Re: nmap crashes -current
* Sigh * I should have looked there first. Sorry!! On 2/22/07, Jasper Lievisse Adriaanse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On Thu, Feb 22, 2007 at 12:59:14PM -0500, Seth Jackson wrote: > Hi, > > For some reason the -f switch crashes the system only if you use the > loopback IP or the IP assigned to your box. > The -f switch works fine if you use it on a IP besides your own (tried > it against a server I have). > > # nmap -f 127.0.0.1 > > (crashes) > (then drops to the kernel debugger I think) > I did: > >boot reboot > > # nmap -f 192.x.x.x > > (same thing but with a different error) > >boot reboot > > By this point I was wondering if the -f switch worked at all > So: > > # nmap -f 192.x.x.x (my server IP) > > blah blah blah. > > (works just fine) > > > Can someone test this out and see if it works for them? this is a known issue, please see pr #5290 for more details. cheers, jasper -- ``This statement is false'' NedBSD: http://nedbsd.eu
Re: nmap crashes -current
On Thu, Feb 22, 2007 at 12:59:14PM -0500, Seth Jackson wrote: > Hi, > > For some reason the -f switch crashes the system only if you use the > loopback IP or the IP assigned to your box. > The -f switch works fine if you use it on a IP besides your own (tried > it against a server I have). > > # nmap -f 127.0.0.1 > > (crashes) > (then drops to the kernel debugger I think) > I did: > >boot reboot > > # nmap -f 192.x.x.x > > (same thing but with a different error) > >boot reboot > > By this point I was wondering if the -f switch worked at all > So: > > # nmap -f 192.x.x.x (my server IP) > > blah blah blah. > > (works just fine) > > > Can someone test this out and see if it works for them? this is a known issue, please see pr #5290 for more details. cheers, jasper -- ``This statement is false'' NedBSD: http://nedbsd.eu
nmap crashes -current
Hi, For some reason the -f switch crashes the system only if you use the loopback IP or the IP assigned to your box. The -f switch works fine if you use it on a IP besides your own (tried it against a server I have). # nmap -f 127.0.0.1 (crashes) (then drops to the kernel debugger I think) I did: boot reboot # nmap -f 192.x.x.x (same thing but with a different error) boot reboot By this point I was wondering if the -f switch worked at all So: # nmap -f 192.x.x.x (my server IP) blah blah blah. (works just fine) Can someone test this out and see if it works for them?