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.
TCP SYN discovery on port x.
-PS nmap 192.168.1.1-5 -PS22-25,80
Port 80 by default
TCP ACK discovery on port x.
-PA nmap 192.168.1.1-5 -PA22-25,80
Port 80 by default
UDP discovery on port x.
-PU nmap 192.168.1.1-5 -PU53
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
nmap 192.168.1.1 -p
-p Port scan multiple TCP and UDP ports
U:53,T:21-25,80
-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- nmap 192.168.1.1 –top-ports
Port scan the top x ports
ports 2000
Leaving off initial port in range makes the scan
-p-65535 nmap 192.168.1.1 -p-65535
start at port 1
Leaving off end port in range
-p0- nmap 192.168.1.1 -p0-
makes the scan go through to port 65535
Service and Version Detection
Switch Example Description
Attempts to determine the version of the
-sV nmap 192.168.1.1 -sV
service running on port
-sV –version- nmap 192.168.1.1 -sV – Intensity level 0 to 9. Higher number
intensity version-intensity 8 increases possibility of correctness
-sV –version- nmap 192.168.1.1 -sV – Enable light mode. Lower possibility of
light version-light correctness. Faster
-sV –version- nmap 192.168.1.1 -sV – Enable intensity level 9. Higher possibility
all version-all of correctness. Slower
Enables OS detection, version detection,
-A nmap 192.168.1.1 -A
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- nmap 192.168.1.1 -O – If at least one open and one closed TCP port are not
limit osscan-limit found it will not try OS detection against host
-O –osscan- nmap 192.168.1.1 -O –
Makes Nmap guess more aggressively
guess osscan-guess
-O –max- nmap 192.168.1.1 -O – Set the maximum number x of OS detection tries
os-tries max-os-tries 1 against a target
Enables OS detection, version detection, script
-A nmap 192.168.1.1 -A
scanning, and traceroute
Timing and Performance
Switc
Example Description
h
-T0 nmap 192.168.1.1
Paranoid (0) Intrusion Detection System evasion
-T0
nmap 192.168.1.1
-T1 Sneaky (1) Intrusion Detection System evasion
-T1
nmap 192.168.1.1 Polite (2) slows down the scan to use less bandwidth and use
-T2
-T2 less target machine resources
nmap 192.168.1.1
-T3 Normal (3) which is default speed
-T3
nmap 192.168.1.1 Aggressive (4) speeds scans; assumes you are on a reasonably
-T4
-T4 fast and reliable network
nmap 192.168.1.1 Insane (5) speeds scan; assumes you are on an extraordinarily
-T5
-T5 fast network
Example
Switch Description
input
–host-timeout <time> 1s; 4m; 2h Give up on target after this long
–min-rtt-timeout/max-rtt-timeout/
1s; 4m; 2h Specifies probe round trip time
initial-rtt-timeout <time>
–min-hostgroup/max-hostgroup <size<
50; 1024 Parallel host scan group sizes
size>
–min-parallelism/max-parallelism <nu
10; 1 Probe parallelization
mprobes>
20ms; 2s;
–scan-delay/–max-scan-delay <time> Adjust delay between probes
4m; 5h
Specify the maximum number of
–max-retries <tries> 3
port scan probe retransmissions
Send packets no slower
–min-rate <number> 100
than <numberr> per second
Send packets no faster
–max-rate <number> 100
than <number> per second
NSE Scripts
Switch Example Description
Scan with default NSE scripts.
-sC nmap 192.168.1.1 -sC Considered useful for discovery
and safe
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script default Scan with default NSE scripts.
default Considered useful for discovery
and safe
Scan with a single script.
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script=banner
Example banner
Scan with a wildcard. Example
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script=http*
http
Scan with two scripts. Example
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script=http,banner
http and banner
Scan default, but remove
–script nmap 192.168.1.1 –script “not intrusive”
intrusive scripts
–script- nmap –script snmp-sysdescr –script-args
NSE script with arguments
args snmpcommunity=admin 192.168.1.1
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 - Fast search for random web
iR 1000 servers
Brute forces DNS
nmap -Pn –script=dns-brute domain.com 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 Safe SMB scripts to run
192.168.1.1
nmap –script whois* domain.com Whois query
nmap -p80 –script http-unsafe-output-escaping Detect cross site scripting
scanme.nmap.org vulnerabilities
nmap -p80 –script http-sql-injection scanme.nmap.org Check for SQL injections
Firewall / IDS Evasion and Spoofing
Switch Example Description
Requested scan
(including ping scans)
-f nmap 192.168.1.1 -f use tiny fragmented IP
packets. Harder for
packet filters
Set your own offset
–mtu nmap 192.168.1.1 –mtu 32
size
nmap -D
Send scans from
-D 192.168.1.101,192.168.1.102,192.168.1.103,192.168.1.23
spoofed IPs
192.168.1.1
nmap -D decoy-ip1,decoy-ip2,your-own-ip,decoy- Above example
-D
ip3,decoy-ip4 remote-host-ip explained
Scan Facebook from
-S nmap -S www.microsoft.com www.facebook.com Microsoft (-e eth0 -Pn
may be required)
-g nmap -g 53 192.168.1.1 Use given source port
number
Relay connections
– nmap –proxies http://192.168.1.1:8080, through
proxies http://192.168.1.2:8080 192.168.1.1 HTTP/SOCKS4
proxies
–data- Appends random data
nmap –data-length 200 192.168.1.1
length to sent packets
Example IDS Evasion command
nmap -f -t 0 -n -Pn –data-length 200 -D
192.168.1.101,192.168.1.102,192.168.1.103,192.168.1.23 192.168.1.1
Output
Switch Example Description
nmap 192.168.1.1 -oN
-oN Normal output to the file normal.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
Grepable output to screen. -oN -, -oX –
-oG – nmap 192.168.1.1 -oG –
also usable
–append- nmap 192.168.1.1 -oN file.file
Append a scan to a previous scan file
output –append-output
Increase the verbosity level (use -vv or
-v nmap 192.168.1.1 -v
more for greater effect)
Increase debugging level (use -dd or more
-d nmap 192.168.1.1 -d
for greater effect)
Display the reason a port is in a particular
–reason nmap 192.168.1.1 –reason
state, same output as -vv
–open nmap 192.168.1.1 –open Only show open (or possibly open) ports
–packet- nmap 192.168.1.1 -T4 –packet- Show all packets sent and received
trace trace
–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 | Scan for web servers and grep to show
grep open which IPs are running web servers
nmap -iR 10 -n -oX out.xml | grep “Nmap” |
Generate a list of the IPs of live hosts
cut -d ” ” -f5 > live-hosts.txt
nmap -iR 10 -n -oX out2.xml | grep “Nmap” |
Append IP to the list of live hosts
cut -d ” ” -f5 >> live-hosts.txt
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’ | Reverse sorted list of how often ports turn
sort | uniq -c | sort -rn | less 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
Discovery only on ports x, no port scan
-sn
Arp discovery only on local network, no
nmap 192.168.1.1-1/24 -PR -sn -vv
port scan
nmap -iR 10 -sn -traceroute Traceroute to random targets, no port scan
nmap 192.168.1.1-50 -sL –dns-server Query the Internal DNS for hosts, list
192.168.1.1 targets only