Nmap Development mailing list archives
Re: Nmap as a network mapper
From: David Fifield <david () bamsoftware com>
Date: Tue, 16 Mar 2010 15:47:42 -0600
On Tue, Mar 16, 2010 at 10:42:22PM +0100, mjanmart () student fundp ac be wrote:
Make sure you use the --traceroute option or else the Topology view isn't as interesting. Even then, if you are scanning just one subnet the "map" will be only one-hop connections. Zenmap doesn't have a display to show "computer always up are in red, computer always down are in green," but what you can do is do several scans of the network over time, save the results in XML format, and then write a program to count how many times each host was up across all scans.As a matter of fact, I can use firewall and DHCP logs so I can know how long computers are up. What I wanted nmap to do is to give me some kind of "tree" I could use in a java program. I would then use my database to "colour" the nodes according to my will.
Then use the --traceroute option. If you use the XML output format, you can get the traces from it and your Java program can build the tree. Or, use the "Save Graphic" button in Zenmap, save to SVG, and then use an SVG editor like Inkscape to color the nodes. If you're only scanning a LAN, the traceroute output won't be interesting. If you want a different kind of map, like one showing the physical location of computers, Zenmap doesn't do that. David Fifield _______________________________________________ Sent through the nmap-dev mailing list http://cgi.insecure.org/mailman/listinfo/nmap-dev Archived at http://seclists.org/nmap-dev/
Current thread:
- Nmap as a network mapper mjanmart (Mar 14)
- Re: Nmap as a network mapper David Fifield (Mar 16)
- Message not available
- Re: Nmap as a network mapper David Fifield (Mar 16)
- Message not available
- Re: Nmap as a network mapper David Fifield (Mar 16)
- Re: Nmap as a network mapper Adrian (Mar 17)