nmap(1) - Network exploration tool and security / port scanner



  • NMAP(1)					  Nmap Reference Guide					 NMAP(1)
    
    
    
    NAME
           nmap - Network exploration tool and security / port scanner
    
    SYNOPSIS
           nmap [Scan Type...] [Options] {target specification}
    
    DESCRIPTION
           Nmap (“Network Mapper”) is an open source tool for network exploration and security auditing. It
           was designed to rapidly scan large networks, although it works fine against single hosts. Nmap
           uses raw IP packets in novel ways to determine what hosts are available on the network, what
           services (application name and version) those hosts are offering, what operating systems (and OS
           versions) they are running, what type of packet filters/firewalls are in use, and dozens of other
           characteristics. While Nmap is commonly used for security audits, many systems and network
           administrators find it useful for routine tasks such as network inventory, managing service
           upgrade schedules, and monitoring host or service uptime.
    
           The output from Nmap is a list of scanned targets, with supplemental information on each
           depending on the options used. Key among that information is the “interesting ports table”..
           That table lists the port number and protocol, service name, and state. The state is either open,
           filtered, closed, or unfiltered.	 Open.	means that an application on the target machine is
           listening for connections/packets on that port.	Filtered.  means that a firewall, filter, or
           other network obstacle is blocking the port so that Nmap cannot tell whether it is open or
           closed.	Closed.	 ports have no application listening on them, though they could open up at any
           time. Ports are classified as unfiltered.  when they are responsive to Nmap's probes, but Nmap
           cannot determine whether they are open or closed. Nmap reports the state combinations
           open|filtered.  and closed|filtered.  when it cannot determine which of the two states describe a
           port. The port table may also include software version details when version detection has been
           requested. When an IP protocol scan is requested (-sO), Nmap provides information on supported IP
           protocols rather than listening ports.
    
           In addition to the interesting ports table, Nmap can provide further information on targets,
           including reverse DNS names, operating system guesses, device types, and MAC addresses.
    
           A typical Nmap scan is shown in Example 1. The only Nmap arguments used in this example are -A,
           to enable OS and version detection, script scanning, and traceroute; -T4 for faster execution;
           and then the two target hostnames.
    
           Example 1. A representative Nmap scan
    
    	   # nmap -A -T4 scanme.nmap.org
    
    	   Nmap scan report for scanme.nmap.org (74.207.244.221)
    	   Host is up (0.029s latency).
    	   rDNS record for 74.207.244.221: li86-221.members.linode.com
    	   Not shown: 995 closed ports
    	   PORT	    STATE    SERVICE	 VERSION
    	   22/tcp   open     ssh	 OpenSSH 5.3p1 Debian 3ubuntu7 (protocol 2.0)
    	   | ssh-hostkey: 1024 8d:60:f1:7c:ca:b7:3d:0a:d6:67:54:9d:69:d9:b9:dd (DSA)
    	   |_2048 79:f8:09:ac:d4:e2:32:42:10:49:d3:bd:20:82:85:ec (RSA)
    	   80/tcp   open     http	 Apache httpd 2.2.14 ((Ubuntu))
    	   |_http-title: Go ahead and ScanMe!
    	   646/tcp  filtered ldp
    	   1720/tcp filtered H.323/Q.931
    	   9929/tcp open     nping-echo	 Nping echo
    	   Device type: general purpose
    	   Running: Linux 2.6.X
    	   OS CPE: cpe:/o:linux:linux_kernel:2.6.39
    	   OS details: Linux 2.6.39
    	   Network Distance: 11 hops
    	   Service Info: OS: Linux; CPE: cpe:/o:linux:kernel
    
    	   TRACEROUTE (using port 53/tcp)
    	   HOP RTT	ADDRESS
    	   [Cut first 10 hops for brevity]
    	   11  17.65 ms li86-221.members.linode.com (74.207.244.221)
    
    	   Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 14.40 seconds
    
           The newest version of Nmap can be obtained from http://nmap.org. The newest version of this man
           page is available at http://nmap.org/book/man.html.  It is also included as a chapter of Nmap
           Network Scanning: The Official Nmap Project Guide to Network Discovery and Security Scanning (see
           http://nmap.org/book/).
    
    OPTIONS SUMMARY
           This options summary is printed when Nmap is run with no arguments, and the latest version is
           always available at https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/docs/nmap.usage.txt. It helps people remember the
           most common options, but is no substitute for the in-depth documentation in the rest of this
           manual. Some obscure options aren't even included here.
    
    	   Nmap 6.40 ( http://nmap.org )
    	   Usage: nmap [Scan Type(s)] [Options] {target specification}
    	   TARGET SPECIFICATION:
    	     Can pass hostnames, IP addresses, networks, etc.
    	     Ex: scanme.nmap.org, 192.168.0.1; 10.0.0-255.1-254
    	     -iL <inputfilename>: Input from list of hosts/networks
    	     -iR <num hosts>: Choose random targets
    	     --exclude <host1[,host2][,host3],...>: Exclude hosts/networks
    	     --excludefile <exclude_file>: Exclude list from file
    	   HOST DISCOVERY:
    	     -sL: List Scan - simply list targets to scan
    	     -sn: Ping Scan - disable port scan
    	     -Pn: Treat all hosts as online -- skip host discovery
    	     -PS/PA/PU/PY[portlist]: TCP SYN/ACK, UDP or SCTP discovery to given ports
    	     -PE/PP/PM: ICMP echo, timestamp, and netmask request discovery probes
    	     -PO[protocol list]: IP Protocol Ping
    	     -n/-R: Never do DNS resolution/Always resolve [default: sometimes]
    	     --dns-servers <serv1[,serv2],...>: Specify custom DNS servers
    	     --system-dns: Use OS's DNS resolver
    	     --traceroute: Trace hop path to each host
    	   SCAN TECHNIQUES:
    	     -sS/sT/sA/sW/sM: TCP SYN/Connect()/ACK/Window/Maimon scans
    	     -sU: UDP Scan
    	     -sN/sF/sX: TCP Null, FIN, and Xmas scans
    	     --scanflags <flags>: Customize TCP scan flags
    	     -sI <zombie host[:probeport]>: Idle scan
    	     -sY/sZ: SCTP INIT/COOKIE-ECHO scans
    	     -sO: IP protocol scan
    	     -b <FTP relay host>: FTP bounce scan
    	   PORT SPECIFICATION AND SCAN ORDER:
    	     -p <port ranges>: Only scan specified ports
    	       Ex: -p22; -p1-65535; -p U:53,111,137,T:21-25,80,139,8080,S:9
    	     -F: Fast mode - Scan fewer ports than the default scan
    	     -r: Scan ports consecutively - don't randomize
    	     --top-ports <number>: Scan <number> most common ports
    	     --port-ratio <ratio>: Scan ports more common than <ratio>
    	   SERVICE/VERSION DETECTION:
    	     -sV: Probe open ports to determine service/version info
    	     --version-intensity <level>: Set from 0 (light) to 9 (try all probes)
    	     --version-light: Limit to most likely probes (intensity 2)
    	     --version-all: Try every single probe (intensity 9)
    	     --version-trace: Show detailed version scan activity (for debugging)
    	   SCRIPT SCAN:
    	     -sC: equivalent to --script=default
    	     --script=<Lua scripts>: <Lua scripts> is a comma separated list of
    		      directories, script-files or script-categories
    	     --script-args=<n1=v1,[n2=v2,...]>: provide arguments to scripts
    	     --script-args-file=filename: provide NSE script args in a file
    	     --script-trace: Show all data sent and received
    	     --script-updatedb: Update the script database.
    	     --script-help=<Lua scripts>: Show help about scripts.
    		      <Lua scripts> is a comma separated list of script-files or
    		      script-categories.
    	   OS DETECTION:
    	     -O: Enable OS detection
    	     --osscan-limit: Limit OS detection to promising targets
    	     --osscan-guess: Guess OS more aggressively
    	   TIMING AND PERFORMANCE:
    	     Options which take <time> are in seconds, or append 'ms' (milliseconds),
    	     's' (seconds), 'm' (minutes), or 'h' (hours) to the value (e.g. 30m).
    	     -T<0-5>: Set timing template (higher is faster)
    	     --min-hostgroup/max-hostgroup <size>: Parallel host scan group sizes
    	     --min-parallelism/max-parallelism <numprobes>: Probe parallelization
    	     --min-rtt-timeout/max-rtt-timeout/initial-rtt-timeout <time>: Specifies
    		 probe round trip time.
    	     --max-retries <tries>: Caps number of port scan probe retransmissions.
    	     --host-timeout <time>: Give up on target after this long
    	     --scan-delay/--max-scan-delay <time>: Adjust delay between probes
    	     --min-rate <number>: Send packets no slower than <number> per second
    	     --max-rate <number>: Send packets no faster than <number> per second
    	   FIREWALL/IDS EVASION AND SPOOFING:
    	     -f; --mtu <val>: fragment packets (optionally w/given MTU)
    	     -D <decoy1,decoy2[,ME],...>: Cloak a scan with decoys
    	     -S <IP_Address>: Spoof source address
    	     -e <iface>: Use specified interface
    	     -g/--source-port <portnum>: Use given port number
    	     --data-length <num>: Append random data to sent packets
    	     --ip-options <options>: Send packets with specified ip options
    	     --ttl <val>: Set IP time-to-live field
    	     --spoof-mac <mac address/prefix/vendor name>: Spoof your MAC address
    	     --badsum: Send packets with a bogus TCP/UDP/SCTP checksum
    	   OUTPUT:
    	     -oN/-oX/-oS/-oG <file>: Output scan in normal, XML, s|<rIpt kIddi3,
    		and Grepable format, respectively, to the given filename.
    	     -oA <basename>: Output in the three major formats at once
    	     -v: Increase verbosity level (use -vv or more for greater effect)
    	     -d: Increase debugging level (use -dd or more for greater effect)
    	     --reason: Display the reason a port is in a particular state
    	     --open: Only show open (or possibly open) ports
    	     --packet-trace: Show all packets sent and received
    	     --iflist: Print host interfaces and routes (for debugging)
    	     --log-errors: Log errors/warnings to the normal-format output file
    	     --append-output: Append to rather than clobber specified output files
    	     --resume <filename>: Resume an aborted scan
    	     --stylesheet <path/URL>: XSL stylesheet to transform XML output to HTML
    	     --webxml: Reference stylesheet from Nmap.Org for more portable XML
    	     --no-stylesheet: Prevent associating of XSL stylesheet w/XML output
    	   MISC:
    	     -6: Enable IPv6 scanning
    	     -A: Enable OS detection, version detection, script scanning, and traceroute
    	     --datadir <dirname>: Specify custom Nmap data file location
    	     --send-eth/--send-ip: Send using raw ethernet frames or IP packets
    	     --privileged: Assume that the user is fully privileged
    	     --unprivileged: Assume the user lacks raw socket privileges
    	     -V: Print version number
    	     -h: Print this help summary page.
    	   EXAMPLES:
    	     nmap -v -A scanme.nmap.org
    	     nmap -v -sn 192.168.0.0/16 10.0.0.0/8
    	     nmap -v -iR 10000 -Pn -p 80
    	   SEE THE MAN PAGE (http://nmap.org/book/man.html) FOR MORE OPTIONS AND EXAMPLES
    
    TARGET SPECIFICATION
           Everything on the Nmap command-line that isn't an option (or option argument) is treated as a
           target host specification. The simplest case is to specify a target IP address or hostname for
           scanning.
    
           Sometimes you wish to scan a whole network of adjacent hosts. For this, Nmap supports CIDR-style.
           addressing. You can append /numbits to an IPv4 address or hostname and Nmap will scan every IP
           address for which the first numbits are the same as for the reference IP or hostname given. For
           example, 192.168.10.0/24 would scan the 256 hosts between 192.168.10.0 (binary: 11000000 10101000
           00001010 00000000) and 192.168.10.255 (binary: 11000000 10101000 00001010 11111111), inclusive.
           192.168.10.40/24 would scan exactly the same targets. Given that the host scanme.nmap.org.  is at
           the IP address 64.13.134.52, the specification scanme.nmap.org/16 would scan the 65,536 IP
           addresses between 64.13.0.0 and 64.13.255.255. The smallest allowed value is /0, which targets
           the whole Internet. The largest value is /32, which scans just the named host or IP address
           because all address bits are fixed.
    
           CIDR notation is short but not always flexible enough. For example, you might want to scan
           192.168.0.0/16 but skip any IPs ending with .0 or .255 because they may be used as subnet network
           and broadcast addresses. Nmap supports this through octet range addressing. Rather than specify a
           normal IP address, you can specify a comma-separated list of numbers or ranges for each octet.
           For example, 192.168.0-255.1-254 will skip all addresses in the range that end in .0 or .255, and
           192.168.3-5,7.1 will scan the four addresses 192.168.3.1, 192.168.4.1, 192.168.5.1, and
           192.168.7.1. Either side of a range may be omitted; the default values are 0 on the left and 255
           on the right. Using - by itself is the same as 0-255, but remember to use 0- in the first octet
           so the target specification doesn't look like a command-line option. Ranges need not be limited
           to the final octets: the specifier 0-255.0-255.13.37 will perform an Internet-wide scan for all
           IP addresses ending in 13.37. This sort of broad sampling can be useful for Internet surveys and
           research.
    
           IPv6 addresses can only be specified by their fully qualified IPv6 address or hostname. CIDR and
           octet ranges aren't yet supported for IPv6.
    
           IPv6 addresses with non-global scope need to have a zone ID suffix. On Unix systems, this is a
           percent sign followed by an interface name; a complete address might be
           fe80::a8bb:ccff:fedd:eeff%eth0. On Windows, use an interface index number in place of an
           interface name: fe80::a8bb:ccff:fedd:eeff%1. You can see a list of interface indexes by running
           the command netsh.exe interface ipv6 show interface.
    
           Nmap accepts multiple host specifications on the command line, and they don't need to be the same
           type. The command nmap scanme.nmap.org 192.168.0.0/8 10.0.0,1,3-7.- does what you would expect.
    
           While targets are usually specified on the command lines, the following options are also
           available to control target selection:
    
           -iL inputfilename (Input from list) .
    	   Reads target specifications from inputfilename. Passing a huge list of hosts is often awkward
    	   on the command line, yet it is a common desire. For example, your DHCP server might export a
    	   list of 10,000 current leases that you wish to scan. Or maybe you want to scan all IP
    	   addresses except for those to locate hosts using unauthorized static IP addresses. Simply
    	   generate the list of hosts to scan and pass that filename to Nmap as an argument to the -iL
    	   option. Entries can be in any of the formats accepted by Nmap on the command line (IP
    	   address, hostname, CIDR, IPv6, or octet ranges). Each entry must be separated by one or more
    	   spaces, tabs, or newlines. You can specify a hyphen (-) as the filename if you want Nmap to
    	   read hosts from standard input rather than an actual file.
    
    	   The input file may contain comments that start with # and extend to the end of the line.
    
           -iR num hosts (Choose random targets) .
    	   For Internet-wide surveys and other research, you may want to choose targets at random. The
    	   num hosts argument tells Nmap how many IPs to generate. Undesirable IPs such as those in
    	   certain private, multicast, or unallocated address ranges are automatically skipped. The
    	   argument 0 can be specified for a never-ending scan. Keep in mind that some network
    	   administrators bristle at unauthorized scans of their networks and may complain. Use this
    	   option at your own risk! If you find yourself really bored one rainy afternoon, try the
    	   command nmap -Pn -sS -p 80 -iR 0 --open.  to locate random web servers for browsing.
    
           --exclude host1[,host2[,...]] (Exclude hosts/networks) .
    	   Specifies a comma-separated list of targets to be excluded from the scan even if they are
    	   part of the overall network range you specify. The list you pass in uses normal Nmap syntax,
    	   so it can include hostnames, CIDR netblocks, octet ranges, etc. This can be useful when the
    	   network you wish to scan includes untouchable mission-critical servers, systems that are
    	   known to react adversely to port scans, or subnets administered by other people.
    
           --excludefile exclude_file (Exclude list from file) .
    	   This offers the same functionality as the --exclude option, except that the excluded targets
    	   are provided in a newline-, space-, or tab-delimited exclude_file rather than on the command
    	   line.
    
    	   The exclude file may contain comments that start with # and extend to the end of the line.
    
    HOST DISCOVERY
           One of the very first steps in any network reconnaissance mission is to reduce a (sometimes huge)
           set of IP ranges into a list of active or interesting hosts. Scanning every port of every single
           IP address is slow and usually unnecessary. Of course what makes a host interesting depends
           greatly on the scan purposes. Network administrators may only be interested in hosts running a
           certain service, while security auditors may care about every single device with an IP address.
           An administrator may be comfortable using just an ICMP ping to locate hosts on his internal
           network, while an external penetration tester may use a diverse set of dozens of probes in an
           attempt to evade firewall restrictions.
    
           Because host discovery needs are so diverse, Nmap offers a wide variety of options for
           customizing the techniques used. Host discovery is sometimes called ping scan, but it goes well
           beyond the simple ICMP echo request packets associated with the ubiquitous ping tool. Users can
           skip the ping step entirely with a list scan (-sL) or by disabling ping (-Pn), or engage the
           network with arbitrary combinations of multi-port TCP SYN/ACK, UDP, SCTP INIT and ICMP probes.
           The goal of these probes is to solicit responses which demonstrate that an IP address is actually
           active (is being used by a host or network device). On many networks, only a small percentage of
           IP addresses are active at any given time. This is particularly common with private address space
           such as 10.0.0.0/8. That network has 16 million IPs, but I have seen it used by companies with
           less than a thousand machines. Host discovery can find those machines in a sparsely allocated sea
           of IP addresses.
    
           If no host discovery options are given, Nmap sends an ICMP echo request, a TCP SYN packet to port
           443, a TCP ACK packet to port 80, and an ICMP timestamp request. (For IPv6, the ICMP timestamp
           request is omitted because it is not part of ICMPv6.) These defaults are equivalent to the -PE
           -PS443 -PA80 -PP options. The exceptions to this are the ARP (for IPv4) and Neighbor Discovery.
           (for IPv6) scans which are used for any targets on a local ethernet network. For unprivileged
           Unix shell users, the default probes are a SYN packet to ports 80 and 443 using the connect
           system call..  This host discovery is often sufficient when scanning local networks, but a more
           comprehensive set of discovery probes is recommended for security auditing.
    
           The -P* options (which select ping types) can be combined. You can increase your odds of
           penetrating strict firewalls by sending many probe types using different TCP ports/flags and ICMP
           codes. Also note that ARP/Neighbor Discovery (-PR).  is done by default against targets on a
           local ethernet network even if you specify other -P* options, because it is almost always faster
           and more effective.
    
           By default, Nmap does host discovery and then performs a port scan against each host it
           determines is online. This is true even if you specify non-default host discovery types such as
           UDP probes (-PU). Read about the -sn option to learn how to perform only host discovery, or use
           -Pn to skip host discovery and port scan all target hosts. The following options control host
           discovery:
    
           -sL (List Scan) .
    	   The list scan is a degenerate form of host discovery that simply lists each host of the
    	   network(s) specified, without sending any packets to the target hosts. By default, Nmap still
    	   does reverse-DNS resolution on the hosts to learn their names. It is often surprising how
    	   much useful information simple hostnames give out. For example, fw.chi is the name of one
    	   company's Chicago firewall.	Nmap also reports the total number of IP addresses at the end.
    	   The list scan is a good sanity check to ensure that you have proper IP addresses for your
    <standard input>:2731: warning [p 36, 5.8i]: can't break line
    	   targets. If the hosts sport domain names you do not recognize, it is worth investigating
    	   further to prevent scanning the wrong company's network.
    
    	   Since the idea is to simply print a list of target hosts, options for higher level
    	   functionality such as port scanning, OS detection, or ping scanning cannot be combined with
    	   this. If you wish to disable ping scanning while still performing such higher level
    	   functionality, read up on the -Pn (skip ping) option.
    
           -sn (No port scan) .
    	   This option tells Nmap not to do a port scan after host discovery, and only print out the
    	   available hosts that responded to the scan. This is often known as a “ping scan”, but you can
    	   also request that traceroute and NSE host scripts be run. This is by default one step more
    	   intrusive than the list scan, and can often be used for the same purposes. It allows light
    	   reconnaissance of a target network without attracting much attention. Knowing how many hosts
    	   are up is more valuable to attackers than the list provided by list scan of every single IP
    	   and host name.
    
    	   Systems administrators often find this option valuable as well. It can easily be used to
    	   count available machines on a network or monitor server availability. This is often called a
    	   ping sweep, and is more reliable than pinging the broadcast address because many hosts do not
    	   reply to broadcast queries.
    
    	   The default host discovery done with -sn consists of an ICMP echo request, TCP SYN to port
    	   443, TCP ACK to port 80, and an ICMP timestamp request by default. When executed by an
    	   unprivileged user, only SYN packets are sent (using a connect call) to ports 80 and 443 on
    	   the target. When a privileged user tries to scan targets on a local ethernet network, ARP
    	   requests are used unless --send-ip was specified. The -sn option can be combined with any of
    	   the discovery probe types (the -P* options, excluding -Pn) for greater flexibility. If any of
    	   those probe type and port number options are used, the default probes are overridden. When
    	   strict firewalls are in place between the source host running Nmap and the target network,
    	   using those advanced techniques is recommended. Otherwise hosts could be missed when the
    	   firewall drops probes or their responses.
    
    	   In previous releases of Nmap, -sn was known as -sP..
    
           -Pn (No ping) .
    	   This option skips the Nmap discovery stage altogether. Normally, Nmap uses this stage to
    	   determine active machines for heavier scanning. By default, Nmap only performs heavy probing
    	   such as port scans, version detection, or OS detection against hosts that are found to be up.
    	   Disabling host discovery with -Pn causes Nmap to attempt the requested scanning functions
    	   against every target IP address specified. So if a class B target address space (/16) is
    	   specified on the command line, all 65,536 IP addresses are scanned. Proper host discovery is
    	   skipped as with the list scan, but instead of stopping and printing the target list, Nmap
    	   continues to perform requested functions as if each target IP is active. To skip ping scan
    	   and port scan, while still allowing NSE to run, use the two options -Pn -sn together.
    
    	   For machines on a local ethernet network, ARP scanning will still be performed (unless
    	   --disable-arp-ping or --send-ip is specified) because Nmap needs MAC addresses to further
    	   scan target hosts. In previous versions of Nmap, -Pn was -P0.  and -PN..
    
           -PS port list (TCP SYN Ping) .
    	   This option sends an empty TCP packet with the SYN flag set. The default destination port is
    	   80 (configurable at compile time by changing DEFAULT_TCP_PROBE_PORT_SPEC.  in nmap.h)..
    	   Alternate ports can be specified as a parameter. The syntax is the same as for the -p except
    	   that port type specifiers like T: are not allowed. Examples are -PS22 and
    	   -PS22-25,80,113,1050,35000. Note that there can be no space between -PS and the port list. If
    	   multiple probes are specified they will be sent in parallel.
    
    	   The SYN flag suggests to the remote system that you are attempting to establish a connection.
    	   Normally the destination port will be closed, and a RST (reset) packet sent back. If the port
    	   happens to be open, the target will take the second step of a TCP three-way-handshake.  by
    	   responding with a SYN/ACK TCP packet. The machine running Nmap then tears down the nascent
    	   connection by responding with a RST rather than sending an ACK packet which would complete
    	   the three-way-handshake and establish a full connection. The RST packet is sent by the kernel
    	   of the machine running Nmap in response to the unexpected SYN/ACK, not by Nmap itself.
    
    	   Nmap does not care whether the port is open or closed. Either the RST or SYN/ACK response
    	   discussed previously tell Nmap that the host is available and responsive.
    
    	   On Unix boxes, only the privileged user root.  is generally able to send and receive raw TCP
    	   packets..  For unprivileged users, a workaround is automatically employed.  whereby the
    	   connect system call is initiated against each target port. This has the effect of sending a
    	   SYN packet to the target host, in an attempt to establish a connection. If connect returns
    	   with a quick success or an ECONNREFUSED failure, the underlying TCP stack must have received
    	   a SYN/ACK or RST and the host is marked available. If the connection attempt is left hanging
    	   until a timeout is reached, the host is marked as down.
    
           -PA port list (TCP ACK Ping) .
    	   The TCP ACK ping is quite similar to the just-discussed SYN ping. The difference, as you
    	   could likely guess, is that the TCP ACK flag is set instead of the SYN flag. Such an ACK
    	   packet purports to be acknowledging data over an established TCP connection, but no such
    	   connection exists. So remote hosts should always respond with a RST packet, disclosing their
    	   existence in the process.
    
    	   The -PA option uses the same default port as the SYN probe (80) and can also take a list of
    	   destination ports in the same format. If an unprivileged user tries this, the connect
    	   workaround discussed previously is used. This workaround is imperfect because connect is
    	   actually sending a SYN packet rather than an ACK.
    
    	   The reason for offering both SYN and ACK ping probes is to maximize the chances of bypassing
    	   firewalls. Many administrators configure routers and other simple firewalls to block incoming
    	   SYN packets except for those destined for public services like the company web site or mail
    	   server. This prevents other incoming connections to the organization, while allowing users to
    	   make unobstructed outgoing connections to the Internet. This non-stateful approach takes up
    	   few resources on the firewall/router and is widely supported by hardware and software
    	   filters. The Linux Netfilter/iptables.  firewall software offers the --syn convenience option
    	   to implement this stateless approach. When stateless firewall rules such as this are in
    	   place, SYN ping probes (-PS) are likely to be blocked when sent to closed target ports. In
    	   such cases, the ACK probe shines as it cuts right through these rules.
    
    	   Another common type of firewall uses stateful rules that drop unexpected packets. This
    	   feature was initially found mostly on high-end firewalls, though it has become much more
    	   common over the years. The Linux Netfilter/iptables system supports this through the --state
    	   option, which categorizes packets based on connection state. A SYN probe is more likely to
    	   work against such a system, as unexpected ACK packets are generally recognized as bogus and
    	   dropped. A solution to this quandary is to send both SYN and ACK probes by specifying -PS and
    	   -PA.
    
           -PU port list (UDP Ping) .
    	   Another host discovery option is the UDP ping, which sends a UDP packet to the given ports.
    	   For most ports, the packet will be empty, though for a few a protocol-specific payload will
    	   be sent that is more likely to get a response..  The --data-length.	option can be used to
    	   send a fixed-length random payload to every port or (if you specify a value of 0) to disable
    	   payloads. You can also disable payloads by specifying --data-length 0.
    
    	   The port list takes the same format as with the previously discussed -PS and -PA options. If
    	   no ports are specified, the default is 40125..  This default can be configured at
    	   compile-time by changing DEFAULT_UDP_PROBE_PORT_SPEC.  in nmap.h..  A highly uncommon port is
    	   used by default because sending to open ports is often undesirable for this particular scan
    	   type.
    
    	   Upon hitting a closed port on the target machine, the UDP probe should elicit an ICMP port
    	   unreachable packet in return. This signifies to Nmap that the machine is up and available.
    	   Many other types of ICMP errors, such as host/network unreachables or TTL exceeded are
    	   indicative of a down or unreachable host. A lack of response is also interpreted this way. If
    	   an open port is reached, most services simply ignore the empty packet and fail to return any
    	   response. This is why the default probe port is 40125, which is highly unlikely to be in use.
    	   A few services, such as the Character Generator (chargen) protocol, will respond to an empty
    	   UDP packet, and thus disclose to Nmap that the machine is available.
    
    	   The primary advantage of this scan type is that it bypasses firewalls and filters that only
    	   screen TCP. For example, I once owned a Linksys BEFW11S4 wireless broadband router. The
    	   external interface of this device filtered all TCP ports by default, but UDP probes would
    	   still elicit port unreachable messages and thus give away the device.
    
           -PY port list (SCTP INIT Ping) .
    	   This option sends an SCTP packet containing a minimal INIT chunk. The default destination
    	   port is 80 (configurable at compile time by changing DEFAULT_SCTP_PROBE_PORT_SPEC.  in
    	   nmap.h). Alternate ports can be specified as a parameter. The syntax is the same as for the
    	   -p except that port type specifiers like S: are not allowed. Examples are -PY22 and
    	   -PY22,80,179,5060. Note that there can be no space between -PY and the port list. If multiple
    	   probes are specified they will be sent in parallel.
    
    	   The INIT chunk suggests to the remote system that you are attempting to establish an
    	   association. Normally the destination port will be closed, and an ABORT chunk will be sent
    	   back. If the port happens to be open, the target will take the second step of an SCTP
    	   four-way-handshake.	by responding with an INIT-ACK chunk. If the machine running Nmap has a
    	   functional SCTP stack, then it tears down the nascent association by responding with an ABORT
    	   chunk rather than sending a COOKIE-ECHO chunk which would be the next step in the
    	   four-way-handshake. The ABORT packet is sent by the kernel of the machine running Nmap in
    	   response to the unexpected INIT-ACK, not by Nmap itself.
    
    	   Nmap does not care whether the port is open or closed. Either the ABORT or INIT-ACK response
    	   discussed previously tell Nmap that the host is available and responsive.
    
    	   On Unix boxes, only the privileged user root.  is generally able to send and receive raw SCTP
    	   packets..  Using SCTP INIT Pings is currently not possible for unprivileged users..
    
           -PE; -PP; -PM (ICMP Ping Types) .
    	   In addition to the unusual TCP, UDP and SCTP host discovery types discussed previously, Nmap
    	   can send the standard packets sent by the ubiquitous ping program. Nmap sends an ICMP type 8
    	   (echo request) packet to the target IP addresses, expecting a type 0 (echo reply) in return
    	   from available hosts..  Unfortunately for network explorers, many hosts and firewalls now
    	   block these packets, rather than responding as required by RFC 1122[2]..  For this reason,
    	   ICMP-only scans are rarely reliable enough against unknown targets over the Internet. But for
    	   system administrators monitoring an internal network, they can be a practical and efficient
    	   approach. Use the -PE option to enable this echo request behavior.
    
    	   While echo request is the standard ICMP ping query, Nmap does not stop there. The ICMP
    	   standards (RFC 792[3].  and RFC 950[4].  “a host SHOULD NOT implement these messages”.
    	   Timestamp and address mask queries can be sent with the -PP and -PM options, respectively. A
    	   timestamp reply (ICMP code 14) or address mask reply (code 18) discloses that the host is
    	   available. These two queries can be valuable when administrators specifically block echo
    	   request packets while forgetting that other ICMP queries can be used for the same purpose.
    
           -PO protocol list (IP Protocol Ping) .
    	   One of the newer host discovery options is the IP protocol ping, which sends IP packets with
    	   the specified protocol number set in their IP header. The protocol list takes the same format
    	   as do port lists in the previously discussed TCP, UDP and SCTP host discovery options. If no
    	   protocols are specified, the default is to send multiple IP packets for ICMP (protocol 1),
    	   IGMP (protocol 2), and IP-in-IP (protocol 4). The default protocols can be configured at
    	   compile-time by changing DEFAULT_PROTO_PROBE_PORT_SPEC.  in nmap.h. Note that for the ICMP,
    	   IGMP, TCP (protocol 6), UDP (protocol 17) and SCTP (protocol 132), the packets are sent with
    	   the proper protocol headers.	 while other protocols are sent with no additional data beyond
    	   the IP header (unless the --data-length.  option is specified).
    
    	   This host discovery method looks for either responses using the same protocol as a probe, or
    	   ICMP protocol unreachable messages which signify that the given protocol isn't supported on
    	   the destination host. Either type of response signifies that the target host is alive.
    
           -PR (ARP Ping) .
    	   One of the most common Nmap usage scenarios is to scan an ethernet LAN. On most LANs,
    	   especially those using private address ranges specified by RFC 1918[5], the vast majority of
    	   IP addresses are unused at any given time. When Nmap tries to send a raw IP packet such as an
    	   ICMP echo request, the operating system must determine the destination hardware (ARP) address
    	   corresponding to the target IP so that it can properly address the ethernet frame. This is
    	   often slow and problematic, since operating systems weren't written with the expectation that
    	   they would need to do millions of ARP requests against unavailable hosts in a short time
    	   period.
    
    	   ARP scan puts Nmap and its optimized algorithms in charge of ARP requests. And if it gets a
    	   response back, Nmap doesn't even need to worry about the IP-based ping packets since it
    	   already knows the host is up. This makes ARP scan much faster and more reliable than IP-based
    	   scans. So it is done by default when scanning ethernet hosts that Nmap detects are on a local
    	   ethernet network. Even if different ping types (such as -PE or -PS) are specified, Nmap uses
    	   ARP instead for any of the targets which are on the same LAN. If you absolutely don't want to
    	   do an ARP scan, specify --disable-arp-ping.
    
    	   For IPv6 (-6 option), -PR uses ICMPv6 Neighbor Discovery instead of ARP. Neighbor Discovery,
    	   defined in RFC 4861, can be seen as the IPv6 equivalent of ARP.
    
           --disable-arp-ping (No ARP or ND Ping) .
    	   Nmap normally does ARP or IPv6 Neighbor Discovery (ND) discovery of locally connected
    	   ethernet hosts, even if other host discovery options such as -Pn or -PE are used. To disable
    	   this implicit behavior, use the --disable-arp-ping option.
    
    	   The default behavior is normally faster, but this option is useful on networks using proxy
    	   ARP, in which a router speculatively replies to all ARP requests, making every target appear
    	   to be up according to ARP scan.
    
           --traceroute (Trace path to host) .
    	   Traceroutes are performed post-scan using information from the scan results to determine the
    	   port and protocol most likely to reach the target. It works with all scan types except
    	   connect scans (-sT) and idle scans (-sI). All traces use Nmap's dynamic timing model and are
    	   performed in parallel.
    
    	   Traceroute works by sending packets with a low TTL (time-to-live) in an attempt to elicit
    	   ICMP Time Exceeded messages from intermediate hops between the scanner and the target host.
    	   Standard traceroute implementations start with a TTL of 1 and increment the TTL until the
    	   destination host is reached. Nmap's traceroute starts with a high TTL and then decrements the
    	   TTL until it reaches zero. Doing it backwards lets Nmap employ clever caching algorithms to
    	   speed up traces over multiple hosts. On average Nmap sends 5–10 fewer packets per host,
    	   depending on network conditions. If a single subnet is being scanned (i.e. 192.168.0.0/24)
    	   Nmap may only have to send two packets to most hosts.
    
           -n (No DNS resolution) .
    	   Tells Nmap to never do reverse DNS resolution on the active IP addresses it finds. Since DNS
    	   can be slow even with Nmap's built-in parallel stub resolver, this option can slash scanning
    	   times.
    
           -R (DNS resolution for all targets) .
    	   Tells Nmap to always do reverse DNS resolution on the target IP addresses. Normally reverse
    	   DNS is only performed against responsive (online) hosts.
    
           --system-dns (Use system DNS resolver) .
    	   By default, Nmap resolves IP addresses by sending queries directly to the name servers
    	   configured on your host and then listening for responses. Many requests (often dozens) are
    	   performed in parallel to improve performance. Specify this option to use your system resolver
    	   instead (one IP at a time via the getnameinfo call). This is slower and rarely useful unless
    	   you find a bug in the Nmap parallel resolver (please let us know if you do). The system
    	   resolver is always used for IPv6 scans.
    
           --dns-servers server1[,server2[,...]]  (Servers to use for reverse DNS queries) .
    	   By default, Nmap determines your DNS servers (for rDNS resolution) from your resolv.conf file
    	   (Unix) or the Registry (Win32). Alternatively, you may use this option to specify alternate
    	   servers. This option is not honored if you are using --system-dns or an IPv6 scan. Using
    	   multiple DNS servers is often faster, especially if you choose authoritative servers for your
    	   target IP space. This option can also improve stealth, as your requests can be bounced off
    	   just about any recursive DNS server on the Internet.
    
    	   This option also comes in handy when scanning private networks. Sometimes only a few name
    	   servers provide proper rDNS information, and you may not even know where they are. You can
    	   scan the network for port 53 (perhaps with version detection), then try Nmap list scans (-sL)
    	   specifying each name server one at a time with --dns-servers until you find one which works.
    
    PORT SCANNING BASICS
           While Nmap has grown in functionality over the years, it began as an efficient port scanner, and
           that remains its core function. The simple command nmap target scans 1,000 TCP ports on the host
           target. While many port scanners have traditionally lumped all ports into the open or closed
           states, Nmap is much more granular. It divides ports into six states: open, closed, filtered,
           unfiltered, open|filtered, or closed|filtered.
    
           These states are not intrinsic properties of the port itself, but describe how Nmap sees them.
           For example, an Nmap scan from the same network as the target may show port 135/tcp as open,
           while a scan at the same time with the same options from across the Internet might show that port
           as filtered.
    
           The six port states recognized by Nmap
    
    	   An application is actively accepting TCP connections, UDP datagrams or SCTP associations on
    	   this port. Finding these is often the primary goal of port scanning. Security-minded people
    	   know that each open port is an avenue for attack. Attackers and pen-testers want to exploit
    	   the open ports, while administrators try to close or protect them with firewalls without
    	   thwarting legitimate users. Open ports are also interesting for non-security scans because
    	   they show services available for use on the network.
    
    	   A closed port is accessible (it receives and responds to Nmap probe packets), but there is no
    	   application listening on it. They can be helpful in showing that a host is up on an IP
    	   address (host discovery, or ping scanning), and as part of OS detection. Because closed ports
    	   are reachable, it may be worth scanning later in case some open up. Administrators may want
    	   to consider blocking such ports with a firewall. Then they would appear in the filtered
    	   state, discussed next.
    
    	   Nmap cannot determine whether the port is open because packet filtering prevents its probes
    	   from reaching the port. The filtering could be from a dedicated firewall device, router
    	   rules, or host-based firewall software. These ports frustrate attackers because they provide
    	   so little information. Sometimes they respond with ICMP error messages such as type 3 code 13
    	   (destination unreachable: communication administratively prohibited), but filters that simply
    	   drop probes without responding are far more common. This forces Nmap to retry several times
    	   just in case the probe was dropped due to network congestion rather than filtering. This
    	   slows down the scan dramatically.
    
    	   The unfiltered state means that a port is accessible, but Nmap is unable to determine whether
    	   it is open or closed. Only the ACK scan, which is used to map firewall rulesets, classifies
    	   ports into this state. Scanning unfiltered ports with other scan types such as Window scan,
    	   SYN scan, or FIN scan, may help resolve whether the port is open.
    
    	   Nmap places ports in this state when it is unable to determine whether a port is open or
    	   filtered. This occurs for scan types in which open ports give no response. The lack of
    	   response could also mean that a packet filter dropped the probe or any response it elicited.
    	   So Nmap does not know for sure whether the port is open or being filtered. The UDP, IP
    	   protocol, FIN, NULL, and Xmas scans classify ports this way.
    
    	   This state is used when Nmap is unable to determine whether a port is closed or filtered. It
    	   is only used for the IP ID idle scan.
    
    PORT SCANNING TECHNIQUES
           As a novice performing automotive repair, I can struggle for hours trying to fit my rudimentary
           tools (hammer, duct tape, wrench, etc.) to the task at hand. When I fail miserably and tow my
           jalopy to a real mechanic, he invariably fishes around in a huge tool chest until pulling out the
           perfect gizmo which makes the job seem effortless. The art of port scanning is similar. Experts
           understand the dozens of scan techniques and choose the appropriate one (or combination) for a
           given task. Inexperienced users and script kiddies,.  on the other hand, try to solve every
           problem with the default SYN scan. Since Nmap is free, the only barrier to port scanning mastery
           is knowledge. That certainly beats the automotive world, where it may take great skill to
           determine that you need a strut spring compressor, then you still have to pay thousands of
           dollars for it.
    
           Most of the scan types are only available to privileged users..	This is because they send and
           receive raw packets,.  which requires root access on Unix systems. Using an administrator account
           on Windows is recommended, though Nmap sometimes works for unprivileged users on that platform
           when WinPcap has already been loaded into the OS. Requiring root privileges was a serious
           limitation when Nmap was released in 1997, as many users only had access to shared shell
           accounts. Now, the world is different. Computers are cheaper, far more people have always-on
           direct Internet access, and desktop Unix systems (including Linux and Mac OS X) are prevalent. A
           Windows version of Nmap is now available, allowing it to run on even more desktops. For all these
           reasons, users have less need to run Nmap from limited shared shell accounts. This is fortunate,
           as the privileged options make Nmap far more powerful and flexible.
    
           While Nmap attempts to produce accurate results, keep in mind that all of its insights are based
           on packets returned by the target machines (or firewalls in front of them). Such hosts may be
           untrustworthy and send responses intended to confuse or mislead Nmap. Much more common are
           non-RFC-compliant hosts that do not respond as they should to Nmap probes. FIN, NULL, and Xmas
           scans are particularly susceptible to this problem. Such issues are specific to certain scan
           types and so are discussed in the individual scan type entries.
    
           This section documents the dozen or so port scan techniques supported by Nmap. Only one method
           may be used at a time, except that UDP scan (-sU) and any one of the SCTP scan types (-sY, -sZ)
           may be combined with any one of the TCP scan types. As a memory aid, port scan type options are
           of the form -sC, where C is a prominent character in the scan name, usually the first. The one
           exception to this is the deprecated FTP bounce scan (-b). By default, Nmap performs a SYN Scan,
           though it substitutes a connect scan if the user does not have proper privileges to send raw
           packets (requires root access on Unix). Of the scans listed in this section, unprivileged users
           can only execute connect and FTP bounce scans.
    
           -sS (TCP SYN scan) .
    	   SYN scan is the default and most popular scan option for good reasons. It can be performed
    	   quickly, scanning thousands of ports per second on a fast network not hampered by restrictive
    	   firewalls. It is also relatively unobtrusive and stealthy since it never completes TCP
    	   connections. SYN scan works against any compliant TCP stack rather than depending on
    	   idiosyncrasies of specific platforms as Nmap's FIN/NULL/Xmas, Maimon and idle scans do. It
    	   also allows clear, reliable differentiation between the open, closed, and filtered states.
    
    	   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 then
    	   wait for a response. A SYN/ACK indicates the port is listening (open), while a RST (reset) is
    	   indicative of a non-listener. If no response is received after several retransmissions, the
    	   port is marked as filtered. The port is also marked filtered if an ICMP unreachable error
    	   (type 3, code 1, 2, 3, 9, 10, or 13) is received. The port is also considered open if a SYN
    	   packet (without the ACK flag) is received in response. This can be due to an extremely rare
    	   TCP feature known as a simultaneous open or split handshake connection (see
    	   http://nmap.org/misc/split-handshake.pdf).
    
           -sT (TCP connect scan) .
    	   TCP connect scan is the default TCP scan type when SYN scan is not an option. This is the
    	   case when a user does not have raw packet privileges. Instead of writing raw packets as most
    	   other scan types do, Nmap asks the underlying operating system to establish a connection with
    	   the target machine and port by issuing the connect system call. This is the same high-level
    	   system call that web browsers, P2P clients, and most other network-enabled applications use
    	   to establish a connection. It is part of a programming interface known as the Berkeley
    	   Sockets API. Rather than read raw packet responses off the wire, Nmap uses this API to obtain
    	   status information on each connection attempt.
    
    	   When SYN scan is available, it is usually a better choice. Nmap has less control over the
    	   high level connect call than with raw packets, making it less efficient. The system call
    	   completes connections to open target ports rather than performing the half-open reset that
    	   SYN scan does. Not only does this take longer and require more packets to obtain the same
    	   information, but target machines are more likely to log the connection. A decent IDS will
    	   catch either, but most machines have no such alarm system. Many services on your average Unix
    	   system will add a note to syslog, and sometimes a cryptic error message, when Nmap connects
    	   and then closes the connection without sending data. Truly pathetic services crash when this
    	   happens, though that is uncommon. An administrator who sees a bunch of connection attempts in
    	   her logs from a single system should know that she has been connect scanned.
    
           -sU (UDP scans) .
    	   While most popular services on the Internet run over the TCP protocol, UDP[6] services are
    	   widely deployed. DNS, SNMP, and DHCP (registered ports 53, 161/162, and 67/68) are three of
    	   the most common. Because UDP scanning is generally slower and more difficult than TCP, some
    	   security auditors ignore these ports. This is a mistake, as exploitable UDP services are
    	   quite common and attackers certainly don't ignore the whole protocol. Fortunately, Nmap can
    	   help inventory UDP ports.
    
    	   UDP scan is activated with the -sU option. It can be combined with a TCP scan type such as
    	   SYN scan (-sS) to check both protocols during the same run.
    
    	   UDP scan works by sending a UDP packet to every targeted port. For some common ports such as
    	   53 and 161, a protocol-specific payload is sent, but for most ports the packet is empty..
    	   The --data-length option can be used to send a fixed-length random payload to every port or
    	   (if you specify a value of 0) to disable payloads. If an ICMP port unreachable error (type 3,
    	   code 3) is returned, the port is closed. Other ICMP unreachable errors (type 3, codes 1, 2,
    	   9, 10, or 13) mark the port as filtered. Occasionally, a service will respond with a UDP
    	   packet, proving that it is open. If no response is received after retransmissions, the port
    	   is classified as open|filtered. This means that the port could be open, or perhaps packet
    	   filters are blocking the communication. Version detection (-sV) can be used to help
    	   differentiate the truly open ports from the filtered ones.
    
    	   A big challenge with UDP scanning is doing it quickly. Open and filtered ports rarely send
    	   any response, leaving Nmap to time out and then conduct retransmissions just in case the
    	   probe or response were lost. Closed ports are often an even bigger problem. They usually send
    	   back an ICMP port unreachable error. But unlike the RST packets sent by closed TCP ports in
    	   response to a SYN or connect scan, many hosts rate limit.  ICMP port unreachable messages by
    	   default. Linux and Solaris are particularly strict about this. For example, the Linux 2.4.20
    	   kernel limits destination unreachable messages to one per second (in net/ipv4/icmp.c).
    
    	   Nmap detects rate limiting and slows down accordingly to avoid flooding the network with
    	   useless packets that the target machine will drop. Unfortunately, a Linux-style limit of one
    	   packet per second makes a 65,536-port scan take more than 18 hours. Ideas for speeding your
    	   UDP scans up include scanning more hosts in parallel, doing a quick scan of just the popular
    	   ports first, scanning from behind the firewall, and using --host-timeout to skip slow hosts.
    
           -sY (SCTP INIT scan) .
    	   SCTP[7] is a relatively new alternative to the TCP and UDP protocols, combining most
    	   characteristics of TCP and UDP, and also adding new features like multi-homing and
    	   multi-streaming. It is mostly being used for SS7/SIGTRAN related services but has the
    	   potential to be used for other applications as well. SCTP INIT scan is the SCTP equivalent of
    	   a TCP SYN scan. It can be performed quickly, scanning thousands of ports per second on a fast
    	   network not hampered by restrictive firewalls. Like SYN scan, INIT scan is relatively
    	   unobtrusive and stealthy, since it never completes SCTP associations. It also allows clear,
    	   reliable differentiation between the open, closed, and filtered states.
    
    	   This technique is often referred to as half-open scanning, because you don't open a full SCTP
    	   association. You send an INIT chunk, as if you are going to open a real association and then
    	   wait for a response. An INIT-ACK chunk indicates the port is listening (open), while an ABORT
    	   chunk is indicative of a non-listener. If no response is received after several
    	   retransmissions, the port is marked as filtered. The port is also marked filtered if an ICMP
    	   unreachable error (type 3, code 1, 2, 3, 9, 10, or 13) is received.
    
           -sN; -sF; -sX (TCP NULL, FIN, and Xmas scans) .
    	   These three scan types (even more are possible with the --scanflags option described in the
    	   next section) exploit a subtle loophole in the TCP RFC[8] to differentiate between open and
    	   closed ports. Page 65 of RFC 793 says that “if the [destination] port state is CLOSED .... an
    	   incoming segment not containing a RST causes a RST to be sent in response.”	Then the next
    	   page discusses packets sent to open ports without the SYN, RST, or ACK bits set, stating
    	   that: “you are unlikely to get here, but if you do, drop the segment, and return.”
    
    	   When scanning systems compliant with this RFC text, any packet not containing SYN, RST, or
    	   ACK bits will result in a returned RST if the port is closed and no response at all if the
    	   port is open. As long as none of those three bits are included, any combination of the other
    	   three (FIN, PSH, and URG) are OK. Nmap exploits this with three scan types:
    
    	   Null scan (-sN)
    	       Does not set any bits (TCP flag header is 0)
    
    	   FIN scan (-sF)
    	       Sets just the TCP FIN bit.
    
    	   Xmas scan (-sX)
    	       Sets the FIN, PSH, and URG flags, lighting the packet up like a Christmas tree.
    
    	   These three scan types are exactly the same in behavior except for the TCP flags set in probe
    	   packets. If a RST packet is received, the port is considered closed, while no response means
    	   it is open|filtered. The port is marked filtered if an ICMP unreachable error (type 3, code
    	   1, 2, 3, 9, 10, or 13) is received.
    
    	   The key advantage to these scan types is that they can sneak through certain non-stateful
    	   firewalls and packet filtering routers. Another advantage is that these scan types are a
    	   little more stealthy than even a SYN scan. Don't count on this though—most modern IDS
    	   products can be configured to detect them. The big downside is that not all systems follow
    	   RFC 793 to the letter. A number of systems send RST responses to the probes regardless of
    	   whether the port is open or not. This causes all of the ports to be labeled closed. Major
    	   operating systems that do this are Microsoft Windows, many Cisco devices, BSDI, and IBM
    	   OS/400. This scan does work against most Unix-based systems though. Another downside of these
    	   scans is that they can't distinguish open ports from certain filtered ones, leaving you with
    	   the response open|filtered.
    
           -sA (TCP ACK scan) .
    	   This scan is different than the others discussed so far in that it never determines open (or
    	   even open|filtered) ports. It is used to map out firewall rulesets, determining whether they
    	   are stateful or not and which ports are filtered.
    
    	   The ACK scan probe packet has only the ACK flag set (unless you use --scanflags). When
    	   scanning unfiltered systems, open and closed ports will both return a RST packet. Nmap then
    	   labels them as unfiltered, meaning that they are reachable by the ACK packet, but whether
    	   they are open or closed is undetermined. Ports that don't respond, or send certain ICMP error
    	   messages back (type 3, code 1, 2, 3, 9, 10, or 13), are labeled filtered.
    
           -sW (TCP Window scan) .
    	   Window scan is exactly the same as ACK scan except that it exploits an implementation detail
    	   of certain systems to differentiate open ports from closed ones, rather than always printing
    	   unfiltered when a RST is returned. It does this by examining the TCP Window field of the RST
    	   packets returned. On some systems, open ports use a positive window size (even for RST
    	   packets) while closed ones have a zero window. So instead of always listing a port as
    	   unfiltered when it receives a RST back, Window scan lists the port as open or closed if the
    	   TCP Window value in that reset is positive or zero, respectively.
    
    	   This scan relies on an implementation detail of a minority of systems out on the Internet, so
    	   you can't always trust it. Systems that don't support it will usually return all ports
    	   closed. Of course, it is possible that the machine really has no open ports. If most scanned
    	   ports are closed but a few common port numbers (such as 22, 25, 53) are filtered, the system
    	   is most likely susceptible. Occasionally, systems will even show the exact opposite behavior.
    	   If your scan shows 1,000 open ports and three closed or filtered ports, then those three may
    	   very well be the truly open ones.
    
           -sM (TCP Maimon scan) .
    	   The Maimon scan is named after its discoverer, Uriel Maimon..  He described the technique in
    	   Phrack Magazine issue #49 (November 1996)..	Nmap, which included this technique, was
    	   released two issues later. This technique is exactly the same as NULL, FIN, and Xmas scans,
    	   except that the probe is FIN/ACK. According to RFC 793[8] (TCP), a RST packet should be
    	   generated in response to such a probe whether the port is open or closed. However, Uriel
    	   noticed that many BSD-derived systems simply drop the packet if the port is open.
    
           --scanflags (Custom TCP scan) .
    	   Truly advanced Nmap users need not limit themselves to the canned scan types offered. The
    	   --scanflags option allows you to design your own scan by specifying arbitrary TCP flags..
    	   Let your creative juices flow, while evading intrusion detection systems.  whose vendors
    	   simply paged through the Nmap man page adding specific rules!
    
    	   The --scanflags argument can be a numerical flag value such as 9 (PSH and FIN), but using
    	   symbolic names is easier. Just mash together any combination of URG, ACK, PSH, RST, SYN, and
    	   FIN. For example, --scanflags URGACKPSHRSTSYNFIN sets everything, though it's not very useful
    	   for scanning. The order these are specified in is irrelevant.
    
    	   In addition to specifying the desired flags, you can specify a TCP scan type (such as -sA or
    	   -sF). That base type tells Nmap how to interpret responses. For example, a SYN scan considers
    	   no-response to indicate a filtered port, while a FIN scan treats the same as open|filtered.
    	   Nmap will behave the same way it does for the base scan type, except that it will use the TCP
    	   flags you specify instead. If you don't specify a base type, SYN scan is used.
    
           -sZ (SCTP COOKIE ECHO scan) .
    	   SCTP COOKIE ECHO scan is a more advanced SCTP scan. It takes advantage of the fact that SCTP
    	   implementations should silently drop packets containing COOKIE ECHO chunks on open ports, but
    	   send an ABORT if the port is closed. The advantage of this scan type is that it is not as
    	   obvious a port scan than an INIT scan. Also, there may be non-stateful firewall rulesets
    	   blocking INIT chunks, but not COOKIE ECHO chunks. Don't be fooled into thinking that this
    	   will make a port scan invisible; a good IDS will be able to detect SCTP COOKIE ECHO scans
    	   too. The downside is that SCTP COOKIE ECHO scans cannot differentiate between open and
    	   filtered ports, leaving you with the state open|filtered in both cases.
    
           -sI zombie host[:probeport] (idle scan) .
    	   This advanced scan method allows for a truly blind TCP port scan of the target (meaning no
    	   packets are sent to the target from your real IP address). Instead, a unique side-channel
    	   attack exploits predictable IP fragmentation ID sequence generation on the zombie host to
    	   glean information about the open ports on the target. IDS systems will display the scan as
    	   coming from the zombie machine you specify (which must be up and meet certain criteria).
    	   This fascinating scan type is too complex to fully describe in this reference guide, so I
    	   wrote and posted an informal paper with full details at http://nmap.org/book/idlescan.html.
    
    	   Besides being extraordinarily stealthy (due to its blind nature), this scan type permits
    	   mapping out IP-based trust relationships between machines. The port listing shows open ports
    	   from the perspective of the zombie host.  So you can try scanning a target using various
    	   zombies that you think might be trusted.  (via router/packet filter rules).
    
    	   You can add a colon followed by a port number to the zombie host if you wish to probe a
    	   particular port on the zombie for IP ID changes. Otherwise Nmap will use the port it uses by
    	   default for TCP pings (80).
    
           -sO (IP protocol scan) .
    	   IP protocol scan allows you to determine which IP protocols (TCP, ICMP, IGMP, etc.) are
    	   supported by target machines. This isn't technically a port scan, since it cycles through IP
    	   protocol numbers rather than TCP or UDP port numbers. Yet it still uses the -p option to
    	   select scanned protocol numbers, reports its results within the normal port table format, and
    	   even uses the same underlying scan engine as the true port scanning methods. So it is close
    	   enough to a port scan that it belongs here.
    
    	   Besides being useful in its own right, protocol scan demonstrates the power of open-source
    	   software. While the fundamental idea is pretty simple, I had not thought to add it nor
    	   received any requests for such functionality. Then in the summer of 2000, Gerhard Rieger.
    	   conceived the idea, wrote an excellent patch implementing it, and sent it to the announce
    	   mailing list.  (then called nmap-hackers)..	I incorporated that patch into the Nmap tree and
    	   released a new version the next day. Few pieces of commercial software have users
    	   enthusiastic enough to design and contribute their own improvements!
    
    	   Protocol scan works in a similar fashion to UDP scan. Instead of iterating through the port
    	   number field of a UDP packet, it sends IP packet headers and iterates through the eight-bit
    	   IP protocol field. The headers are usually empty, containing no data and not even the proper
    	   header for the claimed protocol. The exceptions are TCP, UDP, ICMP, SCTP, and IGMP. A proper
    	   protocol header for those is included since some systems won't send them otherwise and
    	   because Nmap already has functions to create them. Instead of watching for ICMP port
    	   unreachable messages, protocol scan is on the lookout for ICMP protocol unreachable messages.
    	   If Nmap receives any response in any protocol from the target host, Nmap marks that protocol
    	   as open. An ICMP protocol unreachable error (type 3, code 2) causes the protocol to be marked
    	   as closed Other ICMP unreachable errors (type 3, code 1, 3, 9, 10, or 13) cause the protocol
    	   to be marked filtered (though they prove that ICMP is open at the same time). If no response
    	   is received after retransmissions, the protocol is marked open|filtered
    
           -b FTP relay host (FTP bounce scan) .
    	   An interesting feature of the FTP protocol (RFC 959[9]) is support for so-called proxy FTP
    	   connections. This allows a user to connect to one FTP server, then ask that files be sent to
    	   a third-party server. Such a feature is ripe for abuse on many levels, so most servers have
    	   ceased supporting it. One of the abuses this feature allows is causing the FTP server to port
    	   scan other hosts. Simply ask the FTP server to send a file to each interesting port of a
    	   target host in turn. The error message will describe whether the port is open or not. This is
    	   a good way to bypass firewalls because organizational FTP servers are often placed where they
    	   have more access to other internal hosts than any old Internet host would. Nmap supports FTP
    	   bounce scan with the -b option. It takes an argument of the form
    	   username:password@server:port.  Server is the name or IP address of a vulnerable FTP server.
    	   As with a normal URL, you may omit username:password, in which case anonymous login
    	   credentials (user: anonymous password:-wwwuser@) are used. The port number (and preceding
    	   colon) may be omitted as well, in which case the default FTP port (21) on server is used.
    
    	   This vulnerability was widespread in 1997 when Nmap was released, but has largely been fixed.
    	   Vulnerable servers are still around, so it is worth trying when all else fails. If bypassing
    	   a firewall is your goal, scan the target network for port 21 (or even for any FTP services if
    	   you scan all ports with version detection) and use the ftp-bounce.  NSE script. Nmap will
    	   tell you whether the host is vulnerable or not. If you are just trying to cover your tracks,
    	   you don't need to (and, in fact, shouldn't) limit yourself to hosts on the target network.
    	   Before you go scanning random Internet addresses for vulnerable FTP servers, consider that
    	   sysadmins may not appreciate you abusing their servers in this way.
    
    PORT SPECIFICATION AND SCAN ORDER
           In addition to all of the scan methods discussed previously, Nmap offers options for specifying
           which ports are scanned and whether the scan order is randomized or sequential. By default, Nmap
           scans the most common 1,000 ports for each protocol.
    
           -p port ranges (Only scan specified ports) .
    	   This option specifies which ports you want to scan and overrides the default. Individual port
    	   numbers are OK, as are ranges separated by a hyphen (e.g.  1-1023). The beginning and/or end
    	   values of a range may be omitted, causing Nmap to use 1 and 65535, respectively. So you can
    	   specify -p- to scan ports from 1 through 65535. Scanning port zero.	is allowed if you
    	   specify it explicitly. For IP protocol scanning (-sO), this option specifies the protocol
    	   numbers you wish to scan for (0–255).
    
    	   When scanning a combination of protocols (e.g. TCP and UDP), you can specify a particular
    	   protocol by preceding the port numbers by T: for TCP, U: for UDP, S: for SCTP, or P: for IP
    	   Protocol. The qualifier lasts until you specify another qualifier. For example, 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 and TCP, you have to specify -sU and at least
    	   one TCP scan type (such as -sS, -sF, or -sT). If no protocol qualifier is given, the port
    	   numbers are added to all protocol lists.  Ports can also be specified by name according to
    	   what the port is referred to in the nmap-services. You can even use the wildcards * and ?
    	   with the names. For example, to scan FTP and all ports whose names begin with “http”, use -p
    	   ftp,http*. Be careful about shell expansions and quote the argument to -p if unsure.
    
    	   Ranges of ports can be surrounded by square brackets to indicate ports inside that range that
    	   appear in nmap-services. For example, the following will scan all ports in nmap-services
    	   equal to or below 1024: -p [-1024]. Be careful with shell expansions and quote the argument
    	   to -p if unsure.
    
           -F (Fast (limited port) scan) .
    	   Specifies that you wish to scan fewer ports than the default. Normally Nmap scans the most
    	   common 1,000 ports for each scanned protocol. With -F, this is reduced to 100.
    
    	   Nmap needs an nmap-services file with frequency information in order to know which ports are
    	   the most common. If port frequency information isn't available, perhaps because of the use of
    	   a custom nmap-services file, Nmap scans all named ports plus ports 1-1024. In that case, -F
    	   means to scan only ports that are named in the services file.
    
           -r (Don't randomize ports) .
    	   By default, Nmap randomizes the scanned port order (except that certain commonly accessible
    	   ports are moved near the beginning for efficiency reasons). This randomization is normally
    	   desirable, but you can specify -r for sequential (sorted from lowest to highest) port
    	   scanning instead.
    
           --port-ratio ratio<decimal number between 0 and 1>
    	   Scans all ports in nmap-services file with a ratio greater than the one given.  ratio must be
    	   between 0.0 and 1.1.
    
           --top-ports n
    	   Scans the n highest-ratio ports found in nmap-services file.	 n must be 1 or greater.
    
    SERVICE AND VERSION DETECTION
           Point Nmap at a remote machine and it might tell you that ports 25/tcp, 80/tcp, and 53/udp are
           open. Using its nmap-services.  database of about 2,200 well-known services,.  Nmap would report
           that those ports probably correspond to a mail server (SMTP), web server (HTTP), and name server
           (DNS) respectively. This lookup is usually accurate—the vast majority of daemons listening on TCP
           port 25 are, in fact, mail servers. However, you should not bet your security on this! People can
           and do run services on strange ports..
    
           Even if Nmap is right, and the hypothetical server above is running SMTP, HTTP, and DNS servers,
           that is not a lot of information. When doing vulnerability assessments (or even simple network
           inventories) of your companies or clients, you really want to know which mail and DNS servers and
           versions are running. Having an accurate version number helps dramatically in determining which
           exploits a server is vulnerable to. Version detection helps you obtain this information.
    
           After TCP and/or UDP ports are discovered using one of the other scan methods, version detection
           interrogates those ports to determine more about what is actually running. The
           nmap-service-probes.  database contains probes for querying various services and match
           expressions to recognize and parse responses. 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 number, hostname, device type (e.g. printer, router), the OS family (e.g. Windows,
           Linux). When possible, Nmap also gets the Common Platform Enumeration (CPE).  representation of
           this information. Sometimes miscellaneous details like whether an X server is open to
           connections, the SSH protocol version, or the KaZaA user name, are available. Of course, most
           services don't provide all of this information. If Nmap was compiled with OpenSSL support, it
           will connect to SSL servers to deduce the service listening behind that encryption layer..  Some
           UDP ports are left in the open|filtered state after a UDP port scan is unable to determine
           whether the port is open or filtered. Version 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.
           open|filtered TCP ports are treated the same way. Note that the Nmap -A option enables version
           detection among other things.  A paper documenting the workings, usage, and customization of
           version detection is available at http://nmap.org/book/vscan.html.
    
           When RPC services are discovered, the Nmap RPC grinder.	is automatically used to determine the
           RPC program and version numbers. It takes all the TCP/UDP ports detected as RPC and 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..
    
           When Nmap receives responses from a service but cannot match them to its database, it prints out
           a special fingerprint and a URL for you to submit if to if you know for sure what is running on
           the port. Please take a couple minutes to make the submission so that your find can benefit
           everyone. Thanks to these submissions, Nmap has about 6,500 pattern matches for more than 650
           protocols such as SMTP, FTP, HTTP, etc..
    
           Version detection is enabled and controlled with the following options:
    
           -sV (Version detection) .
    	   Enables version detection, as discussed above. Alternatively, you can use -A, which enables
    	   version detection among other things.
    
    	   -sR.	 is an alias for -sV. Prior to March 2011, it was used to active the RPC grinder
    	   separately from version detection, but now these options are always combined.
    
           --allports (Don't exclude any ports from version detection) .
    	   By default, Nmap version detection skips TCP port 9100 because some printers simply print
    	   anything sent to that port, leading to dozens of pages of HTTP GET requests, binary SSL
    	   session requests, etc. This behavior can be changed by modifying or removing the Exclude
    	   directive in nmap-service-probes, or you can specify --allports to scan all ports regardless
    	   of any Exclude directive.
    
           --version-intensity intensity (Set version scan intensity) .
    	   When performing a version scan (-sV), Nmap sends a series of probes, each of which is
    	   assigned a rarity value between one and nine. The lower-numbered probes are effective against
    	   a wide variety of common services, while the higher-numbered ones are rarely useful. The
    	   intensity level specifies which probes should be applied. The higher the number, the more
    	   likely it is the service will be correctly identified. However, high intensity scans take
    	   longer. The intensity must be between 0 and 9..  The default is 7..	When a probe is
    	   registered to the target port via the nmap-service-probesports directive, that probe is tried
    	   regardless of intensity level. This ensures that the DNS probes will always be attempted
    	   against any open port 53, the SSL probe will be done against 443, etc.
    
           --version-light (Enable light mode) .
    	   This is a convenience alias for --version-intensity 2. This light mode makes version scanning
    	   much faster, but it is slightly less likely to identify services.
    
           --version-all (Try every single probe) .
    	   An alias for --version-intensity 9, ensuring that every single probe is attempted against
    	   each port.
    
           --version-trace (Trace version scan activity) .
    	   This causes Nmap to print out extensive debugging info about what version scanning is doing.
    	   It is a subset of what you get with --packet-trace.
    
    OS DETECTION
           One of Nmap's best-known features is remote OS detection using TCP/IP stack fingerprinting. Nmap
           sends a series of TCP and UDP packets to the remote host and examines practically every bit in
           the responses. After performing dozens of tests such as TCP ISN sampling, TCP options support and
           ordering, IP ID sampling, and the initial window size check, Nmap compares the results to its
           nmap-os-db.  database of more than 2,600 known OS fingerprints and prints out the OS details if
           there is a match. Each fingerprint includes a freeform textual description of the OS, and a
           classification which provides the vendor name (e.g. Sun), underlying OS (e.g. Solaris), OS
           generation (e.g. 10), and device type (general purpose, router, switch, game console, etc). Most
           fingerprints also have a Common Platform Enumeration (CPE).  representation, like
           cpe:/o:linux:linux_kernel:2.6.
    
           If Nmap is unable to guess the OS of a machine, and conditions are good (e.g. at least one open
           port and one closed port were found), 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.
    
           OS detection enables some other tests which make use of information that is gathered during the
           process anyway. One of these is TCP Sequence Predictability Classification. This measures
           approximately how hard it is to establish a forged TCP connection against the remote host. It is
           useful for exploiting source-IP based trust relationships (rlogin, firewall filters, etc) or for
           hiding the source of an attack. This sort of spoofing is rarely performed any more, but many
           machines are still vulnerable to it. The actual difficulty number is based on statistical
           sampling and may fluctuate. It is generally better to use the English classification such as
           “worthy challenge” or “trivial joke”. This is only reported in normal output in verbose (-v)
           mode. When verbose mode is enabled along with -O, IP ID 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 several advanced information
           gathering and spoofing attacks.
    
           Another bit of extra information enabled by OS detection is a guess at a target's uptime. This
           uses the TCP timestamp option (RFC 1323[10]) to guess when a machine was last rebooted. The guess
           can be inaccurate due to the timestamp counter not being initialized to zero or the counter
           overflowing and wrapping around, so it is printed only in verbose mode.
    
           A paper documenting the workings, usage, and customization of OS detection is available at
           http://nmap.org/book/osdetect.html.
    
           OS detection is enabled and controlled with the following options:
    
           -O (Enable OS detection) .
    	   Enables OS detection, as discussed above. Alternatively, you can use -A to enable OS
    	   detection along with other things.
    
           --osscan-limit (Limit OS detection to promising targets) .
    	   OS detection is far more effective if at least one open and one closed TCP port are found.
    	   Set this option and Nmap will not even try OS detection against hosts that do not meet this
    	   criteria. This can save substantial time, particularly on -Pn scans against many hosts. It
    	   only matters when OS detection is requested with -O or -A.
    
           --osscan-guess; --fuzzy (Guess OS detection results) .
    	   When Nmap is unable to detect a perfect OS match, it sometimes offers up near-matches as
    	   possibilities. The match has to be very close for Nmap to do this by default. Either of these
    	   (equivalent) options make Nmap guess more aggressively. Nmap will still tell you when an
    	   imperfect match is printed and display its confidence level (percentage) for each guess.
    
           --max-os-tries (Set the maximum number of OS detection tries against a target) .
    	   When Nmap performs OS detection against a target and fails to find a perfect match, it
    	   usually repeats the attempt. By default, Nmap tries five times if conditions are favorable
    	   for OS fingerprint submission, and twice when conditions aren't so good. Specifying a lower
    	   --max-os-tries value (such as 1) speeds Nmap up, though you miss out on retries which could
    	   potentially identify the OS. Alternatively, a high value may be set to allow even more
    	   retries when conditions are favorable. This is rarely done, except to generate better
    	   fingerprints for submission and integration into the Nmap OS database.
    
    NMAP SCRIPTING ENGINE (NSE)
           The Nmap Scripting Engine (NSE) is one of Nmap's most powerful and flexible features. It allows
           users to write (and share) simple scripts (using the Lua programming language[11],
    
           Tasks we had in mind when creating the system include network discovery, more sophisticated
           version detection, vulnerability detection. NSE can even be used for vulnerability exploitation.
    
           To reflect those different uses and to simplify the choice of which scripts to run, each script
           contains a field associating it with one or more categories. Currently defined categories are
           auth, broadcast, default.  discovery, dos, exploit, external, fuzzer, intrusive, malware, safe,
           version, and vuln. These are all described at http://nmap.org/book/nse-usage.html#nse-categories.
    
           Scripts are not run in a sandbox and thus could accidentally or maliciously damage your system or
           invade your privacy. Never run scripts from third parties unless you trust the authors or have
           carefully audited the scripts yourself.
    
           The Nmap Scripting Engine is described in detail at http://nmap.org/book/nse.html and is
           controlled by the following options:
    
           -sC .
    	   Performs a script scan using the default set of scripts. It is equivalent to
    	   --script=default. Some of the scripts in this category are considered intrusive and should
    	   not be run against a target network without permission.
    
           --script filename|category|directory|expression[,...] .
    	   Runs a script scan using the comma-separated list of filenames, script categories, and
    	   directories. Each element in the list may also be a Boolean expression describing a more
    	   complex set of scripts. Each element is interpreted first as an expression, then as a
    	   category, and finally as a file or directory name.
    
    	   There are two special features for advanced users only. One is to prefix script names and
    	   expressions with + to force them to run even if they normally wouldn't (e.g. the relevant
    	   service wasn't detected on the target port). The other is that the argument all may be used
    	   to specify every script in Nmap's database. Be cautious with this because NSE contains
    	   dangerous scripts such as exploits, brute force authentication crackers, and denial of
    	   service attacks.
    
    	   File and directory names may be relative or absolute. Absolute names are used directly.
    	   Relative paths are looked for in the scripts of each of the following places until found:
    	   --datadir
    	   $NMAPDIR.
    	   ~/.nmap (not searched on Windows).
    	   HOME\AppData\Roaming\nmap (only on Windows).
    	   the directory containing the nmap executable
    	   the directory containing the nmap executable, followed by ../share/nmap
    	   NMAPDATADIR.
    	   the current directory.
    
           When a directory name is given, Nmap loads every file in the directory whose name ends with .nse.
           All other files are ignored and directories are not searched recursively. When a filename is
           given, it does not have to have the .nse extension; it will be added automatically if necessary.
           Nmap scripts are stored in a scripts subdirectory of the Nmap data directory by default (see
           http://nmap.org/book/data-files.html).  For efficiency, scripts are indexed in a database stored
           in scripts/script.db,.  which lists the category or categories in which each script belongs.
           When referring to scripts from script.db by name, you can use a shell-style ‘*’ wildcard.
    
           nmap --script "http-*"
    	   Loads all scripts whose name starts with http-, such as http-auth and http-open-proxy. The
    	   argument to --script had to be in quotes to protect the wildcard from the shell.
    
           More complicated script selection can be done using the and, or, and not operators to build
           Boolean expressions. The operators have the same precedence[12] as in Lua: not is the highest,
           followed by and and then or. You can alter precedence by using parentheses. Because expressions
           contain space characters it is necessary to quote them.
    
           nmap --script "not intrusive"
    	   Loads every script except for those in the intrusive category.
    
           nmap --script "default or safe"
    	   This is functionally equivalent to nmap --script "default,safe". It loads all scripts that
    	   are in the default category or the safe category or both.
    
           nmap --script "default and safe"
    	   Loads those scripts that are in both the default and safe categories.
    
           nmap --script "(default or safe or intrusive) and not http-*"
    	   Loads scripts in the default, safe, or intrusive categories, except for those whose names
    	   start with http-.
    
           --script-args n1=v1,n2={n3=v3},n4={v4,v5} .
    	   Lets you provide arguments to NSE scripts. Arguments are a comma-separated list of name=value
    	   pairs. Names and values may be strings not containing whitespace or the characters ‘{’, ‘}’,
    	   ‘=’, or ‘,’. To include one of these characters in a string, enclose the string in single or
    	   double quotes. Within a quoted string, ‘\’ escapes a quote. A backslash is only used to
    	   escape quotation marks in this special case; in all other cases a backslash is interpreted
    	   literally. Values may also be tables enclosed in {}, just as in Lua. A table may contain
    	   simple string values or more name-value pairs, including nested tables. Many scripts qualify
    	   their arguments with the script name, as in xmpp-info.server_name. You may use that full
    	   qualified version to affect just the specified script, or you may pass the unqualified
    	   version (server_name in this case) to affect all scripts using that argument name. A script
    	   will first check for its fully qualified argument name (the name specified in its
    	   documentation) before it accepts an unqualified argument name. A complex example of script
    	   arguments is --script-args
    	   'user=foo,pass=",{}=bar",whois={whodb=nofollow+ripe},xmpp-info.server_name=localhost'. The
    	   online NSE Documentation Portal at http://nmap.org/nsedoc/ lists the arguments that each
    	   script accepts.
    
           --script-args-file filename .
    	   Lets you load arguments to NSE scripts from a file. Any arguments on the command line
    	   supersede ones in the file. The file can be an absolute path, or a path relative to Nmap's
    	   usual search path (NMAPDIR, etc.) Arguments can be comma-separated or newline-separated, but
    	   otherwise follow the same rules as for --script-args, without requiring special quoting and
    	   escaping, since they are not parsed by the shell.
    
           --script-help filename|category|directory|expression|all[,...] .
    	   Shows help about scripts. For each script matching the given specification, Nmap prints the
    	   script name, its categories, and its description. The specifications are the same as those
    	   accepted by --script; so for example if you want help about the ftp-anon script, you would
    	   run nmap --script-help ftp-anon. In addition to getting help for individual scripts, you can
    	   use this as a preview of what scripts will be run for a specification, for example with nmap
    	   --script-help default.
    
           --script-trace .
    	   This option does what --packet-trace does, just one ISO layer higher. If this option is
    	   specified all incoming and outgoing communication performed by a script is printed. The
    	   displayed information includes the communication protocol, the source, the target and the
    	   transmitted data. If more than 5% of all transmitted data is not printable, then the trace
    	   output is in a hex dump format. Specifying --packet-trace enables script tracing too.
    
           --script-updatedb .
    	   This option updates the script database found in scripts/script.db which is used by Nmap to
    	   determine the available default scripts and categories. It is only necessary to update the
    	   database if you have added or removed NSE scripts from the default scripts directory or if
    	   you have changed the categories of any script. This option is generally used by itself: nmap
    	   --script-updatedb.
    
    TIMING AND PERFORMANCE
           One of my highest Nmap development priorities has always been performance. A default scan (nmap
           hostname) of a host on my local network takes a fifth of a second. That is barely enough time to
           blink, but adds up when you are scanning hundreds or thousands of hosts. Moreover, certain scan
           options such as UDP scanning and version detection can increase scan times substantially. So can
           certain firewall configurations, particularly response rate limiting. While Nmap utilizes
           parallelism and many advanced algorithms to accelerate these scans, the user has ultimate control
           over how Nmap runs. Expert users carefully craft Nmap commands to obtain only the information
           they care about while meeting their time constraints.
    
           Techniques for improving scan times include omitting non-critical tests, and upgrading to the
           latest version of Nmap (performance enhancements are made frequently). Optimizing timing
           parameters can also make a substantial difference. Those options are listed below.
    
           Some options accept a time parameter. This is specified in seconds by default, though you can
           append ‘ms’, ‘s’, ‘m’, or ‘h’ to the value to specify milliseconds, seconds, minutes, or hours.
           So the --host-timeout arguments 900000ms, 900, 900s, and 15m all do the same thing.
    
           --min-hostgroup numhosts; --max-hostgroup numhosts (Adjust parallel scan group sizes) .
    	   Nmap has the ability to port scan or version scan multiple hosts in parallel. Nmap does this
    	   by dividing the target IP space into groups and then scanning one group at a time. In
    	   general, larger groups are more efficient. The downside is that host results can't be
    	   provided until the whole group is finished. So if Nmap started out with a group size of 50,
    	   the user would not receive any reports (except for the updates offered in verbose mode) until
    	   the first 50 hosts are completed.
    
    	   By default, Nmap takes a compromise approach to this conflict. It starts out with a group
    	   size as low as five so the first results come quickly and then increases the groupsize to as
    	   high as 1024. The exact default numbers depend on the options given. For efficiency reasons,
    	   Nmap uses larger group sizes for UDP or few-port TCP scans.
    
    	   When a maximum group size is specified with --max-hostgroup, Nmap will never exceed that
    	   size. Specify a minimum size with --min-hostgroup and Nmap will try to keep group sizes above
    	   that level. Nmap may have to use smaller groups than you specify if there are not enough
    	   target hosts left on a given interface to fulfill the specified minimum. Both may be set to
    	   keep the group size within a specific range, though this is rarely desired.
    
    	   These options do not have an effect during the host discovery phase of a scan. This includes
    	   plain ping scans (-sn). Host discovery always works in large groups of hosts to improve speed
    	   and accuracy.
    
    	   The primary use of these options is to specify a large minimum group size so that the full
    	   scan runs more quickly. A common choice is 256 to scan a network in Class C sized chunks. For
    	   a scan with many ports, exceeding that number is unlikely to help much. For scans of just a
    	   few port numbers, host group sizes of 2048 or more may be helpful.
    
           --min-parallelism numprobes; --max-parallelism numprobes (Adjust probe parallelization) .
    	   These options control the total number of probes that may be outstanding for a host group.
    	   They are used for port scanning and host discovery. By default, Nmap calculates an
    	   ever-changing ideal parallelism based on network performance. If packets are being dropped,
    	   Nmap slows down and allows fewer outstanding probes. The ideal probe number slowly rises as
    	   the network proves itself worthy. These options place minimum or maximum bounds on that
    	   variable. By default, the ideal parallelism can drop to one if the network proves unreliable
    	   and rise to several hundred in perfect conditions.
    
    	   The most common usage is to set --min-parallelism to a number higher than one to speed up
    	   scans of poorly performing hosts or networks. This is a risky option to play with, as setting
    	   it too high may affect accuracy. Setting this also reduces Nmap's ability to control
    	   parallelism dynamically based on network conditions. A value of 10 might be reasonable,
    	   though I only adjust this value as a last resort.
    
    	   The --max-parallelism option is sometimes set to one to prevent Nmap from sending more than
    	   one probe at a time to hosts. The --scan-delay option, discussed later, is another way to do
    	   this.
    
           --min-rtt-timeout time, --max-rtt-timeout time, --initial-rtt-timeout time (Adjust probe
           timeouts) .
    	   Nmap maintains a running timeout value for determining how long it will wait for a probe
    	   response before giving up or retransmitting the probe. This is calculated based on the
    	   response times of previous probes.
    
    	   If the network latency shows itself to be significant and variable, this timeout can grow to
    	   several seconds. It also starts at a conservative (high) level and may stay that way for a
    	   while when Nmap scans unresponsive hosts.
    
    	   Specifying a lower --max-rtt-timeout and --initial-rtt-timeout than the defaults can cut scan
    	   times significantly. This is particularly true for pingless (-Pn) scans, and those against
    	   heavily filtered networks. Don't get too aggressive though. The scan can end up taking longer
    	   if you specify such a low value that many probes are timing out and retransmitting while the
    	   response is in transit.
    
    	   If all the hosts are on a local network, 100 milliseconds (--max-rtt-timeout 100ms) is a
    	   reasonable aggressive value. If routing is involved, ping a host on the network first with
    	   the ICMP ping utility, or with a custom packet crafter such as Nping.  that is more likely to
    	   get through a firewall. Look at the maximum round trip time out of ten packets or so. You
    	   might want to double that for the --initial-rtt-timeout and triple or quadruple it for the
    	   --max-rtt-timeout. I generally do not set the maximum RTT below 100 ms, no matter what the
    	   ping times are. Nor do I exceed 1000 ms.
    
    	   --min-rtt-timeout is a rarely used option that could be useful when a network is so
    	   unreliable that even Nmap's default is too aggressive. Since Nmap only reduces the timeout
    	   down to the minimum when the network seems to be reliable, this need is unusual and should be
    	   reported as a bug to the nmap-dev mailing list..
    
           --max-retries numtries (Specify the maximum number of port scan probe retransmissions) .
    	   When Nmap receives no response to a port scan probe, it could mean the port is filtered. Or
    	   maybe the probe or response was simply lost on the network. It is also possible that the
    	   target host has rate limiting enabled that temporarily blocked the response. So Nmap tries
    	   again by retransmitting the initial probe. If Nmap detects poor network reliability, it may
    	   try many more times before giving up on a port. While this benefits accuracy, it also
    	   lengthen scan times. When performance is critical, scans may be sped up by limiting the
    	   number of retransmissions allowed. You can even specify --max-retries 0 to prevent any
    	   retransmissions, though that is only recommended for situations such as informal surveys
    	   where occasional missed ports and hosts are acceptable.
    
    	   The default (with no -T template) is to allow ten retransmissions. If a network seems
    	   reliable and the target hosts aren't rate limiting, Nmap usually only does one
    	   retransmission. So most target scans aren't even affected by dropping --max-retries to a low
    	   value such as three. Such values can substantially speed scans of slow (rate limited) hosts.
    	   You usually lose some information when Nmap gives up on ports early, though that may be
    	   preferable to letting the --host-timeout expire and losing all information about the target.
    
           --host-timeout time (Give up on slow target hosts) .
    	   Some hosts simply take a long time to scan. This may be due to poorly performing or
    	   unreliable networking hardware or software, packet rate limiting, or a restrictive firewall.
    	   The slowest few percent of the scanned hosts can eat up a majority of the scan time.
    	   Sometimes it is best to cut your losses and skip those hosts initially. Specify
    	   --host-timeout with the maximum amount of time you are willing to wait. For example, specify
    	   30m to ensure that Nmap doesn't waste more than half an hour on a single host. Note that Nmap
    	   may be scanning other hosts at the same time during that half an hour, so it isn't a complete
    	   loss. A host that times out is skipped. No port table, OS detection, or version detection
    	   results are printed for that host.
    
           --scan-delay time; --max-scan-delay time (Adjust delay between probes) .
    	   This option causes Nmap to wait at least the given amount of time between each probe it sends
    	   to a given host. This is particularly useful in the case of rate limiting..	Solaris machines
    	   (among many others) will usually respond to UDP scan probe packets with only one ICMP message
    	   per second. Any more than that sent by Nmap will be wasteful. A --scan-delay of 1s will keep
    	   Nmap at that slow rate. Nmap tries to detect rate limiting and adjust the scan delay
    	   accordingly, but it doesn't hurt to specify it explicitly if you already know what rate works
    	   best.
    
    	   When Nmap adjusts the scan delay upward to cope with rate limiting, the scan slows down
    	   dramatically. The --max-scan-delay option specifies the largest delay that Nmap will allow. A
    	   low --max-scan-delay can speed up Nmap, but it is risky. Setting this value too low can lead
    	   to wasteful packet retransmissions and possible missed ports when the target implements
    	   strict rate limiting.
    
    	   Another use of --scan-delay is to evade threshold based intrusion detection and prevention
    	   systems (IDS/IPS)..
    
           --min-rate number; --max-rate number (Directly control the scanning rate) .
    	   Nmap's dynamic timing does a good job of finding an appropriate speed at which to scan.
    	   Sometimes, however, you may happen to know an appropriate scanning rate for a network, or you
    	   may have to guarantee that a scan will be finished by a certain time. Or perhaps you must
    	   keep Nmap from scanning too quickly. The --min-rate and --max-rate options are designed for
    	   these situations.
    
    	   When the --min-rate option is given Nmap will do its best to send packets as fast as or
    	   faster than the given rate. The argument is a positive real number representing a packet rate
    	   in packets per second. For example, specifying --min-rate 300 means that Nmap will try to
    	   keep the sending rate at or above 300 packets per second. Specifying a minimum rate does not
    	   keep Nmap from going faster if conditions warrant.
    
    	   Likewise, --max-rate limits a scan's sending rate to a given maximum. Use --max-rate 100, for
    	   example, to limit sending to 100 packets per second on a fast network. Use --max-rate 0.1 for
    	   a slow scan of one packet every ten seconds. Use --min-rate and --max-rate together to keep
    	   the rate inside a certain range.
    
    	   These two options are global, affecting an entire scan, not individual hosts. They only
    	   affect port scans and host discovery scans. Other features like OS detection implement their
    	   own timing.
    
    	   There are two conditions when the actual scanning rate may fall below the requested minimum.
    	   The first is if the minimum is faster than the fastest rate at which Nmap can send, which is
    	   dependent on hardware. In this case Nmap will simply send packets as fast as possible, but be
    	   aware that such high rates are likely to cause a loss of accuracy. The second case is when
    	   Nmap has nothing to send, for example at the end of a scan when the last probes have been
    	   sent and Nmap is waiting for them to time out or be responded to. It's normal to see the
    	   scanning rate drop at the end of a scan or in between hostgroups. The sending rate may
    	   temporarily exceed the maximum to make up for unpredictable delays, but on average the rate
    	   will stay at or below the maximum.
    
    	   Specifying a minimum rate should be done with care. Scanning faster than a network can
    	   support may lead to a loss of accuracy. In some cases, using a faster rate can make a scan
    	   take longer than it would with a slower rate. This is because Nmap's adaptive retransmission
    	   algorithms will detect the network congestion caused by an excessive scanning rate and
    	   increase the number of retransmissions in order to improve accuracy. So even though packets
    	   are sent at a higher rate, more packets are sent overall. Cap the number of retransmissions
    	   with the --max-retries option if you need to set an upper limit on total scan time.
    
           --defeat-rst-ratelimit .
    	   Many hosts have long used rate limiting.  to reduce the number of ICMP error messages (such
    	   as port-unreachable errors) they send. Some systems now apply similar rate limits to the RST
    	   (reset) packets they generate. This can slow Nmap down dramatically as it adjusts its timing
    	   to reflect those rate limits. You can tell Nmap to ignore those rate limits (for port scans
    	   such as SYN scan which don't treat non-responsive ports as open) by specifying
    	   --defeat-rst-ratelimit.
    
    	   Using this option can reduce accuracy, as some ports will appear non-responsive because Nmap
    	   didn't wait long enough for a rate-limited RST response. With a SYN scan, the non-response
    	   results in the port being labeled filtered rather than the closed state we see when RST
    	   packets are received. This option is useful when you only care about open ports, and
    	   distinguishing between closed and filtered ports isn't worth the extra time.
    
           --nsock-engine epoll|kqueue|poll|select .
    	   Enforce use of a given nsock IO multiplexing engine. Only the select(2)-based fallback engine
    	   is guaranteed to be available on your system. Engines are named after the name of the IO
    	   management facility they leverage. Engines currenty implemented are epoll, kqueue, poll, and
    	   select, but not all will be present on any platform. Use nmap -V to see which engines are
    	   supported.
    
           -T paranoid|sneaky|polite|normal|aggressive|insane (Set a timing template) .
    	   While the fine-grained timing controls discussed in the previous section are powerful and
    	   effective, some people find them confusing. Moreover, choosing the appropriate values can
    	   sometimes take more time than the scan you are trying to optimize. So Nmap offers a simpler
    	   approach, with six timing templates. You can specify them with the -T option and their number
    	   (0–5) or their name. The template names are paranoid (0), sneaky (1), polite (2), normal (3),
    	   aggressive (4), and insane (5). The first two are for IDS evasion. Polite mode slows down the
    	   scan to use less bandwidth and target machine resources. Normal mode is the default and so
    	   -T3 does nothing. Aggressive mode speeds scans up by making the assumption that you are on a
    	   reasonably fast and reliable network. Finally insane mode.  assumes that you are on an
    	   extraordinarily fast network or are willing to sacrifice some accuracy for speed.
    
    	   These templates allow the user to specify how aggressive they wish to be, while leaving Nmap
    	   to pick the exact timing values. The templates also make some minor speed adjustments for
    	   which fine-grained control options do not currently exist. For example, -T4.	 prohibits the
    	   dynamic scan delay from exceeding 10 ms for TCP ports and -T5 caps that value at 5 ms.
    	   Templates can be used in combination with fine-grained controls, and the fine-grained
    	   controls will you specify will take precedence over the timing template default for that
    	   parameter. I recommend using -T4 when scanning reasonably modern and reliable networks. Keep
    	   that option even when you add fine-grained controls so that you benefit from those extra
    	   minor optimizations that it enables.
    
    	   If you are on a decent broadband or ethernet connection, I would recommend always using -T4.
    	   Some people love -T5 though it is too aggressive for my taste. People sometimes specify -T2
    	   because they think it is less likely to crash hosts or because they consider themselves to be
    	   polite in general. They often don't realize just how slow -T polite.	 really is. Their scan
    	   may take ten times longer than a default scan. Machine crashes and bandwidth problems are
    	   rare with the default timing options (-T3) and so I normally recommend that for cautious
    	   scanners. Omitting version detection is far more effective than playing with timing values at
    	   reducing these problems.
    
    	   While -T0.  and -T1.	 may be useful for avoiding IDS alerts, they will take an
    	   extraordinarily long time to scan thousands of machines or ports. For such a long scan, you
    	   may prefer to set the exact timing values you need rather than rely on the canned -T0 and -T1
    	   values.
    
    	   The main effects of T0 are serializing the scan so only one port is scanned at a time, and
    	   waiting five minutes between sending each probe.  T1 and T2 are similar but they only wait 15
    	   seconds and 0.4 seconds, respectively, between probes.  T3 is Nmap's default behavior, which
    	   includes parallelization..  does the equivalent of --max-rtt-timeout 1250ms
    	   --initial-rtt-timeout 500ms --max-retries 6 and sets the maximum TCP scan delay to 10
    	   milliseconds.  T5 does the equivalent of --max-rtt-timeout 300ms --min-rtt-timeout 50ms
    	   --initial-rtt-timeout 250ms --max-retries 2 --host-timeout 15m as well as setting the maximum
    	   TCP scan delay to 5 ms.
    
    FIREWALL/IDS EVASION AND SPOOFING
           Many Internet pioneers envisioned a global open network with a universal IP address space
           allowing virtual connections between any two nodes. This allows hosts to act as true peers,
           serving and retrieving information from each other. People could access all of their home systems
           from work, changing the climate control settings or unlocking the doors for early guests. This
           vision of universal connectivity has been stifled by address space shortages and security
           concerns. In the early 1990s, organizations began deploying firewalls for the express purpose of
           reducing connectivity. Huge networks were cordoned off from the unfiltered Internet by
           application proxies, network address translation, and packet filters. The unrestricted flow of
           information gave way to tight regulation of approved communication channels and the content that
           passes over them.
    
           Network obstructions such as firewalls can make mapping a network exceedingly difficult. It will
           not get any easier, as stifling casual reconnaissance is often a key goal of implementing the
           devices. Nevertheless, Nmap offers many features to help understand these complex networks, and
           to verify that filters are working as intended. It even supports mechanisms for bypassing poorly
           implemented defenses. One of the best methods of understanding your network security posture is
           to try to defeat it. Place yourself in the mind-set of an attacker, and deploy techniques from
           this section against your networks. Launch an FTP bounce scan, idle scan, fragmentation attack,
           or try to tunnel through one of your own proxies.
    
           In addition to restricting network activity, companies are increasingly monitoring traffic with
           intrusion detection systems (IDS). All of the major IDSs ship with rules designed to detect Nmap
           scans because scans are sometimes a precursor to attacks. Many of these products have recently
           morphed into intrusion prevention systems (IPS).	 that actively block traffic deemed malicious.
           Unfortunately for network administrators and IDS vendors, reliably detecting bad intentions by
           analyzing packet data is a tough problem. Attackers with patience, skill, and the help of certain
           Nmap options can usually pass by IDSs undetected. Meanwhile, administrators must cope with large
           numbers of false positive results where innocent activity is misdiagnosed and alerted on or
           blocked.
    
           Occasionally people suggest that Nmap should not offer features for evading firewall rules or
           sneaking past IDSs. They argue that these features are just as likely to be misused by attackers
           as used by administrators to enhance security. The problem with this logic is that these methods
           would still be used by attackers, who would just find other tools or patch the functionality into
           Nmap. Meanwhile, administrators would find it that much harder to do their jobs. Deploying only
           modern, patched FTP servers is a far more powerful defense than trying to prevent the
           distribution of tools implementing the FTP bounce attack.
    
           There is no magic bullet (or Nmap option) for detecting and subverting firewalls and IDS systems.
           It takes skill and experience. A tutorial is beyond the scope of this reference guide, which only
           lists the relevant options and describes what they do.
    
           -f (fragment packets); --mtu (using the specified MTU) .
    	   The -f option causes the requested scan (including ping scans) to use tiny fragmented IP
    	   packets. The idea is to split up the TCP header over several packets to make it harder for
    	   packet filters, intrusion detection systems, and other annoyances to detect what you are
    	   doing. Be careful with this! Some programs have trouble handling these tiny packets. The
    	   old-school sniffer named Sniffit segmentation faulted immediately upon receiving the first
    	   fragment. Specify this option once, and Nmap splits the packets into eight bytes or less
    	   after the IP header. So a 20-byte TCP header would be split into three packets. Two with
    	   eight bytes of the TCP header, and one with the final four. Of course each fragment also has
    	   an IP header. Specify -f again to use 16 bytes per fragment (reducing the number of
    	   fragments)..	 Or you can specify your own offset size with the --mtu option. Don't also
    	   specify -f if you use --mtu. The offset must be a multiple of eight. While fragmented packets
    	   won't get by packet filters and firewalls that queue all IP fragments, such as 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. Others can't enable this because
    	   fragments may take different routes into their networks. Some source systems defragment
    	   outgoing packets in the kernel. Linux with the iptables.  connection tracking module is one
    	   such example. Do a scan while a sniffer such as Wireshark.  is running to ensure that sent
    	   packets are fragmented. If your host OS is causing problems, try the --send-eth.  option to
    	   bypass the IP layer and send raw ethernet frames.
    
    	   Fragmentation is only supported for Nmap's raw packet features, which includes TCP and UDP
    	   port scans (except connect scan and FTP bounce scan) and OS detection. Features such as
    	   version detection and the Nmap Scripting Engine generally don't support fragmentation because
    	   they rely on your host's TCP stack to communicate with target services.
    
           -D decoy1[,decoy2][,ME][,...] (Cloak a scan with decoys) .
    	   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 effective 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 for your real IP address. If you put ME in the sixth 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. You can also use RND.  to generate a random, non-reserved IP address, or RND:number
    	   to generate number addresses.
    
    	   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 nameserver logs).
    
    	   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). Decoys
    	   do not work with version detection or TCP connect scan. When a scan delay is in effect, the
    	   delay is enforced between each batch of spoofed probes, not between each individual probe.
    	   Because decoys are sent as a batch all at once, they may temporarily violate congestion
    	   control limits.
    
    	   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, but many do not restrict
    	   spoofed IP packets at all.
    
           -S IP_Address (Spoof source 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 the 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! The
    	   -e option and -Pn are generally required for this sort of usage. Note that you usually won't
    	   receive reply packets back (they will be addressed to the IP you are spoofing), so Nmap won't
    	   produce useful reports.
    
           -e interface (Use specified interface) .
    	   Tells Nmap what interface to send and receive packets on. Nmap should be able to detect this
    	   automatically, but it will tell you if it cannot.
    
           --source-port portnumber; -g portnumber (Spoof source port number) .
    	   One surprisingly common misconfiguration is to trust traffic based only on the source port
    	   number. It is easy to understand how this comes about. An administrator will set up a shiny
    	   new firewall, only to be flooded with complaints from ungrateful users whose applications
    	   stopped working. In particular, DNS may be broken because the UDP DNS replies from external
    	   servers can no longer enter the network. FTP is another common example. In active FTP
    	   transfers, the remote server tries to establish a connection back to the client to transfer
    	   the requested file.
    
    	   Secure solutions to these problems exist, often in the form of application-level proxies or
    	   protocol-parsing firewall modules. Unfortunately there are also easier, insecure solutions.
    	   Noting that DNS replies come from port 53 and active FTP from port 20, many administrators
    	   have fallen into the trap of simply allowing incoming traffic from those ports. They often
    	   assume that no attacker would notice and exploit such firewall holes. In other cases,
    	   administrators consider this a short-term stop-gap measure until they can implement a more
    	   secure solution. Then they forget the security upgrade.
    
    	   Overworked network administrators are not the only ones to fall into this trap. Numerous
    	   products have shipped with these insecure rules. Even Microsoft has been guilty. The IPsec
    	   filters that shipped with Windows 2000 and Windows XP contain an implicit rule that allows
    	   all TCP or UDP traffic from port 88 (Kerberos). In another well-known case, versions of the
    	   Zone Alarm personal firewall up to 2.1.25 allowed any incoming UDP packets with the source
    	   port 53 (DNS) or 67 (DHCP).
    
    	   Nmap offers the -g and --source-port options (they are equivalent) to exploit these
    	   weaknesses. Simply provide a port number and Nmap will send packets from that port where
    	   possible. Most scanning operations that use raw sockets, including SYN and UDP scans, support
    	   the option completely. The option notably doesn't have an effect for any operations that use
    	   normal operating system sockets, including DNS requests, TCP connect scan,.	version
    	   detection, and script scanning. Setting the source port also doesn't work for OS detection,
    	   because Nmap must use different port numbers for certain OS detection tests to work properly.
    
           --data-length number (Append random data to sent packets) .
    	   Normally Nmap sends minimalist packets containing only a header. So its TCP packets are
    	   generally 40 bytes and ICMP echo requests are just 28. Some UDP ports.  and IP protocols.
    	   get a custom payload by default. This option tells Nmap to append the given number of random
    	   bytes to most of the packets it sends, and not to use any protocol-specific payloads. (Use
    	   --data-length 0 for no random or protocol-specific payloads..  OS detection (-O) packets are
    	   not affected.  because accuracy there requires probe consistency, but most pinging and
    	   portscan packets support this. It slows things down a little, but can make a scan slightly
    	   less conspicuous.
    
           --ip-options S|R [route]|L [route]|T|U ... ; --ip-options hex string (Send packets with specified
           ip options) .
    	   The IP protocol[13] offers several options which may be placed in packet headers. Unlike the
    	   ubiquitous TCP options, IP options are rarely seen due to practicality and security concerns.
    	   In fact, many Internet routers block the most dangerous options such as source routing. Yet
    	   options can still be useful in some cases for determining and manipulating the network route
    	   to target machines. For example, you may be able to use the record route option to determine
    	   a path to a target even when more traditional traceroute-style approaches fail. Or if your
    	   packets are being dropped by a certain firewall, you may be able to specify a different route
    	   with the strict or loose source routing options.
    
    	   The most powerful way to specify IP options is to simply pass in values as the argument to
    	   --ip-options. Precede each hex number with \x then the two digits. You may repeat certain
    	   characters by following them with an asterisk and then the number of times you wish them to
    	   repeat. For example, \x01\x07\x04\x00*36\x01 is a hex string containing 36 NUL bytes.
    
    	   Nmap also offers a shortcut mechanism for specifying options. Simply pass the letter R, T, or
    	   U to request record-route,.	record-timestamp,.  or both options together, respectively.
    	   Loose or strict source routing.  may be specified with an L or S followed by a space and then
    	   a space-separated list of IP addresses.
    
    	   If you wish to see the options in packets sent and received, specify --packet-trace. For more
    	   information and examples of using IP options with Nmap, see
    	   http://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2006/q3/52.
    
           --ttl value (Set IP time-to-live field) .
    	   Sets the IPv4 time-to-live field in sent packets to the given value.
    
           --randomize-hosts (Randomize target host order) .
    	   Tells Nmap to shuffle each group of up to 16384 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. If you want to randomize over larger group sizes, increase
    	   PING_GROUP_SZ.  in nmap.h.  and recompile. An alternative solution is to generate the target
    	   IP list with a list scan (-sL -n -oN filename), randomize it with a Perl script, then provide
    	   the whole list to Nmap with -iL..
    
           --spoof-mac MAC address, prefix, or vendor name (Spoof MAC address) .
    	   Asks Nmap to use the given MAC address for all of the raw ethernet frames it sends. This
    	   option implies --send-eth.  to ensure that Nmap actually sends ethernet-level packets. The
    	   MAC given can take several formats. If it is simply the number 0, Nmap chooses a completely
    	   random MAC address for the session. If the given string is an even number of hex digits (with
    	   the pairs optionally separated by a colon), Nmap will use those as the MAC. If fewer than 12
    	   hex digits are provided, Nmap fills in the remainder of the six bytes with random values. If
    	   the argument isn't a zero or hex string, Nmap looks through nmap-mac-prefixes to find a
    	   vendor name containing the given string (it is case insensitive). If a match is found, Nmap
    	   uses the vendor's OUI (three-byte prefix).  and fills out the remaining three bytes randomly.
    	   Valid --spoof-mac argument examples are Apple, 0, 01:02:03:04:05:06, deadbeefcafe, 0020F2,
    	   and Cisco. This option only affects raw packet scans such as SYN scan or OS detection, not
    	   connection-oriented features such as version detection or the Nmap Scripting Engine.
    
           --badsum (Send packets with bogus TCP/UDP checksums) .
    	   Asks Nmap to use an invalid TCP, UDP or SCTP checksum for packets sent to target hosts. Since
    	   virtually all host IP stacks properly drop these packets, any responses received are likely
    	   coming from a firewall or IDS that didn't bother to verify the checksum. For more details on
    	   this technique, see http://nmap.org/p60-12.html
    
           --adler32 (Use deprecated Adler32 instead of CRC32C for SCTP checksums) .
    	   Asks Nmap to use the deprecated Adler32 algorithm for calculating the SCTP checksum. If
    	   --adler32 is not given, CRC-32C (Castagnoli) is used.  RFC 2960[14] originally defined
    	   Adler32 as checksum algorithm for SCTP; RFC 4960[7] later redefined the SCTP checksums to use
    	   CRC-32C. Current SCTP implementations should be using CRC-32C, but in order to elicit
    	   responses from old, legacy SCTP implementations, it may be preferable to use Adler32.
    
    OUTPUT
           Any security tool is only as useful as the output it generates. Complex tests and algorithms are
           of little value if they aren't presented in an organized and comprehensible fashion. Given the
           number of ways Nmap is used by people and other software, no single format can please everyone.
           So Nmap offers several formats, including the interactive mode for humans to read directly and
           XML for easy parsing by software.
    
           In addition to offering different output formats, Nmap provides options for controlling the
           verbosity of output as well as debugging messages. Output types may be sent to standard output or
           to named files, which Nmap can append to or clobber. Output files may also be used to resume
           aborted scans.
    
           Nmap makes output available in five different formats. The default is called interactive output,.
           and it is sent to standard output (stdout)..  There is also normal output,.  which is similar to
           interactive except that it displays less runtime information and warnings since it is expected to
           be analyzed after the scan completes rather than interactively.
    
           XML output.  is one of the most important output types, as it can be converted to HTML, easily
           parsed by programs such as Nmap graphical user interfaces, or imported into databases.
    
           The two remaining output types are the simple grepable output.  which includes most information
           for a target host on a single line, and sCRiPt KiDDi3 0utPUt.  for users who consider themselves
           |<-r4d.
    
           While interactive output is the default and has no associated command-line options, the other
           four format options use the same syntax. They take one argument, which is the filename that
           results should be stored in. Multiple formats may be specified, but each format may only be
           specified once. For example, you may wish to save normal output for your own review while saving
           XML of the same scan for programmatic analysis. You might do this with the options -oX myscan.xml
           -oN myscan.nmap. While this chapter uses the simple names like myscan.xml for brevity, more
           descriptive names are generally recommended. The names chosen are a matter of personal
           preference, though I use long ones that incorporate the scan date and a word or two describing
           the scan, placed in a directory named after the company I'm scanning.
    
           While these options save results to files, Nmap still prints interactive output to stdout as
           usual. For example, the command nmap -oX myscan.xml target prints XML to myscan.xml and fills
           standard output with the same interactive results it would have printed if -oX wasn't specified
           at all. You can change this by passing a hyphen character as the argument to one of the format
           types. This causes Nmap to deactivate interactive output, and instead print results in the format
           you specified to the standard output stream. So the command nmap -oX - target will send only XML
           output to stdout..  Serious errors may still be printed to the normal error stream, stderr..
    
           Unlike some Nmap arguments, the space between the logfile option flag (such as -oX) and the
           filename or hyphen is mandatory. If you omit the flags and give arguments such as -oG- or
           -oXscan.xml, a backwards compatibility feature of Nmap will cause the creation of normal format
           output files named G- and Xscan.xml respectively.
    
           All of these arguments support strftime-like.  conversions in the filename.  %H, %M, %S, %m, %d,
           %y, and %Y are all exactly the same as in strftime.  %T is the same as %H%M%S, %R is the same as
           %H%M, and %D is the same as %m%d%y. A % followed by any other character just yields that
           character (%% gives you a percent symbol). So -oX 'scan-%T-%D.xml' will use an XML file with a
           name in the form of scan-144840-121307.xml.
    
           Nmap also offers options to control scan verbosity and to append to output files rather than
           clobbering them. All of these options are described below.
    
           Nmap Output Formats
    
           -oN filespec (normal output) .
    	   Requests that normal output be directed to the given filename. As discussed above, this
    	   differs slightly from interactive output.
    
           -oX filespec (XML output) .
    	   Requests that XML output be directed to the given filename. Nmap includes a document type
    	   definition (DTD) which allows XML parsers to validate Nmap XML output. While it is primarily
    	   intended for programmatic use, it can also help humans interpret Nmap XML output. The DTD
    	   defines the legal elements of the format, and often enumerates the attributes and values they
    	   can take on. The latest version is always available from
    	   https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/docs/nmap.dtd.
    
    	   XML offers a stable format that is easily parsed by software. Free XML parsers are available
    	   for all major computer languages, including C/C++, Perl, Python, and Java. People have even
    	   written bindings for most of these languages to handle Nmap output and execution
    	   specifically. Examples are Nmap::Scanner[15].  and Nmap::Parser[16].	 in Perl CPAN. In almost
    	   all cases that a non-trivial application interfaces with Nmap, XML is the preferred format.
    
    	   The XML output references an XSL stylesheet which can be used to format the results as HTML.
    	   The easiest way to use this is simply to load the XML output in a web browser such as Firefox
    	   or IE. By default, this will only work on the machine you ran Nmap on (or a similarly
    	   configured one) due to the hard-coded nmap.xsl filesystem path. Use the --webxml or
    	   --stylesheet options to create portable XML files that render as HTML on any web-connected
    	   machine.
    
           -oS filespec (ScRipT KIdd|3 oUTpuT) .
    	   Script kiddie output is like interactive output, except that it is post-processed to better
    	   suit the l33t HaXXorZ who previously looked down on Nmap due to its consistent capitalization
    	   and spelling. Humor impaired people should note that this option is making fun of the script
    	   kiddies before flaming me for supposedly “helping them”.
    
           -oG filespec (grepable output) .
    	   This output format is covered last because it is deprecated. The XML output format is far
    	   more powerful, and is nearly as convenient for experienced users. XML is a standard for which
    	   dozens of excellent parsers are available, while grepable output is my own simple hack. XML
    	   is extensible to support new Nmap features as they are released, while I often must omit
    	   those features from grepable output for lack of a place to put them.
    
    	   Nevertheless, grepable output is still quite popular. It is a simple format that lists each
    	   host on one line and can be trivially searched and parsed with standard Unix tools such as
    	   grep, awk, cut, sed, diff, and Perl. Even I usually use it for one-off tests done at the
    	   command line. Finding all the hosts with the SSH port open or that are running Solaris takes
    	   only a simple grep to identify the hosts, piped to an awk or cut command to print the desired
    	   fields.
    
    	   Grepable output consists of comments (lines starting with a pound (#)).  and target lines. A
    	   target line includes a combination of six labeled fields, separated by tabs and followed with
    	   a colon. The fields are Host, Ports, Protocols, Ignored State, OS, Seq Index, IP ID, and
    	   Status.
    
    	   The most important of these fields is generally Ports, which gives details on each
    	   interesting port. It is a comma separated list of port entries. Each port entry represents
    	   one interesting port, and takes the form of seven slash (/) separated subfields. Those
    	   subfields are: Port number, State, Protocol, Owner, Service, SunRPC info, and Version info.
    
    	   As with XML output, this man page does not allow for documenting the entire format. A more
    	   detailed look at the Nmap grepable output format is available from
    	   http://nmap.org/book/output-formats-grepable-output.html.
    
           -oA basename (Output to all formats) .
    	   As a convenience, you may specify -oA basename to store scan results in normal, XML, and
    	   grepable formats at once. They are stored in basename.nmap, basename.xml, and basename.gnmap,
    	   respectively. As with most programs, you can prefix the filenames with a directory path, such
    	   as ~/nmaplogs/foocorp/ on Unix or c:\hacking\sco on Windows.
    
           Verbosity and debugging options
    
           -v (Increase verbosity level) .
    	   Increases the verbosity level, causing Nmap to print more information about the scan in
    	   progress. Open ports are shown as they are found and completion time estimates are provided
    	   when Nmap thinks a scan will take more than a few minutes. Use it twice or more for even
    	   greater verbosity: -vv, or give a verbosity level directly, for example -v3..
    
    	   Most changes only affect interactive output, and some also affect normal and script kiddie
    	   output. The other output types are meant to be processed by machines, so Nmap can give
    	   substantial detail by default in those formats without fatiguing a human user. However, there
    	   are a few changes in other modes where output size can be reduced substantially by omitting
    	   some detail. For example, a comment line in the grepable output that provides a list of all
    	   ports scanned is only printed in verbose mode because it can be quite long.
    
           -d (Increase debugging level) .
    	   When even verbose mode doesn't provide sufficient data for you, debugging is available to
    	   flood you with much more! As with the verbosity option (-v), debugging is enabled with a
    	   command-line flag (-d) and the debug level can be increased by specifying it multiple times,.
    	   as in -dd, or by setting a level directly. For example, -d9 sets level nine. That is the
    	   highest effective level and will produce thousands of lines unless you run a very simple scan
    	   with very few ports and targets.
    
    	   Debugging output is useful when a bug is suspected in Nmap, or if you are simply confused as
    	   to what Nmap is doing and why. As this feature is mostly intended for developers, debug lines
    	   aren't always self-explanatory. You may get something like: Timeout vals: srtt: -1 rttvar: -1
    	   to: 1000000 delta 14987 ==> srtt: 14987 rttvar: 14987 to: 100000. If you don't understand a
    	   line, your only recourses are to ignore it, look it up in the source code, or request help
    	   from the development list (nmap-dev)..  Some lines are self explanatory, but the messages
    	   become more obscure as the debug level is increased.
    
           --reason (Host and port state reasons) .
    	   Shows the reason each port is set to a specific state and the reason each host is up or down.
    	   This option displays the type of the packet that determined a port or hosts state. For
    	   example, A RST packet from a closed port or an echo reply from an alive host. The information
    	   Nmap can provide is determined by the type of scan or ping. The SYN scan and SYN ping (-sS
    	   and -PS) are very detailed, but the TCP connect scan (-sT) is limited by the implementation
    	   of the connect system call. This feature is automatically enabled by the debug option (-d).
    	   and the results are stored in XML log files even if this option is not specified.
    
           --stats-every time (Print periodic timing stats) .
    	   Periodically prints a timing status message after each interval of time. The time is a
    	   specification of the kind described in the section called “TIMING AND PERFORMANCE”; so for
    	   example, use --stats-every 10s to get a status update every 10 seconds. Updates are printed
    	   to interactive output (the screen) and XML output.
    
           --packet-trace (Trace packets and data sent and received) .
    	   Causes Nmap to print a summary of every packet sent or received. This is often used for
    	   debugging, but is also a valuable way for new users to understand exactly what Nmap is doing
    	   under the covers. To avoid printing thousands of lines, you may want to specify a limited
    	   number of ports to scan, such as -p20-30. If you only care about the goings on of the version
    	   detection subsystem, use --version-trace instead. If you only care about script tracing,
    	   specify --script-trace. With --packet-trace, you get all of the above.
    
           --open (Show only open (or possibly open) ports) .
    	   Sometimes you only care about ports you can actually connect to (open ones), and don't want
    	   results cluttered with closed, filtered, and closed|filtered ports. Output customization is
    	   normally done after the scan using tools such as grep, awk, and Perl, but this feature was
    	   added due to overwhelming requests. Specify --open to only see hosts with at least one open,
    	   open|filtered, or unfiltered port, and only see ports in those states. These three states are
    	   treated just as they normally are, which means that open|filtered and unfiltered may be
    	   condensed into counts if there are an overwhelming number of them.
    
           --iflist (List interfaces and routes) .
    	   Prints the interface list and system routes as detected by Nmap. This is useful for debugging
    	   routing problems or device mischaracterization (such as Nmap treating a PPP connection as
    	   ethernet).
    
           Miscellaneous output options
    
           --append-output (Append to rather than clobber output files) .
    	   When you specify a filename to an output format flag such as -oX or -oN, that file is
    	   overwritten by default. If you prefer to keep the existing content of the file and append the
    	   new results, specify the --append-output option. All output filenames specified in that Nmap
    	   execution will then be appended to rather than clobbered. This doesn't work well for XML
    	   (-oX) scan data as the resultant file generally won't parse properly until you fix it up by
    	   hand.
    
           --resume filename (Resume aborted scan) .
    	   Some extensive Nmap runs take a very long time—on the order of days. Such scans don't always
    	   run to completion. Restrictions may prevent Nmap from being run during working hours, the
    	   network could go down, the machine Nmap is running on might suffer a planned or unplanned
    	   reboot, or Nmap itself could crash. The administrator running Nmap could cancel it for any
    	   other reason as well, by pressing ctrl-C. Restarting the whole scan from the beginning may be
    	   undesirable. Fortunately, if normal (-oN) or grepable (-oG) logs were kept, the user can ask
    	   Nmap to resume scanning with the target it was working on when execution ceased. Simply
    	   specify the --resume option and pass the normal/grepable output file as its argument. No
    	   other arguments are permitted, as Nmap parses the output file to use the same ones specified
    	   previously. Simply call Nmap as nmap --resume logfilename. Nmap will append new results to
    	   the data files specified in the previous execution. Resumption does not support the XML
    	   output format because combining the two runs into one valid XML file would be difficult.
    
           --stylesheet path or URL (Set XSL stylesheet to transform XML output) .
    	   Nmap ships with an XSL.  stylesheet.	 named nmap.xsl.  for viewing or translating XML output
    	   to HTML..  The XML output includes an xml-stylesheet directive which points to nmap.xml where
    	   it was initially installed by Nmap. Run the XML file through an XSLT processor such as
    	   xsltproc[17].  to produce an HTML file. Directly opening the XML file in a browser no longer
    	   works well because modern browsers limit the locations a stylesheet may be loaded from. If
    	   you wish to use a different stylesheet, specify it as the argument to --stylesheet. You must
    	   pass the full pathname or URL. One common invocation is --stylesheet
    	   http://nmap.org/svn/docs/nmap.xsl. This tells an XSLT processor to load the latest version of
    	   the stylesheet from Nmap.Org. The --webxml option does the same thing with less typing and
    	   memorization. Loading the XSL from Nmap.Org makes it easier to view results on a machine that
    	   doesn't have Nmap (and thus nmap.xsl) installed. So the URL is often more useful, but the
    	   local filesystem location of nmap.xsl is used by default for privacy reasons.
    
           --webxml (Load stylesheet from Nmap.Org) .
    	   This is a convenience option, nothing more than an alias for --stylesheet
    	   http://nmap.org/svn/docs/nmap.xsl.
    
           --no-stylesheet (Omit XSL stylesheet declaration from XML) .
    	   Specify this option to prevent Nmap from associating any XSL stylesheet with its XML output.
    	   The xml-stylesheet directive is omitted.
    
    MISCELLANEOUS OPTIONS
           This section describes some important (and not-so-important) options that don't really fit
           anywhere else.
    
           -6 (Enable IPv6 scanning) .
    	   Nmap has IPv6 support for its most popular features. Ping scanning, port scanning, version
    	   detection, and the Nmap Scripting Engine all support IPv6. The command syntax is the same as
    	   usual except that you also add the -6 option. Of course, you must use IPv6 syntax if you
    	   specify an address rather than a hostname. An address might look like
    	   3ffe:7501:4819:2000:210:f3ff:fe03:14d0, so hostnames are recommended. The output looks the
    	   same as usual, with the IPv6 address on the “interesting ports” line being the only IPv6
    	   giveaway.
    
    	   While IPv6 hasn't exactly taken the world by storm, it gets significant use in some (usually
    	   Asian) countries and most modern operating systems support it. To use Nmap with IPv6, both
    	   the source and target of your scan must be configured for IPv6. If your ISP (like most of
    	   them) does not allocate IPv6 addresses to you, free tunnel brokers are widely available and
    	   work fine with Nmap. I use the free IPv6 tunnel broker.  service at
    	   http://www.tunnelbroker.net. Other tunnel brokers are listed at Wikipedia[18]. 6to4 tunnels
    	   are another popular, free approach.
    
    	   On Windows, raw-socket IPv6 scans are supported only on ethernet devices (not tunnels), and
    	   only on Windows Vista.  and later. Use the --unprivileged.  option in other situations.
    
           -A (Aggressive scan options) .
    	   This option enables additional advanced and aggressive options. I haven't decided exactly
    	   which it stands for yet. Presently this enables OS detection (-O), version scanning (-sV),
    	   script scanning (-sC) and traceroute (--traceroute)..  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. However, because script scanning with the default set is
    	   considered intrusive, you should not use -A against target networks without permission. This
    	   option only enables features, and not timing options (such as -T4) or verbosity options (-v)
    	   that you might want as well.
    
           --datadir directoryname (Specify custom Nmap data file location) .
    	   Nmap obtains some special data at runtime in files named nmap-service-probes, nmap-services,
    	   nmap-protocols, nmap-rpc, nmap-mac-prefixes, and nmap-os-db. If the location of any of these
    	   files has been specified (using the --servicedb or --versiondb options), that location is
    	   used for that file. After that, Nmap searches these files in the directory specified with the
    	   --datadir option (if any). Any files not found there, are searched for in the directory
    	   specified by the NMAPDIR.  environment variable. Next comes ~/.nmap.	 for real and effective
    	   UIDs; or on Windows, HOME\AppData\Roaming\nmap (where HOME is the user's home directory, like
    	   C:\Users\user). This is followed by the location of the nmap executable and the same location
    	   with ../share/nmap appended. Then a compiled-in location such as /usr/local/share/nmap or
    	   /usr/share/nmap.
    
           --servicedb services file (Specify custom services file) .
    	   Asks Nmap to use the specified services file rather than the nmap-services data file that
    	   comes with Nmap. Using this option also causes a fast scan (-F) to be used. See the
    	   description for --datadir for more information on Nmap's data files.
    
           --versiondb service probes file (Specify custom service probes file) .
    	   Asks Nmap to use the specified service probes file rather than the nmap-service-probes data
    	   file that comes with Nmap. See the description for --datadir for more information on Nmap's
    	   data files.
    
           --send-eth (Use raw ethernet sending) .
    	   Asks Nmap to send packets at the raw ethernet (data link) layer rather than the higher IP
    	   (network) layer. By default, Nmap chooses the one which is generally best for the platform it
    	   is running on. Raw sockets (IP layer).  are generally most efficient for Unix machines, while
    	   ethernet frames are required for Windows operation since Microsoft disabled raw socket
    	   support. Nmap still uses raw IP packets on Unix despite this option when there is no other
    	   choice (such as non-ethernet connections).
    
           --send-ip (Send at raw IP level) .
    	   Asks Nmap to send packets via raw IP sockets rather than sending lower level ethernet frames.
    	   It is the complement to the --send-eth option discussed previously.
    
           --privileged (Assume that the user is fully privileged) .
    	   Tells Nmap to simply assume that it is privileged enough to perform raw socket sends, packet
    	   sniffing, and similar operations that usually require root privileges.  on Unix systems. By
    	   default Nmap quits if such operations are requested but geteuid is not zero.	 --privileged is
    	   useful with Linux kernel capabilities and similar systems that may be configured to allow
    	   unprivileged users to perform raw-packet scans. Be sure to provide this option flag before
    	   any flags for options that require privileges (SYN scan, OS detection, etc.). The
    	   NMAP_PRIVILEGED.  environment variable may be set as an equivalent alternative to
    	   --privileged.
    
           --unprivileged (Assume that the user lacks raw socket privileges) .
    	   This option is the opposite of --privileged. It tells Nmap to treat the user as lacking
    	   network raw socket and sniffing privileges. This is useful for testing, debugging, or when
    	   the raw network functionality of your operating system is somehow broken. The
    	   NMAP_UNPRIVILEGED.  environment variable may be set as an equivalent alternative to
    	   --unprivileged.
    
           --release-memory (Release memory before quitting) .
    	   This option is only useful for memory-leak debugging. It causes Nmap to release allocated
    	   memory just before it quits so that actual memory leaks are easier to spot. Normally Nmap
    	   skips this as the OS does this anyway upon process termination.
    
           -V; --version (Print version number) .
    	   Prints the Nmap version number and exits.
    
           -h; --help (Print help summary page) .
    	   Prints a short help screen with the most common command flags. Running Nmap without any
    	   arguments does the same thing.
    
    RUNTIME INTERACTION
           During the execution of Nmap, all key presses are captured. This allows you to interact with the
           program without aborting and restarting it. Certain special keys will change options, while any
           other keys will print out a status message telling you about the scan. The convention is that
           lowercase letters increase the amount of printing, and uppercase letters decrease the printing.
           You may also press ‘?’ for help.
    
           v / V
    	   Increase / decrease the verbosity level
    
           d / D
    	   Increase / decrease the debugging Level
    
           p / P
    	   Turn on / off packet tracing
    
           ?
    	   Print a runtime interaction help screen
    
           Anything else
    	   Print out a status message like this:
    
    	       Stats: 0:00:07 elapsed; 20 hosts completed (1 up), 1 undergoing Service Scan
    	       Service scan Timing: About 33.33% done; ETC: 20:57 (0:00:12 remaining)
    
    EXAMPLES
           Here are some Nmap usage examples, from the simple and routine to a little more complex and
           esoteric. Some actual IP addresses and domain names are used to make things more concrete. In
           their place you should substitute addresses/names from your own network. While I don't think port
           scanning other networks is or should be illegal, some network administrators don't appreciate
           unsolicited scanning of their networks and may complain. Getting permission first is the best
           approach.
    
           For testing purposes, you have permission to scan the host scanme.nmap.org..  This permission
           only includes scanning via Nmap and not testing exploits or denial of service attacks. To
           conserve bandwidth, please do not initiate more than a dozen scans against that host per day. If
           this free scanning target service is abused, it will be taken down and Nmap will report Failed to
           resolve given hostname/IP: scanme.nmap.org. These permissions also apply to the hosts
           scanme2.nmap.org, scanme3.nmap.org, and so on, though those hosts do not currently exist.
    
           This option scans all reserved TCP ports on the machine scanme.nmap.org . The -v option enables
           verbose mode.
    
           Launches a stealth SYN scan against each machine that is up out of the 256 IPs on the class C
           sized network where Scanme 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 OS
           detection.
    
           Launches host enumeration and a TCP scan at the first half of each of the 255 possible eight-bit
           subnets in the 198.116 class B address space. This tests whether the systems run SSH, DNS, POP3,
           or IMAP on their standard ports, or anything on port 4564. For any of these ports found open,
           version detection is used to determine what application is running.
    
           Asks Nmap to choose 100,000 hosts at random and scan them for web servers (port 80). Host
           enumeration is disabled with -Pn since first sending a couple probes to determine whether a host
           is up is wasteful when you are only probing one port on each target host anyway.
    
           This scans 4096 IPs for any web servers (without pinging them) and saves the output in grepable
           and XML formats.
    
    NMAP BOOK
           While this reference guide details all material Nmap options, it can't fully demonstrate how to
           apply those features to quickly solve real-world tasks. For that, we released Nmap Network
           Scanning: The Official Nmap Project Guide to Network Discovery and Security Scanning.  Topics
           include subverting firewalls and intrusion detection systems, optimizing Nmap performance, and
           automating common networking tasks with the Nmap Scripting Engine. Hints and instructions are
           provided for common Nmap tasks such as taking network inventory, penetration testing, detecting
           rogue wireless access points, and quashing network worm outbreaks. Examples and diagrams show
           actual communication on the wire. More than half of the book is available free online. See
           http://nmap.org/book for more information.
    
    BUGS
           Like its author, Nmap isn't perfect. But you can help make it better by sending bug reports or
           even writing patches. If Nmap doesn't behave the way you expect, first upgrade to the latest
           version available from http://nmap.org. If the problem persists, do some research to determine
           whether it has already been discovered and addressed. Try searching for the error message on our
           search page at http://insecure.org/search.html or at Google. Also try browsing the nmap-dev
           archives at http://seclists.org/..  Read this full manual page as well. If nothing comes of this,
           mail a bug report to <[email protected]>. Please include everything you have learned about the
           problem, as well as what version of Nmap you are running and what operating system version it is
           running on. Problem reports and Nmap usage questions sent to <[email protected]> are far more likely
           to be answered than those sent to Fyodor directly. If you subscribe to the nmap-dev list before
           posting, your message will bypass moderation and get through more quickly. Subscribe at
           http://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/dev.
    
           Code patches to fix bugs are even better than bug reports. Basic instructions for creating patch
           files with your changes are available at https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/HACKING. Patches may be sent
           to nmap-dev (recommended) or to Fyodor directly.
    
    AUTHOR
           Gordon “Fyodor” Lyon <[email protected]> (http://insecure.org)
    
           Hundreds of people have made valuable contributions to Nmap over the years. These are detailed in
           the CHANGELOG.  file which is distributed with Nmap and also available from
           http://nmap.org/changelog.html.
    
    LEGAL NOTICES
       Nmap Copyright and Licensing
           The Nmap Security Scanner is (C) 1996–2012 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 Foundation; Version
           2 with the clarifications and exceptions described below. This guarantees your right to use,
           modify, and redistribute this software under certain conditions. If you wish to embed Nmap
           technology into proprietary software, we sell alternative licenses (contact
           <[email protected]>). Dozens of software vendors already license Nmap technology such as host
           discovery, port scanning, OS detection, and version detection.
    
           Note that the GPL places important restrictions on “derived works”, yet it does not provide a
           detailed definition of that term. To avoid misunderstandings, we consider an application to
           constitute a “derivative work” for the purpose of this license if it does any of the following:
    
           ·   Integrates source code from Nmap
    
           ·   Reads or includes Nmap copyrighted data files, such as nmap-os-db or nmap-service-probes.
    
           ·   Executes Nmap and parses the results (as opposed to typical shell or execution-menu apps,
    	   which simply display raw Nmap output and so are not derivative works.)
    
           ·   Integrates/includes/aggregates Nmap into a proprietary executable installer, such as those
    	   produced by InstallShield.
    
           ·   Links to a library or executes a program that does any of the above.
    
           The term “Nmap” should be taken to also include any portions or derived works of Nmap. This list
           is not exclusive, but is meant to clarify our interpretation of derived works with some common
           examples. Our interpretation applies only to Nmap—we don't speak for other people's GPL works.
    
           If you have any questions about the GPL licensing restrictions on using Nmap in non-GPL works, we
           would be happy to help. As mentioned above, we also offer alternative license to integrate Nmap
           into proprietary applications and appliances. These contracts have been sold to many security
           vendors, and generally include a perpetual license as well as providing for priority support and
           updates as well as helping to fund the continued development of Nmap technology. Please email
           <[email protected]> for further information.
    
           As a special exception to the GPL terms, Insecure.Com LLC grants permission to link the code of
           this program with any version of the OpenSSL library which is distributed under a license
           identical to that listed in the included COPYING.OpenSSL file, and distribute linked combinations
           including the two..  You must obey the GNU GPL in all respects for all of the code used other
           than OpenSSL. If you modify this file, you may extend this exception to your version of the file,
           but you are not obligated to do so.
    
           If you received these files with a written license agreement or contract stating terms other than
           the terms above, then that alternative license agreement takes precedence over these comments.
    
       Creative Commons License for this Nmap Guide
           This Nmap Reference Guide is (C) 2005–2012 Insecure.Com LLC. It is hereby placed under version
           3.0 of the Creative Commons Attribution License[19]. This allows you redistribute and modify the
           work as you desire, as long as you credit the original source. Alternatively, you may choose to
           treat this document as falling under the same license as Nmap itself (discussed previously).
    
       Source Code Availability and Community Contributions
           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 <[email protected]> for possible incorporation into the
           main distribution. By sending these changes to Fyodor or one of the Insecure.Org development
           mailing lists, it is assumed that you are offering the Nmap Project (Insecure.Com LLC) the
           unlimited, non-exclusive right to reuse, modify, 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.
    
       No Warranty.
           This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without
           even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
           General Public License v2.0 for more details at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html, or in
           the COPYING file included with Nmap.
    
           It should also be noted that Nmap has occasionally been known to crash poorly written
           applications, TCP/IP stacks, and even operating systems..  While this is extremely rare, it is
           important to keep in mind.  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.
    
       Inappropriate Usage
           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 (e.g. suid root)..  That would open up a
           major security vulnerability as other users on the system (or attackers) could use it for
           privilege escalation.
    
       Third-Party Software and Funding Notices
           This product includes software developed by the Apache Software Foundation[20]. A modified
           version of the Libpcap portable packet capture library[21].  is distributed along with Nmap. The
           Windows version of Nmap utilized the Libpcap-derived WinPcap library[22].  instead. Regular
           expression support is provided by the PCRE library[23],.	 which is open-source software, written
           by Philip Hazel..  Certain raw networking functions use the Libdnet[24].	 networking library,
           which was written by Dug Song..	A modified version is distributed with Nma.p Nmap can optionally
           link with the OpenSSL cryptography toolkit[25].	for SSL version detection support. The Nmap
           Scripting Engine uses an embedded version of the Lua programming language[26]..	The Liblinear
           linear classification library[27] is used for our IPv6 OS detection machine learning
           techniques[28].	All of the third-party software described in this paragraph is freely
           redistributable under BSD-style software licenses.
    
           Binary packages for Windows and Mac OS X include support libraries necessary to run Zenmap and
           Ndiff with Python and PyGTK. (Unix platforms commonly make these libraries easy to install, so
           they are not part of the packages.) A listing of these support libraries and their licenses is
           included in the LICENSES files.
    
           This software was supported in part through the Google Summer of Code[29] and the DARPA CINDER
           program[30] (DARPA-BAA-10-84).
    
       United States Export Control.
           Nmap only uses encryption when compiled with the optional OpenSSL support and linked with
           OpenSSL. When compiled without OpenSSL support, Insecure.Com LLC believes that Nmap is not
           subject to U.S.	Export Administration Regulations (EAR)[31] export control. As such, there is no
           applicable ECCN (export control classification number) and exportation does not require any
           special license, permit, or other governmental authorization.
    
           When compiled with OpenSSL support or distributed as source code, Insecure.Com LLC believes that
           Nmap falls under U.S. ECCN 5D002[32] (“Information Security Software”). We distribute Nmap under
           the TSU exception for publicly available encryption software defined in EAR 740.13(e)[33].
    
    NOTES
    	1. Nmap Network Scanning: The Official Nmap Project Guide to Network Discovery and Security
    	   Scanning
    	   http://nmap.org/book/
    
    	2. RFC 1122
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1122.txt
    
    	3. RFC 792
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc792.txt
    
    	4. RFC 950
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc950.txt
    
    	5. RFC 1918
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1918.txt
    
    	6. UDP
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc768.txt
    
    	7. SCTP
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4960.txt
    
    	8. TCP RFC
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc793.txt
    
    	9. RFC 959
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc959.txt
    
           10. RFC 1323
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1323.txt
    
           11. Lua programming language
    	   http://lua.org
    
           12. precedence
    	   http://www.lua.org/manual/5.1/manual.html#2.5.3
    
           13. IP protocol
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc791.txt
    
           14. RFC 2960
    	   http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2960.txt
    
           15. Nmap::Scanner
    	   http://sourceforge.net/projects/nmap-scanner/
    
           16. Nmap::Parser
    	   http://nmapparser.wordpress.com/
    
           17. xsltproc
    	   http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/
    
           18. listed at Wikipedia
    	   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_IPv6_tunnel_brokers
    
           19. Creative Commons Attribution License
    	   http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
    
           20. Apache Software Foundation
    	   http://www.apache.org
    
           21. Libpcap portable packet capture library
    	   http://www.tcpdump.org
    
           22. WinPcap library
    	   http://www.winpcap.org
    
           23. PCRE library
    	   http://www.pcre.org
    
           24. Libdnet
    	   http://libdnet.sourceforge.net
    
           25. OpenSSL cryptography toolkit
    	   http://www.openssl.org
    
           26. Lua programming language
    	   http://www.lua.org
    
           27. Liblinear linear classification library
    	   http://www.csie.ntu.edu.tw/~cjlin/liblinear/
    
           28. IPv6 OS detection machine learning techniques
    	   http://nmap.org/book/osdetect-guess.html#osdetect-guess-ipv6
    
           29. Google Summer of Code
    	   http://nmap.org/soc/
    
           30. DARPA CINDER program
    	   https://www.fbo.gov/index?s=opportunity&mode=form&id=585e02a51f77af5cb3c9e06b9cc82c48&tab=core&_cview=1
    
           31. Export Administration Regulations (EAR)
    	   http://www.access.gpo.gov/bis/ear/ear_data.html
    
           32. 5D002
    	   http://www.access.gpo.gov/bis/ear/pdf/ccl5-pt2.pdf
    
           33. EAR 740.13(e)
    	   http://www.access.gpo.gov/bis/ear/pdf/740.pdf
    
    
    
    Nmap					       07/28/2013					 NMAP(1)
    

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