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.




Network Security Pen-Test
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: local proxy udp 53

Subject: Re: local proxy udp 53
Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2006 10:13:27 -0800
Bind.  Configure as a caching server.

Perhaps I misunderstood the requirements.

--Aaron



On Tue, 14 Feb 2006 08:49:46 +0100
 "ops-security" <ops-security@edreams.com> wrote:
Hi Julian

DNS is a critical service and is very important the response time. A proxy that rewrites request to another request can worse the service response time.......
Anyway you can view a very great tool that can be usefulness for this and another works....as create a tunnel
between proxy and external provider by https and you do request to proxy in HTTP internally....for example...


http://www.delegate.org/delegate/
ftp://www.delegate.org/pub/DeleGate/Manual.htm#DNSCONF

If you want to do a test over proxy it seems good, but if you need a proxy to offers a service, I think that is better configure a dns cache.

I hope help you!

-----Mensaje original-----
De: Julian Totzek [mailto:julian.totzek@bristol.de]
Enviado el: lunes, 13 de febrero de 2006 21:53
Para: pen-test@securityfocus.com
Asunto: local proxy udp 53


Hi Group,

I wonder if there is a proxy which is configurable that it rewrites every request to special DNS request and is sending and receiving on port 53 UPD/TCP. Additionally there should be a server listening on port 53 UDP answering all requests the client is sending.

Background to this question is, I'm currently testing a wireless network which allows traffic on port 53 to every server. So why not tunnelling s this way! I don't want a tool where I need my own DNS server with authority of a domain and so!

Cheers -j


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Audit your website security with Acunetix Web Vulnerability Scanner:


Hackers are concentrating their efforts on attacking applications on your website. Up to 75% of cyber attacks are launched on shopping carts, forms, login pages, dynamic content etc. Firewalls, SSL and locked-down servers are futile against web application hacking. Check your website for vulnerabilities to SQL injection, Cross site scripting and other web attacks before hackers do! Download Trial at:

http://www.securityfocus.com/sponsor/pen-test_050831
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Audit your website security with Acunetix Web Vulnerability Scanner:


Hackers are concentrating their efforts on attacking applications on your website. Up to 75% of cyber attacks are launched on shopping carts, forms, login pages, dynamic content etc. Firewalls, SSL and locked-down servers are futile against web application hacking. Check your website for vulnerabilities to SQL injection, Cross site scripting and other web attacks before hackers do! Download Trial at:

http://www.securityfocus.com/sponsor/pen-test_050831
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>