Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-02-07 Thread Oystein Viggen
* [Anders Jackson] > Or introduce a new bug in the stack for nmap to recognise! :-) Netcraft don't nmap the webservers, though. They only analyze the packets they receive from a GET /, or more likely HEAD /. I got some suggestions from Richard Wendland at netcraft. If you want to do somethin

Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-02-06 Thread Anders Jackson
Oystein Viggen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > * [Marcus Brinkmann] > > Yes, version 2.2.12. We don't ever see bogus things in the upper > > layer, so I guess it might be difficult to tell the difference. > > Maybe there are some subtle differences in the scheduling/timing > > of requests, but t

Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-01-30 Thread Oystein Viggen
* [Marcus Brinkmann] > Yes, version 2.2.12. We don't ever see bogus things in the upper layer, so > I guess it might be difficult to tell the difference. Maybe there are some > subtle differences in the scheduling/timing of requests, but that might be > very hard to figure out if it exists even

Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-01-30 Thread Marcus Brinkmann
On Wed, Jan 30, 2002 at 12:07:10PM +0100, Kenneth Peiruza wrote: > Is the HURD's IP Stack a port of the Linux's stack? If so, HURD would be > detected as that Leenucks version :/ Yes, version 2.2.12. We don't ever see bogus things in the upper layer, so I guess it might be difficult to tell the

Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-01-30 Thread Kenneth Peiruza
TCP/IP fingerprinting it's based upon the server's response in front of strange IP packets or buggy responses. If you send an erroneous packet, the server's response varies from OS to OS. If the packet is right it should be answered only in one way, so, detecting bugs makes fingerprinting easie

Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-01-24 Thread Patrick Strasser
Oystein Viggen wrote: * [Sean Neakums] AFAIR, they use the "Server:" header in the HTTP response to determine the OS of the server, rather than fingerprinting the TCP/IP stack. But I could be wrong. They use something they call "passive tcp fingerprinting". I don't know exactly what that implie

Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-01-18 Thread Oystein Viggen
* [Sean Neakums] > AFAIR, they use the "Server:" header in the HTTP response to determine > the OS of the server, rather than fingerprinting the TCP/IP stack. > But I could be wrong. They use something they call "passive tcp fingerprinting". I don't know exactly what that implies. The Server h

Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-01-18 Thread Sean Neakums
begin Marcus Brinkmann quotation: [netcraft] > It's questionable if they can seperate the Linux 2.2 TCP/IP stack from our > pfinet, which uses the same code. But there is not enough information on > their site to figure it out. Also, I don't know how they find out the > uptime, I'd like to know

Re: Any webservers out there?

2002-01-18 Thread Marcus Brinkmann
On Fri, Jan 18, 2002 at 10:12:29PM +0100, Oystein Viggen wrote: > Hi > > Does anybody have or know of a web server running the GNU Hurd with a > direct connection to the internet? The reason I'm asking is that if I > can provide the address of such a server, the netcraft guys might add > the Hurd

Any webservers out there?

2002-01-18 Thread Oystein Viggen
Hi Does anybody have or know of a web server running the GNU Hurd with a direct connection to the internet? The reason I'm asking is that if I can provide the address of such a server, the netcraft guys might add the Hurd to their OS detection. I think that would be cool :) Oystein -- If it