IP xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx - Server IP xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx - Workstation IP xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx - Domain Controller IP xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx - Terminal Server
Ect. Ect.
I want to use it in a network...
Thanks in advance!
muts
Feb 17 2004, 09:20 AM
I didn't quite understand your question...
Your looking for a port scanner that will identify a domain controller (or other windows services) ?
I think your best bet would be netbios enumeration. You could enumerate the function of the remote machine via a null session, or by using tools like Enum & NBT enum. If you really want, you can also script this to run on a whole IP range.
Otherwise, you can scan for the (default) 3389 to search for terminal services.
Personally, when i see ports 5000 and 1900 (udp PNP) i can deduce that these are win XP machines (workstations).
Hope this helped.
eXist
Feb 17 2004, 10:15 AM
You can also run your scans, then check your results later in Dameware NT Utilities. If you put the IP in and it is able to connect to it, you will be shown what type of computer it is, ie server, workstation etc. This is done by colour coding, which is explained in the help files.
K1LL3RB0Y
Feb 17 2004, 04:07 PM
hmm i think ya need Network Tools Kit v6.2
Network Tools Kit is application for testing the network and a computer in the network. Network tools kit includes ping, trace, trace plotter, lookup, whois, services, HTML, connections, IP configuration utilities, network scanner. Most of the tools work in multithreading. Network Tools Kit is a high performance and reliability program. Network Tools Kit was tested by the system administrators and on workstations and on high-performance servers.
u can find @ google scan100\scan500\scan1000(best tool ) and scan the port for thows things u want: terminl server 3389 ect... i hope i help u Qlimax
Zekk
Feb 17 2004, 04:54 PM
both those tools will work fine gl
dotcom
Feb 17 2004, 04:57 PM
I am wondering if OSVER would be helpful to you even though it is not a scanner, a well written batch script could do the same thing you desired I think...
QUOTE
OSVER
NAME OSVER
VERSION 6.0; 13Feb2004
AUTHOR Bill Stewart (bstewart@iname.com)
SYNOPSIS OSVER [-q] [-r] [-s] [-t]
AVAILABILITY Win32 - Windows 95, 98, Me, NT 4.0, 2000, 2003, etc.
DESCRIPTION OSVER can report several pieces of information about the currently running operating system. It operates on both the "Windows" platform (Windows 9x and Me), and the "Windows NT" platform (Windows NT 4.0 and later, including Windows XP and Windows Server 2003). It can return the following pieces of information:
* The operating system: Windows 95, 98, Me, NT 4.0, 2000, XP, or 2003 * On the Windows NT platform, the service pack level * On the Windows NT platform, the system's role: Workstation, server, or domain controller * On servers running Windows NT 4.0 SP6 or later, the Terminal Server mode: none, remote administration mode, or application server mode
PARAMETERS If you don't specify any parameters, OSVER simply prints the current operating system's name and quits; for example, "Windows 2000" or "Windows 98."
-q OSVER should run quietly (no visual output).
-r OSVER should return the system's role: Workstation, Server, or Domain Controller (NT platform only).
-s OSVER should return an exit code equal to the service pack level of the current OS (NT platform only).
-t OSVER should return the Terminal Server mode (NT 4.0 SP6 or later only).
EXIT STATUS If no parameters are specified, OSVER returns an errorlevel specifying the operating system:
0 = Unknown OS 4 = Windows NT 4.0 1 = Windows 95 5 = Windows 2000 2 = Windows 98 6 = Windows XP 3 = Windows Me 7 = Windows Server 2003
If -r is specified, OSVER returns an exit code corresponding to the system's role:
1 = Workstation 2 = Server (not domain controller) 3 = Server (domain controller) 99 = NT not detected, or an error occurred
If -s is specified, OSVER returns an errorlevel matching the OS's service pack (e.g. 0 = no service pack, or 2 = Service Pack 2). If run on an non-NT OS (Windows 95, 95 OSR2 or 2.5, 98, 98 SE, Me), OSVER returns an exit code of 99.
If you specify -t, OSVER returns Terminal Server status:
1 = Terminal Server not detected 2 = Terminal Server remote administration mode 3 = Terminal Server application server mode
Note: Windows XP systems always return 1, even if Remote Desktop is enabled. -t is only valid for servers.
digitalk2003
Feb 18 2004, 08:23 PM
From the initial post, it looks like he/she was looking for a scanner. Since this forum relates the windows based systems, I would say that there are really only two scanners on the market to consider. On is the GFI LanGuard Network Security Scanner (www.gfi.com - free) and Iris Retina Security Scanner (http://www.eeye.com/html/Products/Retina/ - free trial). Each of these scanners does the whole suite of scanning and enumeration. You can either specify a single computer or scan a range. Similarly, the Retina tool will allow similar functionality. The GFI scanner also can download updates to its security file so the latests security threats / vulns / exploits can be searched out.
..."truely a best in class tool!"
Ciau...
digitalk
o0oKARo0o
Feb 20 2004, 01:46 AM
sfind scan that way and is very powerfull but while using it your pc will slow down quite a lot..
sylver
Feb 21 2004, 11:54 AM
here the most famous scan tools also scan1000 hxxp://home.hccnet.nl/m3ssi4h.rul3z/