VTSTech Posted August 14, 2014 Share Posted August 14, 2014 (edited) http://www.vts-tech.org/torscan-v0-1/ Changelog --------- v0.32 Disabling 'Verbose' should actually be less verbose now Various code optimizations Specific support improved for: SMB Sends/Detects SMBv1 Negotiate Protocol Request/Response Sends/Detects SMBv1 Session Request/Response Currently can detect OS on SMB for Win2k, WinXP, Win7, Win2k3, Win2k8 and Unix based Samba 2.x-4.x systems (Might not detect all variants - Currently using observed variants.) v0.31 Added LDAP, SOCKS Scan prefix Added 'Show Hex' option Added 'Custom Hex' option Specific support added for: SMB, Any with Custom Hex SMB: Sends SMBv1 Connect request v0.3 Added HTTPS, SMB, RPC, MSSQL, RADMIN Scan prefix Added Ticker v0.2 Fixed bug in Port->HexPort calculation Added POP3, IMAP, VNC, MYSQL Scan prefix Sending CRLF is now optional Specific support added for: POP3 POP3: Lists supported AUTH types v0.1 First Release Currently has specific support forfollowing protocols: FTP, SSH, HTTP FTP: Returns banner, MOTD and checks Anonymous login SSH: Checks banner, Does protocol handshake, Returns partial KEXINIT string HTTP: Preforms HTTP 1.0 GET / request For all other protocols will send CRLF on connect and hope something comes back. Protocol currently determined by dest port, protocol detection is planned for future builds http://www.vts-tech.org/torscan-v0-1/ Download http://www.mediafire.com/download/k3cs66xxdrda9pm/VTSTech-TorScan-032.rar Edited August 27, 2014 by VTSTech Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
THCMinister Posted August 15, 2014 Share Posted August 15, 2014 Although I prefer Linux over windows, I did enjoy programming in VB6. My appetite has since changed more to more portable languages. It's amazing seeing this language still being utilized with all the other choices out there. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VTSTech Posted August 15, 2014 Author Share Posted August 15, 2014 Although I prefer Linux over windows, I did enjoy programming in VB6. My appetite has since changed more to more portable languages. It's amazing seeing this language still being utilized with all the other choices out there. I usually do quick builds in VB6 first and then port the code over to Python. Once I get all the functionality/syntax/bugs sorted, then its much quicker rewriting Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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