On 08-01 15:08, Henrik Engmark wrote: >> So I set up a new 6.3 with the sole purpose of nmapping, since my older >> OpenBSDs is coremapping on me with nmap. >>[....] >> On to the problem, I scan my local LAN with the following: >> nmap -Pn -A -v -v --send-eth -e em0 -stylesheet somestylesheet -oA >>/tmp/nmapout 192.168.1.0/24 This works fine, every time i try. Takes about >>an hour. However, when I try it on a remote routed net like so: >> nmap -Pn -A -v -v --send-eth -e em1 -stylesheet somestylesheet -oA >>/tmp/nmapout 10.20.30.192/26 >> >> nmap stops doing anything after a minute or so, it goes to 0% cpu and stays >> there. I waited at least 24 hours without any sign of life. >> top tells me nmap is WAIT/bpf after those first couple of minutes. I am not >> sure what that means exactly, but I figured maybe something with pf, so I >> disabled pf alltogether and tried again, with the same result.
> >I am curious what you learn as I have seen similar behavior. I've been >nmapping a printer on my local network, trying different things, and nmap >freezes for me after a short or long time. > >Strangely though, it seems to ~ "unfreeze" if I start another nmap instance, >probing the same address, in a separate terminal window. >Sometimes I have to kill and restart that other instance as it freezes too, >but this workaround has allowed me to continue at least. > >I am on 6.3 stable with latest syspatch. > Indeed starting several nmap sessions against the same subnet seems to make things a lot better. They somehow seem to keep eachother alive. This might just be me who is too inexperienced with tweaking nmap, but I don't run in to this issue on other platforms. Does anyone know where best to pursue this problem? The ports list, the maintainer directly or not at all perhaps?