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Netcat 2.0 ========== /\_/\ / 0 0 \ Netcat is a simple Unix utility which reads and writes data ====v==== across network connections, using TCP or UDP protocol. \ W / It is designed to be a reliable "back-end" tool that can | | _ be used directly or easily driven by other programs and / ___ \ / scripts. At the same time, it is a feature-rich network / / \ \ | debugging and exploration tool, since it can create almost (((-----)))-' any kind of connection you would need and has several / interesting built-in capabilities. Netcat, or "nc" as the ( ___ actual program is named, should have been supplied long ago \__.=|___E as another one of those cryptic but standard Unix tools. / Some of netcat's major features are: Outbound or inbound connections, TCP or UDP, to or from any ports Full DNS forward/reverse checking, with appropriate warnings Ability to use any local source port Ability to use any locally-configured network source address Built-in port-scanning capabilities, with randomizer Can read command line arguments from standard input Slow-send mode, one line every N seconds Hex dump of transmitted and received data Ability to let another program service established connections Optional telnet-options responder A very short list of potential uses: Script backends Scanning ports and inventorying services, automated probes Backup handlers File transfers Server testing, simulation, debugging, and hijacking Firewall testing Proxy gatewaying Network performance testing Address spoofing tests Protecting X servers 1001 other uses you'll likely come up with Changes between the 1.10 release and release 2.00: Autoconfiscation Source code easier to read Removed DNS checking, too complicated and interacted badly with IPv6 Removed source-routing, nobody enables it anymore :-) Support for IPv6 Multi-line input for port scanning Quit-upon-end-of-input Changes between the 1.00 release and release 1.10: Better portability -- updated generic.h and Makefile [thanx folks!] Indication of local-end interface address on inbound connections That's *Dave* Borman's telnet, not Paul Borman... Better indication of DNS errors Total byte counts printed if -v -v is used A bunch of front-end driver companion programs and scripts Better handling of stdin arguments-plus-data Hex-dump feature Telnet responder Program exec works inbound or outbound now Netcat and the associated package was written by *Hobbit* as a product of Avian Research, and the last version he released is available in full source form with no restrictions save an obligation to give credit where due. Get it via anonymous FTP at avian.org:/src/hacks/nc110.tgz which is a gzipped tar file and not to be confused with its version 1.00 precursor, nc100.tgz. Other distribution formats can be accomodated upon request. Netcat is also mirrored at the following [faster] sites: zippy.telcom.arizona.edu:/pub/mirrors/avian.org/hacks/nc110.tgz ftp.sterling.com:/mirrors/avian.org/src/hacks/nc110.tgz coast.cs.purdue.edu:/pub/tools/unix/netcat/nc110.tgz ftp.rge.com:/pub/security/coast/mirrors/avian.org/netcat/nc110.tgz This release is not an attempt to steal *Hobbit*'s merits as Netcat's author, but rather to keep an extraordinarily useful tool in pace with the changes in the Internet, and to make an extraordinarily instructive piece of code even more so. Note that there is another renewed version of Netcat which is included in OpenBSD. These two are not related; this version does keep most of the original source code (albeit with renamed variables/functions and updated/edited comments), while OpenBSD's is said to be a complete rewrite. OpenBSD's version lacks some features (hexdump, line-by-line, multiplexing) but has some more (AF_UNIX sockets and SOCKS support).
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Some experiments I made to learn IPv6 sockets
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