Ethical Hacking Learn to find vulnerabilities before the bad guys do! Gain real world hands on hacking experience in our state of the art hacking lab. Course designed and taught by expert instructors with years of penetration testing experience. 12 student maximum in every class. Certification attempt included in every package. | Computer Forensics Training at InfoSec Institute Gain the in-demand skills of a certified computer examiner, learn to recover trace data left behind by fraud, theft, and cybercrime perpetrators. Discover the source of computer crime and abuse at your organization so that it never happens again. All of our class sizes are guaranteed to be 12 students or less to facilitate one-on-one interaction with one of our expert instructors. |

| Subject: | Re: scanning redirect |
|---|---|
| Date: | Wed, 19 Oct 2005 10:47:29 +0200 |
On Wed Oct 19 2005 at 10:16, Max Andersen wrote:
Is there a way to scan a local netcat process or something, so I directly can see what data is sent to a host?
I don't think this is the easiest way to reach your goal.
I thought about running a scan and output the communication to a file, just to document what data makes service crash.
I'd rather use a tool like tcpflow to capture and split the trafic. See http://www.circlemud.org/~jelson/software/tcpflow/ Or maybe ethereal, it can follow TCP flows too. _______________________________________________ Nessus mailing list Nessus@list.nessus.org http://mail.nessus.org/mailman/listinfo/nessus
| <Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
|---|---|---|
| ||
| Previous by Date: | Re: scanning redirect, Tobias Glemser |
|---|---|
| Next by Date: | Re: scanning redirect, Max Andersen |
| Previous by Thread: | Re: scanning redirect, Max Andersen |
| Next by Thread: | Re: scanning redirect, George A. Theall |
| Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |