Arif
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02:39:00 am on March 1, 2010 | # |
Port scanner class. An example of usage is as follow where my IP is 192.168.1.10. The upper range for scanning isn’t alive: 192.168.1.11. I hide warnings due to open socket failure which will happen because the IP isn’t alive.
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<?php ini_set( "display_errors", 0); require_once("scanner.class.php"); $ip_address1 = "192.168.1.10"; $ip_address2 = "192.168.1.11"; $my_scanner = new PortScanner($ip_address1, $ip_address2); $my_scanner->set_ports("80"); $results = $my_scanner->do_scan(); foreach($results as $ip=>$ip_results) { echo gethostbyaddr($ip)."\n<blockquote>\n"; foreach($ip_results as $port=>$port_results) { echo "\t".$port." : ".$port_results['pname']." : "; if ($port_results['status']==1){echo "open";} else {echo "closed";}echo "<br />\n"; } echo "</blockquote>\n\n"; } ?>
Results are as follow (it includes developerfusion.com port scan by default (?)):
developerfusion.com
15 : netstat : closed
16 : N/A : closed
17 : qotd : closed
18 : msp : closed
19 : chargen : closed
20 : ftp-data : closed
21 : ftp : closed
22 : ssh : closed
23 : telnet : closed
24 : N/A : closed
25 : smtp : open
80 : www : open
110 : pop3 : closed
3306 : mysql : closed
1337 : N/A : closed
666 : N/A : closedxp-racy.local
80 : www : open
192.168.1.11
80 : www : closed