535 ports (by default it will only check the most popular 1,000) • 192.168.0.1 is the IP address to scan • -oA OUTPUTFILE tells Nmap to output the findings in its three major formats at once using the filename "OUTPUTFILE" • -iL INPUTFILE tells Nmap to use the provided file as inputs ``` * CTF NMAP This configuration is enough to do a basic check for a CTF VM ```bash nmap -sV -sC -oA ~/nmap-initial 192.168.1.1 -sV : Probe open ports to determine service/version info -sC : to enable the script -oA : to save the results After this quick command you can add "-p-" to run a full scan while you work with the previous result ``` * Aggressive NMAP ```bash nmap -A -T4 scanme.nmap.org • -A: Enable OS detection, version detection, script scanning, and traceroute • -T4: Defines the timing for the task (options are 0-5 and higher is faster) ``` * Using searchsploit to detect vulnerable services ```bash nmap -p- -sV -oX a.xml IP_ADDRESS; searchsploit --nmap a.xml ``` * Generating nice scan report ```bash nmap -sV IP_ADDRESS -oX scan.xml && xsltproc scan.xml -o "`date +%m%d%y`_report.html" ``` * NMAP Scripts ```bash nmap -sC : equivalent to --script=default nmap --script 'http-enum' -v web.xxxx.com -p80 -oN http-enum.nmap PORT STATE SERVICE 80/tcp open http | http-enum: | /phpmyadmin/: phpMyAdmin | /.git/HEAD: Git folder | /css/: Potentially interesting directory w/ listing on 'apache/2.4.10 (debian)' |_ /image/: Potentially interesting directory w/ listing on 'apache/2.4.10 (debian)' nmap --script smb-enum-users.nse -p 445 [target host] Host script results: | smb-enum-users: | METASPLOITABLE\backup (RID: 1068) | Full name: backup | Flags: Account disabled, Normal user account | METASPLOITABLE\bin (RID: 1004) | Full name: bin | Flags: Account disabled, Normal user account | METASPLOITABLE\msfadmin (RID: 3000) | Full name: msfadmin,,, | Flags: Normal user account List Nmap scripts : ls /usr/share/nmap/scripts/ ``` ## Masscan ```powershell masscan -iL ips-online.txt --rate 10000 -p1-65535 --only-open -oL masscan.out masscan -e tun0 -p1-65535,U:1-65535 10.10.10.97 --rate 1000 ``` ## Reconnoitre Dependencies: * nbtscan * nmap ```powershell python2.7 ./reconnoitre.py -t 192.168.1.2-252 -o ./results/ --pingsweep --hostnames --services --quick ``` If you have a segfault with nbtscan, read the following quote. > Permission is denied on the broadcast address (.0) and it segfaults on the gateway (.1) - all other addresses seem fine here.So to mitigate the problem: nbtscan 192.168.0.2-255 ## Netdiscover ```powershell netdiscover -i eth0 -r 192.168.1.0/24 Currently scanning: Finished! | Screen View: Unique Hosts 20 Captured ARP Req/Rep packets, from 4 hosts. Total size: 876 _____________________________________________________________________________ IP At MAC Address Count Len MAC Vendor / Hostname ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 192.168.1.AA 68:AA:AA:AA:AA:AA 15 630 Sagemcom 192.168.1.XX 52:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX 1 60 Unknown vendor 192.168.1.YY 24:YY:YY:YY:YY:YY 1 60 QNAP Systems, Inc. 192.168.1.ZZ b8:ZZ:ZZ:ZZ:ZZ:ZZ 3 126 HUAWEI TECHNOLOGIES CO.,LTD ``` ## Responder ```powershell responder -I eth0 -A # see NBT-NS, BROWSER, LLMNR requests without responding. responder.py -I eth0 -wrf ``` Alternatively you can use the [Windows version](https://github.com/lgandx/Responder-Windows) ## Bettercap ```powershell bettercap -X --proxy --proxy-https -T # better cap in spoofing, discovery, sniffer # intercepting http and https requests, # targetting specific IP only ``` ## References * [TODO](TODO)