From Fedora Project Wiki

No edit summary
Line 20: Line 20:
The basics of nmap:
The basics of nmap:


#nmap <options> <host>
nmap <options> <host>


For example if you want to do an light scan of <host> that returns the open ports and operating system of <host>, where <host> is 127.0.0.1 you would do
For example if you want to do an light scan of <host> that returns the open ports and operating system of <host>, where <host> is 127.0.0.1 you would do


#nmap -T5 -O 127.0.0.1
nmap -T5 -O 127.0.0.1


and it would return something along the lines of
and it would return something along the lines of

Revision as of 01:10, 19 February 2010

This page is for brainstorming a Quality Assurance plan for the upcoming SecuritySpin based on Available Apps.

How to use this page

Provide a test case and add a heading in order to keep a running outline of the test cases and we can use them to format into an actual Quality Assurance plan at a later date.

Example:

Foo package test case

- Quick note on how to use Foo

RTest Case Expected Result
Scan Bar with Foo Output of information about Bar

Nmap

The basics of nmap:

nmap <options> <host>

For example if you want to do an light scan of <host> that returns the open ports and operating system of <host>, where <host> is 127.0.0.1 you would do

nmap -T5 -O 127.0.0.1

and it would return something along the lines of


Starting Nmap 5.21 ( http://nmap.org ) at 2010-02-18 18:49 Central Standard Time

Nmap scan report for localhost.color.net (127.0.0.1)

Host is up.

PORT STATE SERVICE

22/tcp open tellnet

80/tcp open http

OS details: Microsoft Windows XP SP2 or SP3

OS detection performed. Please report any incorrect results at http://nmap.org/submit/ .

Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 2.11 seconds

Basic commands

Argument Result
-T (1-5) Tells nmap the amount of time/intensity
-O Designates operating system detection
-p<port number> tells nmap to scan only selected ports