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ICMPInfo 0.2

ICMPInfo 0.2


ICMPInfo is a tool that uses ICMP type 13 and 17 to retrieve the current time of a remote host and its netmask. more>>
ICMPInfo is a tool that uses ICMP type 13 and 17 to retrieve the current time of a remote host and its netmask.

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Added: 2006-04-18 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1284 downloads
Icmpenum 1.0

Icmpenum 1.0


Icmpenum sends ICMP traffic for host enumeration. more>>
Host enumeration is the act of determining the IP address of potential targets on a network. This can be done in both layer 2 and layer 3. Icmpenum project can send ICMP traffic for such enumeration.

The ICMP packets supported are: Echo, Timestamp, Information and Netmask. Furthermore, it supports spoofing and promiscuous listening for reply packets. Icmpenum is great for enumerating networks which allow ICMP traffic.
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Added: 2007-05-08 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
548 downloads
ICMPScan 1.1

ICMPScan 1.1


ICMPScan scans the specified address, or addresses, for ICMP responses. more>>
ICMPScan scans the specified address, or addresses, for ICMP responses.

Usage:

icmpscan [ -EPTSNMAIRcvbn ] [ -A address ] [ -f filename ] [ -i interface ] [ -r retries ] [ -t timeout ] target [...]

Options:

-i, --interface
Listen on the specified interface. If unspecified, icmpscan will examine the routing table and select the most appropriate interface for each target address.
-c, --promisc
Put in interface into promiscuous mode. As this option increases the load on the system in general, it should only be used if spoofing of source packets address is enabled with the "-A" option.
-A, --address
Specify the source IP address of generated packets.
-t, --timeout
Specify the timeout, in milli-seconds, before retrying.
-r, --retries
Specify the number of attempts to elicit a particular ICMP response.
-f, --file
Read target list from the specified file.
-E, -P, --echo, --ping
Check of ICMP Echo responses.
-T, -S, --timestamp
Check for ICMP Timestamp responses.
-N, -M, --netmask
Check for ICMP Netmask responses.
-I, --info
Check for ICMP Info responses.
-R, --router
Check for ICMP Router Solicitation responses.
-v, --verbose
Increase the output verbosity.
-B, --debug

Target Specification

The simplest case is listing single hostnames or IP addresses on the command line. If you want to scan a subnet of IP addresses, you can append /mask to the hostname or IP address. mask must be between 0 (scan the whole Internet) and 32 (scan the single host specified). Use /24 to scan a class "C" address and /16 for a class "B". There is also a more powerful notation which lets you specify an IP address using lists/ranges for each element. Thus you can scan the whole class "B" network 192.168.*.* by specifying "192.168.*.*" or "192.168.0-255.0-255" or even "192.168.1-50,51-255.1,2,3,4,5-255". And of course you can use the mask notation: "192.168.0.0/16". These are all equivalent. If you use asterisks ("*"), remember that most shells require you to escape them with back slashes or protect them with quotes.

Examples:

The following example checks the first 16 addresses in the 192.168.1.0/24 netblock for all ICMP responses. The scan speed is increased by lowering the timeout value and setting the number of retries to 1:

> icmpscan -t 500 -r 1 192.168.1.0-16
192.168.1.0: Echo (From 192.168.1.17!)
192.168.1.0: Address Mask [255.255.255.0] (From 192.168.1.17!)
192.168.1.7: Echo
192.168.1.7: Timestamp [0x03ab2db0, 0x02d4c507, 0x02d4c507]
192.168.1.7: Address Mask [255.255.255.0]
192.168.1.8: Echo
192.168.1.8: Address Mask [255.255.255.0]
To display failed probes, increase the output verbosity:

> icmpscan -v 192.168.1.1
192.168.1.1: -- No response to Echo request --
192.168.1.1: -- No response to Timestamp request --
192.168.1.1: -- No response to Netmask request --
192.168.1.1: -- No response to Info request --
192.168.1.1: -- No response to Router Solicitation request --
Individual ICMP types can be checked for by listing their corresponding flags on the command line:

> icmpscan -v --echo --netmask 192.168.1.7
192.168.1.7: Echo
192.168.1.7: Address Mask [255.255.255.0]

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Added: 2007-08-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
794 downloads
Icmpenun 1.2

Icmpenun 1.2


Icmpenum sends ICMP traffic to potential targets on a network. more>>
Icmpenum sends ICMP traffic to potential targets on a network.
Introduction:
Host enumeration is the act of determining the IP address of potential targets on a network. This can be done in both layer 2 and layer 3. Icmpenum sends ICMP traffic for such enumeration. The ICMP packets supported are: Echo, Timestamp, Information and Netmask. Furthermore, it supports spoofing and promiscuous listening for reply packets. Icmpenum is great for enumerating networks which allow ICMP traffic.
Installation:
1. Install the latest libpcap (libpcap 0.4, ftp://ftp.ee.lbl.gov/libpcap.tar.Z).
2. Install the latest Libnet (http://www.packetfactory.net/libnet/).
3. Compile icmpenum as follows:
gcc `libnet-config --defines` -o icmpenum icmpenum.c -lnet -lpcap
4. Copy icmpenum to your fave directory and (as root) start enumerating.
Usage:
Running icmpenum -h gives you the following screen:
# ./icmpenum -h
USAGE: ./icmpenum [opts] [-c class C] [-d dev] [-i 1-3] [-s src] [-t sec] hosts
opts are h n p r v
-h this help screen
-n no sending of packets
-p promiscuous receive mode
-r receiving packets only (no
-v verbose
-c class C in x.x.x.0 form
-i icmp type to send/receive, types include the following:
1 echo/echo reply (default)
2 timestamp request/reply
3 info request/reply
-d device to grab local IP or sniff from, default is eth0
-s spoofed source address
-t time in seconds to wait for all replies (default 5)
host(s) are target hosts (ignored if using -c)
Examples:
Here are some example uses of icmpenum to enumerate hosts.
Example 1:
[Host1]# icmpenum 192.168.1.1 192.168.1.2
This will use the default of Echo packets to try and determine if
192.168.1.1 and 192.168.1.2 are up and running.
Example 2:
[Host1]# icmpenum -i 2 -v 192.168.100.100 192.168.100.200
This will enumerate the two hosts using Timestamp packets in
verbose mode.
Example 3:
[Host1]# icmpenum -i 3 -s 10.10.10.10 -p -v 192.168.1.1 192.168.1.2
This will enumerate hosts 192.168.1.1 and 192.168.1.2 using
Information packets with a spoofed address of 10.10.10.10, since our real address is 10.10.10.11 we use the -p option to listen for the replies.
Here are some more advanced uses of icmpenum.
Example 4:
Assuming Host1 is 6.6.6.6 and Host2 is 7.7.7.7, and that the network 1.1.1.0 has potential hosts to enumerate, we use the following two entries to enumerate with Information packets:
[Host2]# icmpenum -r -t 30 -i 3 -c 1.1.1.0
[Host1]# icmpenum -s 7.7.7.7 -i 3 -c 1.1.1.0
Host2 starts first in receive mode with a timeout of 30 seconds and starts listening for Information packets from the 1.1.1.0 network. Then Host1 starts sending spoofed packets with Host2 as the source address, sending exactly what Host2 is listening for. It should be noted that this is hardly stealthy, as logs at 1.1.1s site could have 7.7.7.7s address all over them, but the -r function is good for testing.
Example 5:
Assuming Host1 is 6.6.6.6 and Host2 is 7.7.7.7, and that Host2 can sniff traffic between 1.1.1.0 and 2.2.2.0, we use the following entries to enumerate the 1.1.1.0 network:
[Host2]# icmpenum -t 20 -n -p -i 2 -c 1.1.1.0
[Host1]# icmpenum -s 2.2.2.2 -i 2 -c 1.1.1.0
Host2 starts first with a timeout of 20 seconds, makes sure not to send the packets with the -n option, listens promiscuously for Timestamp packets from the 1.1.1.0 network. Host1 sends the exact packets Host2 is listening for with a 2.2.2.2 spoofed source address. Yes, one could simply replace the -n option in Host2s command line with -s 2.2.2.2 and do the same thing from one workstation, but were demonstrating a distributed concept.
Enhancements:
- I have added ICMP MASK (type 17 and 18) requests and replys. Simply use the -i 4 option on the command line, such as; icmpenum -i 4 -c 1.2.3.1 (sends ICMP MASK requests to the Class C range 1.2.3.1/24 and reports any system as.
- Due to the use of some older versions of Libnet and Libpcap. I can see problems for some people compiling this and hence have placed two statically linked versions within the tarball
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Added: 2007-04-05 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
556 downloads
ICMP-Chat 0.6

ICMP-Chat 0.6


ICMP-Chat is a simple console-based chat that uses ICMP packets for communication. more>>
ICMP-Chat is a simple console-based chat that uses ICMP packets for communication. All the data is encrypted with Rijndael-256 algorithm.
Installation:
Type: make && make install
For solaris type: make solaris && make install
Usage:
Usage: icmpchat [OPTIONS] < host > < nick >
< host > = Host to chat with
< nick > = Your nickname
OPTIONS:
-t < type > = specify icmp type (default ECHO_REPLY)
Example: icmpchat 192.168.1.2 foo
ICMP codes:
[0] Echo Reply
[5] Redirect
[8] Echo Request
[9] Router advertisement
[10] Router solicitation
[13] Timestamp request
[14] Timestamp reply
[15] Information request
[16] Information reply
[17] Adressmask request
[18] Adressmask reply
Enhancements:
- Rewrote from scratch
- Implemented optimized rijndael algorithm
- Implemented sha256 for password hashing
- Implemented ncurses frontend (again)
- Fixed getuid problem so that setting suid flag works now (thanks John)
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Added: 2006-06-16 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
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IRMP3 0.5.6

IRMP3 0.5.6


IRMP3 is a multimedia audio jukebox for Linux. more>>
IRMP3 is a multimedia audio jukebox for Linux. IRMP3s strength is that it easily integrates into home, car, and mobile environments (where a keyboard/screen interface may not always be available).
IRMP3 relies on external programs but this is depending on what you want to do.
Main features:
- Plays mp3, Ogg, FLAC, CD-ROM, FM radio, as well as shoutcast http streams.
- Controllable with IR remote controls and external keypads.
- Display status (song name, time, volume, etc) on LCD displays.
- Repeat single, repeat all, and shuffle functions.
- Sleep timer with volume fadeout.
- Mixer support for volume, balance, bass, and treble settings.
- Support for network-based control and status monitoring.
- Playlist loadable from file or by recursively scanning dirs.
- Powerful configuration for easy customization.
- Flexible, modularized source allows easy implementation of new functions to developers.
Enhancements:
- src/irmp3d/mod_mpg123.C : cut n paste bug corrected
- doc/INSTALL : quick fixes to install documentation so its not too
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Added: 2006-07-25 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
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icpld 1.1.3

icpld 1.1.3


icpld is a tool to log the uptime of your network connection. more>>
ICPLD is a connection monitor which allows you to keep track of your network connection perfomance. It will log each occasion of broken networking.

icpld runs as a background process, and sends ICMP requests to an ip of your choice. When a reply isnt received within proper amount of time, it will consider the connection as unavailable and put a stamp in its log.

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Added: 2006-04-26 License: BSD License Price:
1276 downloads
NMP 0.4

NMP 0.4


NMP is a music module player. more>>
NMP is a music module player. It is able to play 18 module formats. NMP is a graphic mode player and uses the Allegro library for the user interface, and the mikmod library as sound playing engine.
Main features:
- 16/8 bit
- Mono/Stereo
- Reverse stereo
- Surround
- Interpolation
- High/Low mixing quality
- Mixing frequency (MP only)
- Module loop
- Module fadeout
- BPM +/-
- SPEED +/-
- TEMPO +/-
- REVERB +/-
- STEREO +/-
- MODULE VOLUME +/-
- GENERAL VOLUME +/-
- MIXER VOLUME +/- (MP only)
- TREBLE +/- (MP only)
- BASS +/- (MP only)
- Replay pattern
- Next pattern
- Previous pattern
- Restart module
- Pause module
- Stop module
- Next module (playlist)
- Previous module (playlist)
- Channel mute/unmute
- 669 (669 and Extended-669)
- AMF (DMP Advanced Module Format)
- DSM (DSIK internal module format)
- FAR (Farandole Composer)
- GDM (General DigiMusic)
- IMF (Imago Orpheus)
- MED (Amiga MED modules)
- M15 (Soundtracker 15-instrument)
- MOD (Standard 31-instrument Module)
- MTM (Multi-Tracker Module)
- OKT (Amiga Oktalyzer)
- STM (ScreamTracker 2)
- S3M (ScreamTracker 3)
- STX (STMIK 0.2)
- ULT (UltraTracker)
- UNI (MikMod and APlayer internal)
- IT (Impulse Tracker)
- XM (FastTracker 2)
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Added: 2006-07-21 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
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Shell over ICMP 0.5

Shell over ICMP 0.5


Shell over ICMP project allows a user to connect to a remote shell daemon, by using ICMP protocol instead of classical TCP. more>>
Shell over ICMP consists of two free and open source applications: one server and one client. Shell over ICMP project allows a user to connect to a remote shell daemon, by using ICMP protocol instead of classical TCP.
Entirely written in Python, soicmp is a working proof-of-concept to demonstrate that data can be transmitted across a network by hiding it in traffic that normally does not contain payloads.
How does it work?
The soicmp server is a daemon that must be started on the remote server. When the server receives a request from the client it looks into the packets payload. The payload must respect certain protocol rules. In detail the client must specify:
command
communication mode (echo|echo/reply)
authentication (y|n)
This is an example of a correct payload string sent by client to server:
$CMD ls -a $MODE echo/reply $PWD root2005 $END
If the payload matches with the server protocol specification then it will pipe the command to "/bin/sh" or "cmd.exe" and execute it. The server then reads the result from the pipe and sends it back to the client that will print it to stdout.
Moreover every client will send ICMP packets having id equal to the clients current process ID and will accept only ICMP replies having the same id value. This prevents output to be printed by other client instances running on the same workstation (this argument is also treated in the FAQs section).
Main features:
- Platform independent.
- Possibility to run soicmp daemon on multiple ethernet interfaces simultaneously handling multiple client connections.
- Possibility to specify the buffer size of outgoing packets.
- Client side source IP address spoofing.
- Remote client case-sensitive (plain texted) authentication.
- Possibility to select two communication types:
- One based on encapsulating command output in unique "one way" ICMP_ECHOREPLY (type 0) packets sent by server to client (see fig. 1).
- Another one that guarantees the correct packets delivering by using the request/response nature of ECHO and ECHOREPLY ICMP packet types (see fig.2)
- No listening sockets are listed by netstat or similar programs.
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Added: 2006-11-07 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
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NetPacket::ICMP 0.04

NetPacket::ICMP 0.04


NetPacket::ICMP is a Perl module to assemble and disassemble ICMP (Internet Control Message Protocol) packets. more>>
NetPacket::ICMP is a Perl module to assemble and disassemble ICMP (Internet Control Message Protocol) packets.

SYNOPSIS

use NetPacket::ICMP;

$icmp_obj = NetPacket::ICMP->decode($raw_pkt);
$icmp_pkt = NetPacket::ICMP->encode();
$icmp_data = NetPacket::ICMP::strip($raw_pkt);

NetPacket::ICMP provides a set of routines for assembling and disassembling packets using ICMP (Internet Control Message Protocol).

Methods

NetPacket::ICMP->decode([RAW PACKET])
Decode the raw packet data given and return an object containing instance data. This method will quite happily decode garbage input. It is the responsibility of the programmer to ensure valid packet data is passed to this method.

NetPacket::ICMP->encode()
Return an ICMP packet encoded with the instance data specified.

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Added: 2007-02-27 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
970 downloads
Autocomp 0.0.5

Autocomp 0.0.5


Autocomp is an accompaniment generator written in Perl and Csound. more>>
Autocomp is an accompaniment generator written in Perl and Csound.

It takes as input a text file containing chord changes, plus time signature and bpm information, and outputs a Csound .sco file containing a simple arrangement of those changes.

A sample Csound .orc file containing a bass instrument, a selection of keyboard instruments, and a small sample-based drumkit is provided.

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Added: 2006-09-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1146 downloads
ICMP Hostname Tools for Linux 0.3

ICMP Hostname Tools for Linux 0.3


The ICMP Hostname Tools for Linux include a responder daemon, a lookup tool, and a nameswitch module. more>>
The ICMP Hostname Tools for Linux include a responder daemon, a lookup tool, and a nameswitch module to handle ICMP host name functions.

The NSS module caches all requests (including failures) and honors the TTL value sent by the responding host. It uses a configuration file called /etc/nss-icmp.conf, which controls different aspects of its operation:

* timeout – Sets the timeout in milliseconds for ICMP host name queries, by passing the -t option to idnlookup.
* nocache – Disables the cache.
* ttlnotfound – Sets the TTL for not-found cache entries is seconds. The default is 5 minutes.

Both icmpdnd and idnlookup need to run as root, due to the fact that they use ICMP. Thus, idnlookup needs be installed SUID root.
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Added: 2005-06-28 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
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pyMap 0.1

pyMap 0.1


pyMap consists in a port scanner written in Python. more>>
pyMap consists in a port scanner written in Python.

pyMap is a port scanner capable of ICMP, SYN, and FIN scans. It has been found to work on Windows XP and numerous Linux distributions.

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Added: 2007-04-26 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
918 downloads
ISIC 0.06

ISIC 0.06


ISIC is a suite of utilities to exercise the stability of an IP Stack and its component stacks (TCP, UDP, ICMP et. al.). more>>
ISIC is a suite of utilities to exercise the stability of an IP Stack and its component stacks (TCP, UDP, ICMP et. al.). It generates piles of pseudo random packets of the target protocol.

The packets be given tendancies to conform to. Ie 50% of the packets generated can have IP Options. 25% of the packets can be IP fragments... But the percentages are arbitrary and most of the packet fields have a configurable tendancy.

The packets are then sent against the target machine to either penetrate its firewall rules or find bugs in the IP stack.

It also contains a utility generate raw ether frames to examine hardware implementations.

Other novel uses people have found for ISIC include IDS testing, stack fingerprinting, breaking sniffers and barraging the IRC kiddie.

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Added: 2006-03-09 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
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yamp 1.0.0

yamp 1.0.0


yamp is an abbreviation of Yet Another Mixer Program. more>>
yamp is an abbreviation of "Yet Another Mixer Program". It is a program, running in an X window, to control your soundcard via the OSS kernel sound driver. This program is specific to Linux.
It queries the soundcard which variables can be influenced, and sets up a notebook control with a page for every variable. Usually you can set the volume of the speakers, bass and treble, volume of the CD player and other input sources. With the sliders on the page, you can set that particular variable for the left and right channel separately.
yamp uses version 2 of the GTK+ toolkit.
Enhancements:
- This version requires version 2 of the GTK+ toolkit.
- It will not work with version 1.x.
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Added: 2006-06-07 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
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