Table des matières

Cybersécurité

Nmap Cheat sheet


source : Nathan House (Station X)

Target Specification

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
nmap 192.168.1.1 Scan a single IP
nmap 192.168.1.1 192.168.2.1 Scan specific IPs
nmap 192.168.1.1-254 Scan a range
nmap scanme.nmap.org Scan a domain
nmap 192.168.1.0/24 Scan using CIDR notation
-iL nmap -iL targets.txt Scan targets from a file
-iR nmap -iR 100 Scan 100 random hosts
–exclude nmap –exclude 192.168.1.1 Exclude listed hosts


Scan Techniques

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-sS nmap 192.168.1.1 -sS TCP SYN port scan (Default)
-sT nmap 192.168.1.1 -sT TCP connect port scan (Default without root privilege)
-sU nmap 192.168.1.1 -sU UDP port scan
-sA nmap 192.168.1.1 -sA TCP ACK port scan
-sW nmap 192.168.1.1 -sW TCP Window port scan
-sM nmap 192.168.1.1 -sM TCP Maimon port scan


Host Discovery

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-sL nmap 192.168.1.1-3 -sL No Scan. List targets only
-sn nmap 192.168.1.1/24 -sn Disable port scanning. Host discovery only.
-Pn nmap 192.168.1.1-5 -Pn Disable host discovery. Port scan only.
-PS nmap 192.168.1.1-5 -PS22-25,80 TCP SYN discovery on port x. Port 80 by default
-PA nmap 192.168.1.1-5 -PA22-25,80 TCP ACK discovery on port x. Port 80 by default
-PU nmap 192.168.1.1-5 -PU53 UDP discovery on port x. Port 40125 by default
-PR nmap 192.168.1.1-1/24 -PR ARP discovery on local network
-n nmap 192.168.1.1 -n Never do DNS resolution


Port Specification

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-p nmap 192.168.1.1 -p 21 Port scan for port x
-p nmap 192.168.1.1 -p 21-100 Port range
-p nmap 192.168.1.1 -p U:53,T:21-25,80 Port scan multiple TCP and UDP ports
-p nmap 192.168.1.1 -p- Port scan all ports
-p nmap 192.168.1.1 -p http,https Port scan from service name
-F nmap 192.168.1.1 -F Fast port scan (100 ports)
–top-ports nmap 192.168.1.1 –top-ports 2000 Port scan the top x ports
-p-65535 nmap 192.168.1.1 -p-65535 Leaving off initial port in range makes the scan start at port 1
-p0- nmap 192.168.1.1 -p0- Leaving off end port in range makes the scan go through to port 65535


Service and Version Detection

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-sV nmap 192.168.1.1 -sV Attempts to determine the version of the service running on port
-sV –version-intensity nmap 192.168.1.1 -sV –version-intensity 8 Intensity level 0 to 9. Higher number increases possibility of correctness
-sV –version-light nmap 192.168.1.1 -sV –version-light Enable light mode. Lower possibility of correctness. Faster
-sV –version-all nmap 192.168.1.1 -sV –version-all Enable intensity level 9. Higher possibility of correctness. Slower
-A nmap 192.168.1.1 -A Enables OS detection, version detection, script scanning, and traceroute


OS Detection

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-O nmap 192.168.1.1 -O Remote OS detection using TCP/IP stack fingerprinting
-O –osscan-limit nmap 192.168.1.1 -O –osscan-limit If at least one open and one closed TCP port are not found it will not try OS detection against host
-O –osscan-guess nmap 192.168.1.1 -O –osscan-guess Makes Nmap guess more aggressively
-O –max-os-tries nmap 192.168.1.1 -O –max-os-tries 1 Set the maximum number x of OS detection tries against a target
-A nmap 192.168.1.1 -A Enables OS detection, version detection, script scanning, and traceroute


Timing and Performance

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-T0 nmap 192.168.1.1 -T0 Paranoid (0) Intrusion Detection System evasion
-T1 nmap 192.168.1.1 -T1 Sneaky (1) Intrusion Detection System evasion
-T2 nmap 192.168.1.1 -T2 Polite (2) slows down the scan to use less bandwidth and use less target machine resources
-T3 nmap 192.168.1.1 -T3 Normal (3) which is default speed
-T4 nmap 192.168.1.1 -T4 Aggressive (4) speeds scans; assumes you are on a reasonably fast and reliable network
-T5 nmap 192.168.1.1 -T5 Insane (5) speeds scan; assumes you are on an extraordinarily fast network


Timing and Performance Switches

SWITCH EXAMPLE INPUT DESCRIPTION
–host-timeout <time> 1s; 4m; 2h Give up on target after this long
–min-rtt-timeout/max-rtt-timeout/initial-rtt-timeout <time> 1s; 4m; 2h Specifies probe round trip time
–min-hostgroup/max-hostgroup <size<size> 50; 1024 Parallel host scan group sizes
–min-parallelism/max-parallelism <numprobes> 10; 1 Probe parallelization
–max-retries <tries> 3 Specify the maximum number of port scan probe retransmissions
–min-rate <number> 100 Send packets no slower than <number> per second
–max-rate <number> 100 Send packets no faster than <number> per second


NSE Scripts

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-sC nmap 192.168.1.1 -sC Scan with default NSE scripts. Considered useful for discovery and safe
–script default nmap 192.168.1.1 –script default Scan with default NSE scripts. Considered useful for discovery and safe
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script=banner Scan with a single script. Example banner
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script=http* Scan with a wildcard. Example http
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script=http,banner Scan with two scripts. Example http and banner
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script “not intrusive” Scan default, but remove intrusive scripts
–script-args nmap –script snmp-sysdescr –script-args snmpcommunity=admin 192.168.1.1 NSE script with arguments


Useful NSE Script Examples

COMMAND DESCRIPTION
nmap -Pn –script=http-sitemap-generator scanme.nmap.org http site map generator
nmap -n -Pn -p 80 –open -sV -vvv –script banner,http-title -iR 1000 Fast search for random web servers
nmap -Pn –script=dns-brute domain.com Brute forces DNS hostnames guessing subdomains
nmap -n -Pn -vv -O -sV –script smb-enum*,smb-ls,smb-mbenum,smb-os-discovery,smb-s*,smb-vuln*,smbv2* -vv 192.168.1.1 Safe SMB scripts to run
nmap –script whois* domain.com Whois query
nmap -p80 –script http-unsafe-output-escaping scanme.nmap.org Detect cross site scripting vulnerabilities
nmap -p80 –script http-sql-injection scanme.nmap.org Check for SQL injections


Firewall / IDS Evasion and Spoofing

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-f nmap 192.168.1.1 -f Requested scan (including ping scans) use tiny fragmented IP packets. Harder for packet filters
–mtu nmap 192.168.1.1 –mtu 32 Set your own offset size
-D nmap -D 192.168.1.101,192.168.1.102,192.168.1.103,192.168.1.23 192.168.1.1 Send scans from spoofed IPs
-D nmap -D decoy-ip1,decoy-ip2,your-own-ip,decoy-ip3,decoy-ip4 remote-host-ip Above example explained
-S nmap -S www.microsoft.com www.facebook.com Scan Facebook from Microsoft (-e eth0 -Pn may be required)
-g nmap -g 53 192.168.1.1 Use given source port number
–proxies nmap –proxies http://192.168.1.1:8080, http://192.168.1.2:8080 192.168.1.1 Relay connections through HTTP/SOCKS4 proxies
–data-length nmap –data-length 200 192.168.1.1 Appends random data to sent packets


Output

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-oN nmap 192.168.1.1 -oN normal.file Normal output to the file normal.file
-oX nmap 192.168.1.1 -oX xml.file XML output to the file xml.file
-oG nmap 192.168.1.1 -oG grep.file Grepable output to the file grep.file
-oA nmap 192.168.1.1 -oA results Output in the three major formats at once
-oG – nmap 192.168.1.1 -oG – Grepable output to screen. -oN -, -oX – also usable
–append-output nmap 192.168.1.1 -oN file.file –append-output Append a scan to a previous scan file
-v nmap 192.168.1.1 -v Increase the verbosity level (use -vv or more for greater effect)
-d nmap 192.168.1.1 -d Increase debugging level (use -dd or more for greater effect)
–reason nmap 192.168.1.1 –reason Display the reason a port is in a particular state, same output as -vv
–open nmap 192.168.1.1 –open Only show open (or possibly open) ports
–packet-trace nmap 192.168.1.1 -T4 –packet-trace Show all packets sent and received
–iflist nmap –iflist Shows the host interfaces and routes
–resume nmap –resume results.file Resume a scan


Helpful Nmap Output examples

COMMAND DESCRIPTION
nmap -p80 -sV -oG – –open 192.168.1.1/24 | grep open Scan for web servers and grep to show which IPs are running web servers
nmap -iR 10 -n -oX out.xml | grep “Nmap” | cut -d ” ” -f5 > live-hosts.txt Generate a list of the IPs of live hosts
nmap -iR 10 -n -oX out2.xml | grep “Nmap” | cut -d ” ” -f5 » live-hosts.txt Append IP to the list of live hosts
ndiff scanl.xml scan2.xml Compare output from nmap using the ndif
xsltproc nmap.xml -o nmap.html Convert nmap xml files to html files
grep ' open ' results.nmap | sed -r ‘s/ +/ /g’ | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | less Reverse sorted list of how often ports turn up


Miscellaneous Options

SWITCH EXAMPLE DESCRIPTION
-6 nmap -6 2607:f0d0:1002:51::4 Enable IPv6 scanning
-h nmap -h nmap help screen


Other Useful Nmap Commands

COMMAND DESCRIPTION
nmap -iR 10 -PS22-25,80,113,1050,35000 -v -sn Discovery only on ports x, no port scan
nmap 192.168.1.1-1/24 -PR -sn -vv Arp discovery only on local network, no port scan
nmap -iR 10 -sn -traceroute Traceroute to random targets, no port scan
nmap 192.168.1.1-50 -sL –dns-server 192.168.1.1 Query the Internal DNS for hosts, list targets only