Hi,
a common way of handling many cleartext protocols is
sending "QUIT\n" and grabbing the output.
To solve your question i'd say we need a DB of every
protocol in existance and what does it "likes" to recive
in a packet or two- in order to reply with its name/version.
Same goes for UDP, BTW.
Best Regards,
Yonatan Bokovza
IT Security Consultant
Xpert Systems
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Erik Norman [mailto:erik.norman_at_ccnox.com]
> Sent: Monday, July 02, 2001 13:14
> To: pen test
> Subject: Port identification methodology
>
>
> Hi all,
>
> I have a question regarding methodology while performing a
> PT. It concerns identifying programs/services.
>
> Imagine a full nmap scan has been performed. A handfull
> of open ports was found on a particular server. The
> usual 25, 53, 80 etc are identified, but one or two ports
> stand out from the crowd. Looking in various 'common ports'
> files does not provide a hint what the port is used for.
>
> Connecting with telnet yields no text, and a tcpdump
> dump does not provide any text (in clear anyway).
>
>
> Now what!???
>
> How should one approach this?
>
>
> /Erik
>
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Received on Jul 03 2001