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Scanning

Scanning. This presentation is an amalgam of presentations by Mark Michael, Randy Marchany and Ed Skoudis. I have edited and added material. Dr. Stephen C. Hayne. The Source!. “Network Scanning Techniques – Understanding how it is done” Author: Ofir Arkin. SCANNER. SCANNER.

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Scanning

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  1. Scanning This presentation is an amalgam of presentations by Mark Michael, Randy Marchany and Ed Skoudis. I have edited and added material. Dr. Stephen C. Hayne

  2. The Source! • “Network Scanning Techniques – Understanding how it is done” • Author: Ofir Arkin

  3. SCANNER SCANNER NETWORK SCANNING Web Server Domain Controller Internal Threats External Threats Internet Gateway Fire wall Desktops Mail Server Database Server

  4. Intro to Intelligence Gathering Techniques • 3 Major Steps • Foot Printing • Scanning • Enumeration • Similar to Military • Gather information on the target • Analyze weaknesses • Construct and launch attack

  5. Footprinting • Construct a profile of the target site • Adminstrative, technical & billing contacts from the ARIN database (whois utility) • IP Address range • DNS Servers • Mail Servers • Firewalls

  6. Scanning • Art of detecting which systems are alive and reachable on the Internet • What services do they offer? • TCP/UDP running on each system • System architecture (Unix, Windows, etc.) • OS version and patch levels

  7. Enumeration • The process of extracting valid accounts or exported resource names from systems • Uses active connections to systems and queries, therefore, more intrusive than footprinting or scanning • OS specific • Gathers userid, group names, system banners, routing tables, SNMP info

  8. Intro to Scanning • What are scanners doing? • What do they look like(signature)? • How do they operate in order to accomplish their tasks? • What kind of information is collected? • How serious is the threat?

  9. Scanning: Ping Sweeps • ICMP Echo Requests(ICMP Type 8) to the target and wait for ICMP Echo Reply (ICMP Type 0) • Unix Tools • Fping, gping, nmap • Windows • Ping, pinger from Rhino9 (this is a extremely fast scanner that sends multiple ICMP echo requests concurrently • Defense: block ICMP echo requests

  10. Scanning: Broadcast ICMP • Send ICMP Echo Request to broadcast address on the subnets • Unix boxes will answer requests directed to the network so we can identify the Unix boxes using this technique • Windows boxes won’t respond

  11. Scanning: Non-ECHO ICMP • Use non-ECHO ICMP protocols to bypass the ‘block ICMP echo’ filters • ICMP type 13 (TIMESTAMP) will query a system for the current time • ICMP type 17 (Address Mask Request) is used by diskless systems to obtain its subnet mask at boot time. • Tools: icmpush, icmpquery

  12. Scanning: TCP Sweeps • TCP SYN or TCP ACK packets sent to the target network • telnet, FTP, HTTP, SMTP are the common ports scanned • Firewalls can spoof the response so this isn’t a reliable scanning method • Tools: nmap, hping (also allows packet fragments to be sent)

  13. Scanning: UDP Sweeps • Relies on the ICMP PORT UNREACHABLE message which is sent by a closed UDP port • If not received, the port is assumed to be open • Not reliable because: • Routers can drop UDP packets • Many UDP services don’t respond correctly • Firewalls usually drop UDP packets except DNS

  14. Scanning: Port Scanning • Goal: determine what services are running or in a LISTENING state • The services may suffer from vulnerabilities • A number of port scan techniques

  15. Port Scanning • TCP Connect() scan • SYN packet sent to target port • If SYN/ACK is received, port is active • If RST/ACK is received, port is dead • Finish the 3-way sequence by sending an ACK then terminate the connection • Easily detected by looking at syslogs for connection or error messages

  16. Port Scanning • TCP Half Open Scan (SYN Scan) • Send the SYN packet to the target • If SYN/ACK received, the port is active • If RST/ACK received, the port is dead • We do NOT complete the connection

  17. Advanced Port Scanning • Stealth Scanning techniques • Intentionally violate the 3-way handshake • SYN/ACK scan • FIN scan • XMAS scan • NULL scan • RFC 793 states that closed ports must reply with a RST packet to our probe

  18. Stealth Scanning • SYN/ACK scan • Send SYN/ACK to target (step 2 of the 3 way handshake) • TCP should respond with RST because it figures this is a mistake • We get a response which tells us the port is closed • Open ports do not send anything

  19. Stealth Scanning • FIN scan • Send a FIN to the target • Wait for reply • Open ports will respond • XMAS scan • Send TCP packet with all TCP flags – URG, ACK, PSH, RST, SYN, FIN set

  20. Stealth Scanning • Null Scanning • Send TCP packet that turns off all flags • The target should send a RST to all closed ports • RFC 793 says this should work for every TCP implementation • Windows, CISCO, BSDI, HP/UX, MVS, Irix are broken. They send RST to open ports as well. • If FIN/NULL/XMAS scans show closed ports then SYN scan them to find open ports. If they match, you have one of the above systems.

  21. Inverse Mapping • Gather info about hosts or networks which aren’t there • We make assumptions about what is there • RESET Scan • Routers will give information on a net even if the question doesn’t make sense • Routers will report non-existent addresses • No HOST UNREACHABLE or TIME EXCEEDED means the IP exists

  22. Inverse Mapping • Proxy Scanning/FTP Bounce Scanning • Attacker.com connects to FTP server which has a world writable directory and opens a control connection • Attacker can then ask the FTP server to initiate an active server data xfer process to send a file anywhere on the net. Hobbit’s paper has more details • Use to scan behind a firewall

  23. Port Scanning Techniques • TCP Reverse Ident Scanning • Ident protocol (RFC 1413) determines the owner of a TCP connection by communicating on port 113 • Full TCP connection to the host • Slow scan • Defeats IDS that look for lots of connection in a short period of time. • Typical scan rate: 2 ports/day

  24. Port Scanning Techniques • Fragmentation Scanning • All IP packets can be fragmented • RFC 791 defines the min/max fragment size • 8 octets (min frag size) are enough to contain the src/dst port numbers • This forces the TCP flags field into the second fragment

  25. Port Scanning Techniques • Fragmentation Scanning • Some filters/IDS may incorrectly reassemble or completely miss portions of the scan • Filters that queue all IP fragments can handle this method • Fixed in most vendor’s products

  26. Port Scanning Techniques • Decoy Scanning • The target net thinks the hosts you specify as decoys (bots) are scanning them also • Makes it impossible to determine who the real scanner is • Signature: TTL field usually contains the same number • Nmap bypasses this error • test by traceroute’ing the source IP

  27. Port Scanning Techniques • Coordinated Scans • Multiple IP’s used in the scan • Each one of them probes specific ports in a different time period, different scan rate • Detection depends on the time period the probes take place • Coordinated scans are the most discrete way of probing a target

  28. Operating System Detection • TCP/IP/Stack Fingerprinting • Uses distinct variation in TCP stack implementation to get the OS type • Send specific TCP packets to target and observe the response • Varies with vendor because they interpret the RFC differently when they wrote their TCP stacks

  29. Operating System Detection • FIN packet sent to open port. RFC 793 says “don’t respond to the FIN”. • Many stacks will respond with a RST. Windows, BSDI, CISCO, HPUX, MVS, Irix do this.

  30. Firewalking • A techniqueused to gather information about a remote network protected by a firewall. • 2 purposes • Determine the ACL of a FW by mapping open ports on the FW. • If FW drops ICMP ECHO request/reply, this technique is effective

  31. Firewalking • Uses traceroute style packet filtering to determine whether the packet passes through the FW. • Need 2 pieces of info • IP of last known gateway BEFORE the FW. This is our waypoint. • IP of host located behind the firewall.This is used as a destination to direct packet flow.

  32. Firewalking • If we traceroute a host behind the FW and get blocked by the ACL, we find the FW. • We then try to traceroute same host using different transport protocol (TCP, UDP, ICMP). If we get a response, 2 possible conclusions: • This particular traffic is allowed by the FW. • We know a host exists behind the FW. • Trying to pass packets on all ports/protocols through the FW, monitor the response will produce the ACL. Use slow scan to avoid detection! Send packets to all hosts inside the net.

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