Book Image

Nmap: Network Exploration and Security Auditing Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Paulino Calderon
Book Image

Nmap: Network Exploration and Security Auditing Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Paulino Calderon

Overview of this book

This is the second edition of ‘Nmap 6: Network Exploration and Security Auditing Cookbook’. A book aimed for anyone who wants to master Nmap and its scripting engine through practical tasks for system administrators and penetration testers. Besides introducing the most powerful features of Nmap and related tools, common security auditing tasks for local and remote networks, web applications, databases, mail servers, Microsoft Windows machines and even ICS SCADA systems are explained step by step with exact commands and argument explanations. The book starts with the basic usage of Nmap and related tools like Ncat, Ncrack, Ndiff and Zenmap. The Nmap Scripting Engine is thoroughly covered through security checks used commonly in real-life scenarios applied for different types of systems. New chapters for Microsoft Windows and ICS SCADA systems were added and every recipe was revised. This edition reflects the latest updates and hottest additions to the Nmap project to date. The book will also introduce you to Lua programming and NSE script development allowing you to extend further the power of Nmap.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
13
Brute Force Password Auditing Options
17
References and Additional Reading

Adjusting timing parameters


Nmap not only adjusts itself to different network and target conditions while scanning, but it can be fine-tuned using timing options to improve performance. Nmap automatically calculates packet round trip, timeout, and delay values, but these values can also be set manually through specific settings.

The following recipe describes the timing parameters supported by Nmap.

How to do it...

Enter the following command to adjust the initial round trip timeout, the delay between probes, and a time out for each scanned host:

# nmap -T4 --scan-delay 1s --initial-rtt-timeout 150ms --host-timeout 15m -d scanme.nmap.org
   --------------- Timing report --------------- 
     hostgroups: min 1, max 100000 
     rtt-timeouts: init 150, min 100, max 1250 
     max-scan-delay: TCP 1000, UDP 1000, SCTP 1000 
     parallelism: min 0, max 0 
     max-retries: 6, host-timeout: 900000 
     min-rate: 0, max-rate: 0 
   --------------------------------------------- 

How it works...

Nmap...