Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
|
|
|
|
Changes:
- Implemented the largest-ever OS fingerprint update! Roughtly 300
fingerprints were added/modified. These massive changes span the
gamut from AIX 5.1 to the ZyXEL Prestige broadband router line.
Notable updates include OpenBSD 3.3, FreeBSD 5.1, Mac OS X 10.2.6,
Windows 2003 server, and more WAPs and broadband routers than you
can shake a stick at. Someone even submitted a fingerprint for
Debian Linux running on the Microsoft Xbox. You have to love that
irony :). Thanks to everyone who submitted fingerprints using the
URL Nmap gives you when it gets a clean reading but is stumped.
The fingerprint DB now contains almost 1000 fingerprints.
- Went through every one of the fingerprints to normalize the
descriptions a bit. I also looked up what all of the devices are
(thanks E*Bay and Google!). Results like "Nexland ISB Pro800 Turbo"
and "Siemens 300E Release 6.5" are much more useful when you add the
words "cable modem" and "business phone system"
- Added a new classification system to nmap-os-fingerprints. In
addition to the standard text description, each entry is now
classified by vendor name (e.g. Sun), underlying OS (e.g. Solaris),
OS generation (e.g. 7), and device type ("general purpose", router,
switch, game console, etc). This can be useful if you want to (say)
locate and eliminate the SCO systems on a network, or find the
wireless access points (WAPs) by scanning from the wired side.
- Classification system described above is now used to print out a
"device type" line and OS categories for matches. The free-form
English details are still printed as well. Nmap can sometimes
provide classifications even where it used to provide nothing
because of "too many matches". These have been added to XML output
as well. They are not printed for the "grepable output", as I
consider that format deprecated.
- Nmap will now sometimes guess in the "no exact matches" case, even
if you don't use the secret --osscan_guess or -fuzzy options.
- Applied another huge NmapFE patch from Peter Marschall
(peter(a)adpm.de). This revamps the interface to use a tabbed
format that allows for many more Nmap options to be used. It also
cleans up some crufty parts of the code. Let Fyodor and Peter know
what you think (and if you encounter any problems).
- Windows and Amiga ports now use packet receive times from libpcap.
Let Fyodor know if you get any "time computation problem" errors.
- Updated version of the Russian man page translation from Alex Volkov
(alex(a)cherepovets-city.ru).
|
|
Changes:
- Fixed (i hope) an issue that would cause Nmap to print "Serious time
computation problem in adjust_timeout ..." and quit. The ultimate
cause was demonstrated by this --packet_trace snippet that Russel
Miller (rmiller(a)duskglow.com) sent me:
SENT (0.0500s) ICMP 0.0.0.0 > 127.0.0.1 Echo request (type=8/code=0) ...
RCVD (0.0450s) ICMP 127.0.0.1 > 127.0.0.1 Echo reply (type=0/code=0) ...
As you can see, the ping reply appears to come BEFORE the request
was sent(!). This sort of thing happens on at least Linux and
Windows. The send time is obtained from gettimeofday(NULL), while
receive time libpcap packet header.
- For years, Nmap has added -I/usr/local/include and -L/usr/local/lib
to the compiler line to grab local libraries. I have removed this
behavior by default, and added a '--with_localdirs' configure option
that adds it back. If Nmap fails to compile now without the above
option, please let me know. I can change the default back if this
change causes more problems than it solves. People (such as certain
ports tree packagers) who know they don't want /usr/local should
specify --without_localdirs rather than relying on that always being
the default.
- Fixed (I hope) a problem that led to the error message "Assertion
`tqi->sockets[probe_port_num][seq] == -1' failed".
- Fixed a problem that would cause Nmap on Windows to send ICMP ping
packets from 0.0.0.0 instead of the appropriate source IP. Thanks
to Yeti (boxed(a)blueyonder.co.uk) for the report.
- Applied some changes from Solar Designer (solar(a)openwall.com)
which fix some typos and also suggest safer /tmp/ behavior in the
HACKING file and Lithuanian man page. These changes are for the
Nmap package of his Openwall GNU/*/Linux (Owl) distribution.
[ http://www.openwall.com/Owl/ ]
- For Solaris, I now define NET_SIZE_T to size_t rather than socklen_t
in nmap.h. Isn't that exciting?!!! Hopefully this will help
compilation on Solaris 2.6 (and perhaps earlier). If any Solaris
users notice new compilation problems, please let me know. Thanks to
Al Smith (Al.Smith(a)aeschi.ch.eu.org) for reporting the issue.
- Removed an errant getopt() prototype in nbase/getopt.h which should
hopefully improve compilation on certain Solaris boxes and BSD
variants.
- SCO operating systems are no longer supported due to their recent
(and absurd) attacks against Linux and IBM. Bug reports relating to
UnixWare will be ignored, or possibly even laughed at derisively.
Note that I have no reason to believe anyone has ever used Nmap on
SCO systems. Unixware sucks.
- Fixed a problem with small --max_parallism values when non-root ping
scanning that would cause Nmap to say "sendconnecttcpquery: Could
not scavenge a free socket!" and quit. Problem was reported by
Justin A (justin(a)bouncybouncy.net) as Debian Bug #195463.
- Changed many single-quotes (') into double quotes (") in the man
page due to a disagreement over whether to represent them as (') or
(\') in nroff.
- Included --packet_trace support for Explicit Congestion Notification
(rfc 2481/3168) flags thanks to a patch sent in by Maik Pfeil
(root(a)bundesspionageministerium.de)
- Included --packet_trace support for a few (unusual) ICMP types in
case Nmap receives them. The patch was also sent by Maik Pfeil.
- Fixed a problem with redirecting XML/Grep/Machine output to stdout
on Windows (e.g. -oX - ). Problem was reported by Wei Jiang
(Wei.Jiang(a)bindview.com)
- Made "-g -Wall" compiler flags dependent on availability of gcc/g++
sine some other compilers do not support them.
|
|
Changes:
- Nmap now compiles under Amiga thanks to patches sent by Diego
Casorran (dcr8520@amiga.org).
- Fixed a backwards WIN32 ifdef that broke UDP and small-fragment
scans for some operating systems other than Linux and Windows.
Thanks to Guido van Rooij (guido@gvr.org) for reporting the problem
and sending a patch.
- Applied patch from Marius Strobl (marius@alchemy.franken.de) which
improves the definition of NET_SIZE_T on FreeBSD so that it compiles
on 64-bit platforms.
|
|
reachable on the given email address anymore.
|
|
Addresses PR pkg/21338 by Simon Hitzemann.
Changes:
- Fixed Mac OS X Compilation (at least on most of the machines
tested). You will probably need to type
"./configure CPP=/usr/bin/cpp" instead of simply "./configure".
If you still have trouble, drop me an email. Thanks to everyone
who provided or offered shell accounts!
- Fixed a segmentation fault several people reported that was
introduced in 3.25. This problem manifests itself intermittently
in many normal situations involving large-network scanning. So
all 3.25 users are urged to upgrade.
|
|
Based on a patch sent by Simon Hitzemann via PR pkg/21245.
Changes:
- fetch .tar.bz2 files
- UDP-based "ping" scanning (-PU) has been added. Works like -PS and -PA
- "Assertion `pt->down_this_block > 0' failed" seems to be fixed now.
- GCC dependency reported by Ayamura Kikuchi has been fixed.
- "assertion failure" after --max_rtt_timeout < 3000 has been fixed.
- Packet receive times are now taken from libpcap which improves performance
a bit.
- Fixed a bug that ignored RST responses while using -PS or -PA
- Ping scan performance improved when many instances of Nmap are executed
concurrently.
- Fixed a problem that caused BSD Make to bail out (never noticed that on
NetBSD).
- Fixed a divide by zero error when nonroot users requested ICMP pings. Now
it prints a warning and uses TCP connect() ping.
- Nmap is now a bit more tolerant of corrupt nmap-services and nmap-protocols.
- Some portnumbers have been added.
- --packet_trace support for Windows added.
- Removed superfluous "addport" line in XML output.
- wintcpip.cc and tcpip.cc have been merged into tcpip.cc
- Fixed assertion failure crashes related to combining port 0 scans and OS
scan.
- Compilation problems on systems without IPv6 support have been fixed.
- Applied patch from Jochen Erwied which fixes the format strings used for
printing certain timestamps.
- Upgraded to autoconf 2.57
- Renamed configure.ac to configure.in
- Changed the wording of NmapFE Gnome entries to better-comply with Gnome's
Human Interface Guidelines.
|
|
Based on patch sent by Juan RP via PR pkg/20839.
Changes:
Nmap 3.20:
==========
o The random IP input option (-iR) now takes an argument specifying
how many IPs you want to scan (e.g. -iR 1000). Specify 0 for the old
neverending scan behavior.
o Fixed a tricky memory leak discovered by Mugz (mugz@x-mafia.com).
o Fixed output truncation problem noted by Lionel CONS (lionel.cons@cern.ch)
o Fixed a bug that would cause certain incoming ICMP error messages to
be improperly ignored.
Nmap 3.15BETA3:
===============
o Made numerous improvements to the timing behavior of "-T Aggressive"
(same as -T4) scans. It is now recommended for regular use by
impatient people with a fast connection. "-T Insane" mode has also
been updated, but we only recommend that for, well, insane people.
o Made substantial changes to the SYN/connect()/Window scanning
algorithms for improved speeds, especially against heavily filtered
hosts. If you notice any timing problems (misidentified ports,
etc.), please send me the details (including full Nmap output and a
description of what is wrong). Reports of any timing problems with
-T4 would be helpful as well.
o Changed Nmap such that ALL syn scan packets are sent from the port
you specify with -g. Retransmissions used to utilize successively
higher ports. This change has a downside in that some operating
systems (such as Linux) often won't reply to the retransmissions
because they reuse the same connection specifier quad
(srcip:srcport:dstip:dstport). Overall I think this is a win.
o Added timestamps to "Starting nmap" line and each host port scan in
verbose (-v) mode. These are in ISO 8601 standard format because
unlike President Bush, we actually care about International
consensus :).
o Nmap now comes by default in .tar.bz2 format, which compresses about
20% further. You can still find .tgz in the dist directory at
http://download.insecure.org/nmap/dist/?M=D .
o Various other minor bugfixes, new services, fingerprints, etc.
Nmap 3.15BETA2:
===============
o I added support for a brand new "port" that many of you may have
never scanned before! UDP & TCP "port 0" (and IP protocol 0) are now
permitted if you specify 0 explicitly. An argument like "-p -40"
would still scan ports 1-40. Unlike ports, protocol 0 IS now scanned
by default. This now works for ping probes too (e.g., -PS, -PA).
o Applied patch by Martin Kluge (martin@elxsi.info) which adds --ttl
option, which sets the outgoing IPv4 TTL field in packets sent via
all raw scan types (including ping scans and OS detection). The
patch "should work" on Windows, but hasn't been tested. A TTL of 0
is supported, and even tends to work on a LAN:
14:17:19.474293 192.168.0.42.60214 > 192.168.0.40.135: S 3265375623:3265375623(0) win 1024 [ttl 0] (id 35919, len 40)
14:17:19.474456 192.168.0.40.135 > 192.168.0.42.60214: S 2805154856:2805154856(0) ack 3265375624 win 64240 <mss 1460> (DF) (ttl 128, id 49889, len 44)
o Applied patch by Gabriel L. Somlo ( somlo@acns.colostate.edu ) which
extends the multi-ping-port functionality to nonroot and IPv6
connect() users.
o I added a new --datadir command line option which allows you to
specify the highest priority directory for Nmap data files
nmap-services, nmap-os-fingerprints, and nmap-rpc. Any files which
aren't in the given dir, will be searched for in the $NMAPDIR
environmental variable, ~/nmap/, a compiled in data directory
(e.g. /usr/share/nmap), and finally the current directory.
o Fixed Windows (VC++ 6) compilation, thanks to patches from Kevin
Davis (computerguy@cfl.rr.com) and Andy Lutomirski
(luto@stanford.edu)
o Included new Latvian man page translation by
"miscelerious options" (misc@inbox.lv)
o Fixed Solaris compilation when Sun make is used rather than GNU
make. Thanks to Tom Duffy (tduffy@sun.com) for assistance.
o Applied patch from Stephen Bishop (sbishop@idsec.co.uk) which
prevends certain false-positive responses when Nmap raw TCP ping scans
are being run in parallel.
o To emphasize the highly professional nature of Nmap, I changed all
instances of "fucked up" in error message text into "b0rked".
o Fixed a problem with nmap-frontend RPMs that would cause a bogus
/bin/xnmap link to be created (it should only create
/usr/bin/xnmap). Thanks to Juho Schultz
(juho.schultz@astro.helsinki.fi) for reporting the problem.
o I made the maximum number of allowed routes and interfaces allowed
on the scanning machine dynamic rather than hardcoded #defines of 1024
and 128. You never know -- some wacko probably has that many :).
Nmap 3.15BETA1:
===============
o Integrated the largest OS fingerprint DB updates ever! Thanks to
everyone who contributed signatures! New or substantially modified
fingerprints included the latest Windows 2K/XP changes, Cisco IOS
12.2-based routers and PIX 6.3 firewalls, FreeBSD 5.0, AIX 5.1,
OpenBSD 3.2, Tru64 5.1A, IBM OS/400 V5R1M0, dozens of wireless APs,
VOIP devices, firewalls, printers, print servers, cable modems,
webcams, etc. We've even got some mod-chipped Xbox fingerprints
now!
o Applied NetBSD portability patch by Darren Reed
(darrenr@reed.wattle.id.au)
o Updated Makefile to better-detect if it can't make nmapfe and
provide a clearer error message. Also fixed a couple compiler
warnings on some *BSD platforms.
o Applied patch from "Max" (nmap@webwizarddesign.com) which adds the
port owner to the "addport" XML output lines which are printed (only
in verbose mode, I think) as each open port is discovered.
o I killed the annoying whitespace that is normally appended after the
service name. Now it is only there when an owner was found via -sI
(in which case there is a fourth column and so "service" must be
exactly 24 characters).
Nmap 3.10ALPHA9:
================
o Reworked the "ping scan" algorithm (used for any scan except -P0 or
-sL) to be more robust in the face of low-bandwidth and congested
connections. This also improves reliability in the multi-port and
multi-type ping cases described below.
o "Ping types" are no longer exclusive -- you can now do combinations
such as "-PS22,53,80 -PT113 -PN -PE" in order to increase your odds of
passing through strict filters. The "PB" flag is now deprecated
since you can achieve the same result via "PE" and "PT" options.
o Applied patch (with modest changes) by Gabriel L. Somlo
(somlo@acns.colostate.edu), which allows multiple TCP probe ports in
raw (root) mode. See the previous item for an example.
o Fixed a libpcap compilation issue noted by Josef 'Jupp' Schugt
(deusxmachina@webmail.co.za) which relates to the definition (or
lack thereof) of ARPHRD_HDLC (used for Cisco HDLC frames).
o Tweaked the version number (-V) output slightly.
Nmap 3.10ALPHA7:
================
o Upgraded libpcap from version 0.6.2 to 0.7.1. Updated the
libpcap-possiblymodified/NMAP_MODIFICATIONS file to give a much
more extensive list (including diffs) of the changes included
in the Nmap bundled version of Libpcap.
o Applied patch to fix a libpcap alignment bug found by Tom Duffy
(tduffy@sun.com).
o Fixed Windows compilation.
o Applied patch by Chad Loder (cloder@loder.us) of Rapid7 which
fixes OpenBSD compilation. I believe Chad is now the official
OpenBSD Nmap "port" maintainer. His patch also adjusted
random-scan (-iR) to include the recently allocated 82.0.0.0/8
space.
o Fixed (I hope) a few compilation problems on
non-IPv6-enabled machines which were noted by Josef 'Jupp'
Schugt (jupp@gmx.de)
o Included some man page translations which were inadvertently
missed in previous tarballs.
o Applied patch from Matthieu Verbert (mve@zurich.ibm.com) which
places the Nmap man pages under ${prefix}/share/man rather than
${prefix}/man when installed via RPM. Maybe the tarball
install should do this too? Opinions?
o Applied patch from R Anderson (listbox@pole-position.org) which
improves the way ICMP port unreachables from intermediate hosts
are handled during UDP scans.
o Added note to man page related to Nmap US export control. I
believe Nmap falls under ECCN 5D992, which has no special
restrictions beyond the standard export denial to a handful of
rogue nations such as Iraq and North Korea.
o Added a warning that some hosts may be skipped and/or repeated
when someone tries to --resume a --randomize_hosts scan. This
was suggested by Crayden Mantelium (crayden@sensewave.com)
o Fixed a minor memory leak noted by Michael Davis
(mike@datanerds.net).
Nmap 3.10ALPHA4:
================
o Applied patch by Max Schubert (nmap@webwizarddesign.com) which adds
an add-port XML tag whenever a new port is found open when Nmap is
running in verbose mode. The new tag looks like:
<addport state="open" portid="22" protocol="tcp"/>
I also updated docs/nmap.dtd to recognize this new tag.
o Added German translation of Nmap manpage by Marc Ruef
(marc.ruef@computec.ch). It is also available at
http://www.insecure.org/nmap/data/nmap_manpage-de.html
o Includes a brand new French translation of the manpage by Sebastien
Blanchet. You could probably guess that it is available at
http://www.insecure.org/nmap/data/nmap_manpage-fr.html
o Applied some patches from Chad Loder (cloder@loder.us) which update
the random IP allocation pool and improve OpenBSD support. Some
were from the OBSD Nmap patchlist.
o Fixed a compile problem on machines without PF_INET6. Thanks to
Josef 'Jupp' Schugt (deusxmachina@webmail.co.za) for noting this.
Nmap 3.10ALPHA3:
================
o Added --min_parallelism option, which makes scans more aggressive
and MUCH faster in certain situations -- especially against
firewalled hosts. It is basically the opposite of --max_parallelism
(-M). Note that reliability can be lost if you push it too far.
o Added --packet_trace option, which tells Nmap to display all of the
packets it sends and receives in a format similar to tcpdump. I
mostly added this for debugging purposes, but ppl wishing to learn
how Nmap works or for experts wanting to ensure Nmap is doing
exactly what they epect. If you want this feature supported under
Windows, please send me a patch :).
o Fixed a segmentation fault in Idlescan (-sI).
o Made Idlescan timing more conservative when -P0 is specified to
improve accuracy.
o Fixed an infinite-loop condition that could occur during certain
dropped-packet scenarios in an Idle scan.
o Nmap now reports execution times to millisecond precision (rather
than rouding to the nearest second).
o Fixed an infinite loop caused by invalid port arguments. Problem
noted by fejed (fejed@uddf.net).
Nmap 3.10ALPHA2:
================
o Fixed compilation and IPv6 support on FreeBSD (tested on
4.6-STABLE). Thanks to Niels Heinen (niels.heinen@ubizen.com) for
suggestions.
o Made some portability changes based on suggestions by Josef 'Jupp'
Schugt (jupp@gmx.de)
o Fixed compilation and IPv6 support on Solaris 9 (haven't tested
earlier versions).
Nmap 3.10ALPHA1:
================
o IPv6 is now supported for TCP scan (-sT), connect()-style ping
scan (-sP), and list scan (-sL)! Just specify the -6 option and the
IPv6 numbers or DNS names. Netmask notation is not currently
supported -- I'm not sure how useful it is for IPv6, where even petty
end users may be allocated trillions of addresses (/80). If you
need one of the scan types that hasn't been ported yet, give
Sebastien Peterson's patch a try at http://nmap6.sourceforge.net/ .
If there is demand, I may integrate more of that into Nmap.
o Major code restructing, which included conversion to C++ -- so
you'll need g++ or another C++ compiler. I accidently let a C++
requirement slip in a while back and found that almost everyone has
such a compiler. Windows (VC++) users: see the README-WIN32 for new
compilation instructions.
o Applied patch from Axel Nennker (Axel.Nennker@t-systems.com) which
adds a --without-nmapfe option to the configure script. This si
useful if your system doesn't have the proper libraries (eg GTK) or
if you think GUIs are for sissies :).
o Removed arbitrary max_parallelism (-M) limitations, as suggested by
William McVey ( wam@cisco.com ).
o Added DEC OSF to the platforms that require the BSDFIX() macro due
to taking ip length and offset fields in host rather than network byte
order. Suggested by Dean Bennett (deanb@gbtn.net)
o Fixed an debug statement C ambiguity discovered by Kronos
(kronos@kronoz.cjb.net)
|
|
|
|
* Added protocol scan (-sO), which determines what IP protocols
(TCP, IGMP, GRE, UDP, ICMP, etc) are supported by a given host.
This uses a clever technique designed and implemented by Gerhard
Rieger .
* Nmap now recognizes more than 700 operating system versions and
network devices (printers, webcams, routers, etc) thanks to
thousands of contributions from the user community! Many
operating systems were even recognized by Nmap prior to their
official release. Nmap3 also recognizes 2148 port assignments,
451 SunRPC services, and 144 IP protocols.
* Added Idlescan (-sI), which bounces the scan off a "zombie"
machine. This can be used to bypass certain (poorly configured)
firewalls and packet filters. In addition, this is the most
stealthy Nmap scan mode, as no packets are sent to the target
from your true IP address.
* The base Nmap package now builds and functions under Windows! It
is distributed in three forms: build-it-yourself source code, a
simple command-line package, or along with a nice GUI interface
(NmapWin) and a fancy installer. This is due to the hard work of
Ryan Permeh (from eEye), Andy Lutomirski, and Jens Vogt.
* Mac OS X is now supported, as well as the latest versions of
Linux, OpenBSD, Solaris, FreeBSD, and most other UNIX platforms.
Nmap has also been ported to several handheld devices -- see the
Related Projects page for further information.
* XML output (-oX) is now available for smooth interoperability
between Nmap and other tools.
* Added ICMP Timestamp and Netmask ping types (-PP and -PM). These
(especially timestamp) can be useful against some hosts that do
not respond to normal ping (-PI) packets. Nmap still allows TCP
"ping" as well.
* Nmap can now detect the uptime of many hosts when the OS Scan
option (-O) is used.
* Several new tests have been added to make OS detection more
accurate and provide more granular version information.
* Removed 128.210.*.* addresses from Nmap man page examples due to
complaints from Purdue security staff.
* The --data_length option was added, allowing for longer probe
packets. Among other uses, this defeats certain simplistic IDS
signatures.
* You can now specify distinct port UDP and TCP port numbers in a
single scan command using a command like 'nmap -sSU -p
U:53,111,137,T:21-25,80,139,515,6000,8080 target.com'. See the
man page for more usage info.
* Added mysterious, undocumented --scanflags and --fuzzy options.
* Nmap now provides IPID as well as TCP ISN sequence
predictability reports if you use -v and -O.
* SYN scan is now the default scan type for privileged (root)
users. This is usually offers greater performance while reducing
network traffic.
* Capitalized all references to God in error messages.
* Added List scan (-sL) which enumerates targets without scanning
them.
* The Nmap "random IP" scanning mode is now smart enough to skip
many unallocated netblocks.
* Tons of more minor features, bugfixes, and portability enhancements.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
By Stoned Elipot in pkg/13920.
|
|
net/libpcap. Also fix DEPENDS for Solaris and Linux
|
|
|
|
|
|
+ move the patch digest/checksum values from files/patch-sum to distinfo
|
|
|
|
a directory option to it.
|
|
of sizeof(bpf_int32).
|
|
|
|
Patches mostly by Itojun.
|
|
Changes from Nmap Changelog:
-- Fixed a commenting issue that could cause trouble for non-GNU compilers
(first found by Jan-Frode Myklebust (janfrode at parallab.uib.no))
-- A few new services to nmap-services
|
|
-- Fixed a "Status: Down" machine name output problem in machine
parseable logs found by Alek O. Komarnitsky ( alek (at) ast.lmco.com )
-- Took some wierd files out of the doc directory (cd, grep , vi, and
.swp)
-- Fixed some typos found by Thomas Klausner ( wiz (at)
danbala.ifoer.tuwien.ac.at )
Fixes PR 10054 by Reinoud Koornstra (reinoud@ibbnet.org).
|
|
Maintainer shared my opinion about architecture independent data files
belonging into share/ instead of lib/.
Other changes against 2.50: Target parsing bug fixed, new rpc number list.
|
|
Important changes since 2.12:
Remote OS identification by fingerprint, recognition of RPC programs
listening on the respective ports, scan timing controls, ACK/window
scanning, stop/restart scans, output readability improved, and lots of
bug fixes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Noted in PR 8291 by Bjoern Labitzke <hermit@cs.tu-berlin.de>
|
|
|
|
Changes: Changed the way tcp connect() scan determines the results of a
connect() call, got rid of the security warning message for people who are
missing /dev/random and /dev/urandom due to complaints about the
warning, eliminated pow() calls on Linux boxes, and fixed an RPM problem.
|
|
Pointed out in PR 7318 by Dave Burgess <burgess@cynjut.neonramp.com>
|
|
Changes: Many new fingerprints added, fixed IRIX problems which
prevented OS scanning from working on that platform, added support
for '-m -' to redirect machine readable logs to stdout for shell
pipelining, fixed a link-list bug that could cause hangs in
UDP,FIN,NULL, and XMAS scans, also fixed a pointer problem that
could cause SIGSEGV, fixed installation problem for people without
a /usr/local/man/man1 directory as well as several other little
fixes to the installation script and minor scanner tweaks.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|