Book Image

Nmap 6: Network Exploration and Security Auditing Cookbook

Book Image

Nmap 6: Network Exploration and Security Auditing Cookbook

Overview of this book

Nmap is a well known security tool used by penetration testers and system administrators. The Nmap Scripting Engine (NSE) has added the possibility to perform additional tasks using the collected host information. Tasks like advanced fingerprinting and service discovery, information gathering, and detection of security vulnerabilities."Nmap 6: Network exploration and security auditing cookbook" will help you master Nmap and its scripting engine. You will learn how to use this tool to do a wide variety of practical tasks for pentesting and network monitoring. Finally, after harvesting the power of NSE, you will also learn how to write your own NSE scripts."Nmap 6: Network exploration and security auditing cookbook" is a book full of practical knowledge for every security consultant, administrator or enthusiast looking to master Nmap. The book overviews the most important port scanning and host discovery techniques supported by Nmap. You will learn how to detect mis-configurations in web, mail and database servers and also how to implement your own monitoring system. The book also covers tasks for reporting, scanning numerous hosts, vulnerability detection and exploitation, and its strongest aspect; information gathering.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Nmap 6: Network Exploration and Security Auditing Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
References
Index

Excluding hosts from your scans


There will be situations where host exclusion is necessary to avoid scanning certain machines. For example, you may lack the authorization, or it may be that the host has already been scanned and you want to save some time. Nmap implements an option to exclude a host or list of hosts to help you in these cases.

This recipe describes how to exclude hosts from your Nmap scans.

How to do it...

Open your terminal and type the following command:

# nmap -sV -O --exclude 192.168.1.102,192.168.1.254 192.168.1.1/24

You should see the scan results of all the available hosts in the private network 192.168.1.1-255, excluding the IPs 192.168.1.254 and 192.168.1.102, as shown in the following example:

# nmap -sV -O --exclude 192.168.1.102,192.168.1.254 192.168.1.1/24 


Nmap scan report for 192.168.1.101 
Host is up (0.019s latency). 
Not shown: 996 closed ports 
PORT     STATE    SERVICE VERSION 
21/tcp   filtered ftp 
53/tcp   filtered domain 
554/tcp  filtered rtsp 
3306...