|
Neohapsis is currently accepting applications for employment. For more information, please visit our website www.neohapsis.com or email hr@neohapsis.com |
Re: Discovering network subnets
From: Kelly Scroggins (kelly
cliffhanger.com)
Date: Sat Aug 20 2005 - 18:44:04 CDT
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
:)
- C O R R E C T I O N -
The last 'host' was incorrect :)
The network ID of 192.168.1.0/22 includes 4
'C Blocks' with the following hosts ...
192.168.0.1 -to- 192.168.0.255
192.168.1.0 -to- 192.168.1.255
192.168.2.0 -to- 192.168.2.255
192.168.3.0 -to- 192.168.3.254 <--- was .255
--
-- --
\ /
\/
/\
/ \
-- --
Quoting Kelly Scroggins <kelly
cliffhanger.com>:
Depending on the netmask used, it could be a valid
host IP. i.e.,
The network ID of 192.168.1.0/22 includes 4
'C Blocks' with the following hosts ...
192.168.0.1 -to- 192.168.0.255
192.168.1.0 -to- 192.168.1.255
192.168.2.0 -to- 192.168.2.255
192.168.3.0 -to- 192.168.3.255
--
-- --
\ /
\/
/\
/ \
-- --
Quoting hannibal blog <hannibalsec
gmail.com>:
hello list
I'm actually doing a blackbox audit of a network, and I'm trying to
discover network architecture.
I got this output with nmap X.X.X.0/24
interresting ports on X.X.X.0
68/tcp
723/tcp
6000/tcp
I'm not sure the network is a C class one, but I'm surprised that such
an ip adress is an host IP.
What do u think ?
Any idea to guess network adressing map ?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FREE WHITE PAPER - Wireless LAN Security: What Hackers Know That You Don't
Learn the hacker's secrets that compromise wireless LANs. Secure your
WLAN by understanding these threats, available hacking tools and proven
countermeasures. Defend your WLAN against man-in-the-Middle attacks and
session hijacking, denial-of-service, rogue access points, identity
thefts and MAC spoofing. Request your complimentary white paper at:
http://www.securityfocus.com/sponsor/AirDefense_pen-test_050801
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FREE WHITE PAPER - Wireless LAN Security: What Hackers Know That You Don't
Learn the hacker's secrets that compromise wireless LANs. Secure your
WLAN by understanding these threats, available hacking tools and proven
countermeasures. Defend your WLAN against man-in-the-Middle attacks and
session hijacking, denial-of-service, rogue access points, identity
thefts and MAC spoofing. Request your complimentary white paper at:
http://www.securityfocus.com/sponsor/AirDefense_pen-test_050801
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]