23.05 Source OS p0f.fp database signatures outdated
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Hello fellow Netgate community members,
Can you please help? How do I get updated signatures for source OS? The Firewall ACL Rules do not include any updated OS versions. No smartphones and or ipad, amazon fire, or ipad or current Windows 10 or 11 docker containers, freeBSD jails and or current imac versions. This is still listing Palm OS. This could be a strong tool to fight against invasive containers.
P0f is used.
Example:
running p0f -i (intrface)
Example 4:63+1:0:1460:65228,7:mss,nop,ws,sok,ts: :0
this is freeBSD 13.12 inside Hyper-VThe database just needs some updated signatures, the software still works great.
Ref:
https://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/p0f3/
https://redmine.pfsense.org/issues/7260Current database in 23.05
Sigdatabase.txt -
@JonathanLee I will admit it is a cool feature to have but it needs to be updated. I dont think i have ever used it but i would like to.
Lets hope your question gets some traction.FreeBSD goes up to 5.2 in the list. PFsense itself runs 13. So the list is very ancient. If anything it probably should be removed if it cant be updated. Its of no value.
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@michmoor imagine you have an invasive container running on a machine the OS detect would know it's not the primary OS, and block out those packets, containers like Kali on docker. It would see it as it will not match the original host system.
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Redmine.pfsense.org/issues/14444
I created a guide to help explain the issue, what is needed why it's needed now more than ever with an example of Docker's Kali container.
Location of current database if you want to add any OS fingerprints to it
/etc/pf.os$FreeBSD$
$OpenBSD: pf.os,v 1.27 2016/09/03 17:08:57 sthen Exp $
passive OS fingerprinting
-------------------------
SYN signatures. Those signatures work for SYN packets only (duh!).
(C) Copyright 2000-2003 by Michal Zalewski lcamtuf@coredump.cx
(C) Copyright 2003 by Mike Frantzen frantzen@w4g.org
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above
copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES
WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR
ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF
OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
This fingerprint database is adapted from Michal Zalewski's p0f passive
operating system package. The last database sync was from a Nov 3 2003
p0f.fp.
Each line in this file specifies a single fingerprint. Please read the
information below carefully before attempting to append any signatures
reported as UNKNOWN to this file to avoid mistakes.
We use the following set metrics for fingerprinting:
- Window size (WSS) - a highly OS dependent setting used for TCP/IP
performance control (max. amount of data to be sent without ACK).
Some systems use a fixed value for initial packets. On other
systems, it is a multiple of MSS or MTU (MSS+40). In some rare
cases, the value is just arbitrary.
NEW SIGNATURE: if p0f reported a special value of 'Snn', the number
appears to be a multiple of MSS (MSS*nn); a special value of 'Tnn'
means it is a multiple of MTU ((MSS+40)*nn). Unless you notice the
value of nn is not fixed (unlikely), just copy the Snn or Tnn token
literally. If you know this device has a simple stack and a fixed
MTU, you can however multiply S value by MSS, or T value by MSS+40,
and put it instead of Snn or Tnn.
If WSS otherwise looks like a fixed value (for example a multiple
of two), or if you can confirm the value is fixed, please quote
it literally. If there's no apparent pattern in WSS chosen, you
should consider wildcarding this value.
- Overall packet size - a function of all IP and TCP options and bugs.
NEW SIGNATURE: Copy this value literally.
- Initial TTL - We check the actual TTL of a received packet. It can't
be higher than the initial TTL, and also shouldn't be dramatically
lower (maximum distance is defined as 40 hops).
NEW SIGNATURE: Never copy TTL from a p0f-reported signature literally.
You need to determine the initial TTL. The best way to do it is to
check the documentation for a remote system, or check its settings.
A fairly good method is to simply round the observed TTL up to
32, 64, 128, or 255, but it should be noted that some obscure devices
might not use round TTLs (in particular, some shoddy appliances use
"original" initial TTL settings). If not sure, you can see how many
hops you're away from the remote party with traceroute or mtr.
- Don't fragment flag (DF) - some modern OSes set this to implement PMTU
discovery. Others do not bother.
NEW SIGNATURE: Copy this value literally.
- Maximum segment size (MSS) - this setting is usually link-dependent. P0f
uses it to determine link type of the remote host.
NEW SIGNATURE: Always wildcard this value, except for rare cases when
you have an appliance with a fixed value, know the system supports only
a very limited number of network interface types, or know the system
is using a value it pulled out of nowhere. Specific unique MSS
can be used to tell Google crawlbots from the rest of the population.
- Window scaling (WSCALE) - this feature is used to scale WSS.
It extends the size of a TCP/IP window to 32 bits. Some modern
systems implement this feature.
NEW SIGNATURE: Observe several signatures. Initial WSCALE is often set
to zero or other low value. There's usually no need to wildcard this
parameter.
- Timestamp - some systems that implement timestamps set them to
zero in the initial SYN. This case is detected and handled appropriately.
- Selective ACK permitted - a flag set by systems that implement
selective ACK functionality.
- The sequence of TCP all options (MSS, window scaling, selective ACK
permitted, timestamp, NOP). Other than the options previously
discussed, p0f also checks for timestamp option (a silly
extension to broadcast your uptime ;-), NOP options (used for
header padding) and sackOK option (selective ACK feature).
NEW SIGNATURE: Copy the sequence literally.
To wildcard any value (except for initial TTL or TCP options), replace
it with '*'. You can also use a modulo operator to match any values
that divide by nnn - '%nnn'.
Fingerprint entry format:
wwww:ttt:D:ss:OOO...:OS:Version:Subtype:Details
wwww - window size (can be *, %nnn, Snn or Tnn). The special values
"S" and "T" which are a multiple of MSS or a multiple of MTU
respectively.
ttt - initial TTL
D - don't fragment bit (0 - not set, 1 - set)
ss - overall SYN packet size
OOO - option value and order specification (see below)
OS - OS genre (Linux, Solaris, Windows)
Version - OS Version (2.0.27 on x86, etc)
Subtype - OS subtype or patchlevel (SP3, lo0)
details - Generic OS details
If OS genre starts with '*', p0f will not show distance, link type
and timestamp data. It is useful for userland TCP/IP stacks of
network scanners and so on, where many settings are randomized or
bogus.
If OS genre starts with @, it denotes an approximate hit for a group
of operating systems (signature reporting still enabled in this case).
Use this feature at the end of this file to catch cases for which
you don't have a precise match, but can tell it's Windows or FreeBSD
or whatnot by looking at, say, flag layout alone.
Option block description is a list of comma or space separated
options in the order they appear in the packet:
N - NOP option
Wnnn - window scaling option, value nnn (or * or %nnn)
Mnnn - maximum segment size option, value nnn (or * or %nnn)
S - selective ACK OK
T - timestamp
T0 - timestamp with a zero value
To denote no TCP options, use a single '.'.
Please report any additions to this file, or any inaccuracies or
problems spotted, to the maintainers: lcamtuf@coredump.cx,
frantzen@openbsd.org and bugs@openbsd.org with a tcpdump packet
capture of the relevant SYN packet(s)
A test and submission page is available at
http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/p0f-help/
WARNING WARNING WARNING
-----------------------
Do not add a system X as OS Y just because NMAP says so. It is often
the case that X is a NAT firewall. While nmap is talking to the
device itself, p0f is fingerprinting the guy behind the firewall
instead.
When in doubt, use common sense, don't add something that looks like
a completely different system as Linux or FreeBSD or LinkSys router.
Check DNS name, establish a connection to the remote host and look
at SYN+ACK - does it look similar?
Some users tweak their TCP/IP settings - enable or disable RFC1323
functionality, enable or disable timestamps or selective ACK,
disable PMTU discovery, change MTU and so on. Always compare a new rule
to other fingerprints for this system, and verify the system isn't
"customized" before adding it. It is OK to add signature variants
caused by a commonly used software (personal firewalls, security
packages, etc), but it makes no sense to try to add every single
possible /proc/sys/net/ipv4 tweak on Linux or so.
KEEP IN MIND: Some packet firewalls configured to normalize outgoing
traffic (OpenBSD pf with "scrub" enabled, for example) will, well,
normalize packets. Signatures will not correspond to the originating
system (and probably not quite to the firewall either).
NOTE: Try to keep this file in some reasonable order, from most to
least likely systems. This will speed up operation. Also keep most
generic and broad rules near the end.
##########################
Standard OS signatures
##########################
----------------- AIX ---------------------
AIX is first because its signatures are close to NetBSD, MacOS X and
Linux 2.0, but it uses a fairly rare MSSes, at least sometimes...
This is a shoddy hack, though.
45046:64:0:44:M*: AIX:4.3::AIX 4.3
16384:64:0:44:M512: AIX:4.3:2-3:AIX 4.3.2 and earlier16384:64:0:60:M512,N,W%2,N,N,T: AIX:4.3:3:AIX 4.3.3-5.2
16384:64:0:60:M512,N,W%2,N,N,T: AIX:5.1-5.2::AIX 4.3.3-5.2
32768:64:0:60:M512,N,W%2,N,N,T: AIX:4.3:3:AIX 4.3.3-5.2
32768:64:0:60:M512,N,W%2,N,N,T: AIX:5.1-5.2::AIX 4.3.3-5.2
65535:64:0:60:M512,N,W%2,N,N,T: AIX:4.3:3:AIX 4.3.3-5.2
65535:64:0:60:M512,N,W%2,N,N,T: AIX:5.1-5.2::AIX 4.3.3-5.2
65535:64:0:64:M*,N,W1,N,N,T,N,N,S: AIX:5.3:ML1:AIX 5.3 ML1----------------- Linux -------------------
S1:64:0:44:M*:A: Linux:1.2::Linux 1.2.x (XXX quirks support)
512:64:0:44:M*: Linux:2.0:3x:Linux 2.0.3x
16384:64:0:44:M*: Linux:2.0:3x:Linux 2.0.3xEndian snafu! Nelson says "ha-ha":
2:64:0:44:M*: Linux:2.0:3x:Linux 2.0.3x (MkLinux) on Mac
64:64:0:44:M*: Linux:2.0:3x:Linux 2.0.3x (MkLinux) on MacS4:64:1:60:M1360,S,T,N,W0: Linux:google::Linux (Google crawlbot)
S2:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.4::Linux 2.4 (big boy)
S3:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.4:.18-21:Linux 2.4.18 and newer
S4:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.4::Linux 2.4/2.6 <= 2.6.7
S4:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.6:.1-7:Linux 2.4/2.6 <= 2.6.7S4:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W5: Linux:2.6::Linux 2.6 (newer, 1)
S4:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W6: Linux:2.6::Linux 2.6 (newer, 2)
S4:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W7: Linux:2.6::Linux 2.6 (newer, 3)
T4:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W7: Linux:2.6::Linux 2.6 (newer, 4)S10:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W4: Linux:3.0::Linux 3.0
S3:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W1: Linux:2.5::Linux 2.5 (sometimes 2.4)
S4:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W1: Linux:2.5-2.6::Linux 2.5/2.6
S3:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W2: Linux:2.5::Linux 2.5 (sometimes 2.4)
S4:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W2: Linux:2.5::Linux 2.5 (sometimes 2.4)S20:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.2:20-25:Linux 2.2.20 and newer
S22:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.2::Linux 2.2
S11:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.2::Linux 2.2Popular cluster config scripts disable timestamps and
selective ACK:
S4:64:1:48:M1460,N,W0: Linux:2.4:cluster:Linux 2.4 in cluster
This needs to be investigated. On some systems, WSS
is selected as a multiple of MTU instead of MSS. I got
many submissions for this for many late versions of 2.4:
T4:64:1:60:M1412,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.4::Linux 2.4 (late, uncommon)
This happens only over loopback, but let's make folks happy:
32767:64:1:60:M16396,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.4:lo0:Linux 2.4 (local)
S8:64:1:60:M3884,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.2:lo0:Linux 2.2 (local)Opera visitors:
16384:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.2:Opera:Linux 2.2 (Opera?)
32767:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W0: Linux:2.4:Opera:Linux 2.4 (Opera?)Some fairly common mods:
S4:64:1:52:M*,N,N,S,N,W0: Linux:2.4:ts:Linux 2.4 w/o timestamps
S22:64:1:52:M*,N,N,S,N,W0: Linux:2.2:ts:Linux 2.2 w/o timestamps----------------- FreeBSD -----------------
16384:64:1:44:M*: FreeBSD:2.0-2.2::FreeBSD 2.0-4.2
16384:64:1:44:M*: FreeBSD:3.0-3.5::FreeBSD 2.0-4.2
16384:64:1:44:M*: FreeBSD:4.0-4.2::FreeBSD 2.0-4.2
16384:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: FreeBSD:4.4::FreeBSD 4.41024:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: FreeBSD:4.4::FreeBSD 4.4
57344:64:1:44:M*: FreeBSD:4.6-4.8:noRFC1323:FreeBSD 4.6-4.8 (no RFC1323)
57344:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: FreeBSD:4.6-4.9::FreeBSD 4.6-4.932768:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: FreeBSD:4.8-4.11::FreeBSD 4.8-5.1 (or MacOS X)
32768:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: FreeBSD:5.0-5.1::FreeBSD 4.8-5.1 (or MacOS X)
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: FreeBSD:4.8-4.11::FreeBSD 4.8-5.2 (or MacOS X)
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: FreeBSD:5.0-5.2::FreeBSD 4.8-5.2 (or MacOS X)
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W1,N,N,T: FreeBSD:4.7-4.11::FreeBSD 4.7-5.2
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W1,N,N,T: FreeBSD:5.0-5.2::FreeBSD 4.7-5.2XXX need quirks support
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T:Z:FreeBSD:5.1-5.4::5.1-current (1)
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W1,N,N,T:Z:FreeBSD:5.1-5.4::5.1-current (2)
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W2,N,N,T:Z:FreeBSD:5.1-5.4::5.1-current (3)
65535:64:1:44:M*:Z:FreeBSD:5.2::FreeBSD 5.2 (no RFC1323)
16384:64:1:60:M*,N,N,N,N,N,N,T:FreeBSD:4.4:noTS:FreeBSD 4.4 (w/o timestamps)
----------------- NetBSD ------------------
16384:64:0:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: NetBSD:1.3::NetBSD 1.3
65535:64:0:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T0: NetBSD:1.6:opera:NetBSD 1.6 (Opera)
16384:64:0:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T0: NetBSD:1.6::NetBSD 1.6
16384:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T0: NetBSD:1.6:df:NetBSD 1.6 (DF)
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W1,N,N,T0: NetBSD:1.6::NetBSD 1.6W-current (DF)
65535:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T0: NetBSD:1.6::NetBSD 1.6X (DF)
32768:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T0: NetBSD:1.6:randomization:NetBSD 1.6ZH-current (w/ ip_id randomization)----------------- OpenBSD -----------------
16384:64:0:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: OpenBSD:2.6::NetBSD 1.3 (or OpenBSD 2.6)
16384:64:1:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W0,N,N,T: OpenBSD:3.0-4.8::OpenBSD 3.0-4.8
16384:64:0:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W0,N,N,T: OpenBSD:3.0-4.8:no-df:OpenBSD 3.0-4.8 (scrub no-df)
57344:64:1:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W0,N,N,T: OpenBSD:3.3-4.0::OpenBSD 3.3-4.0
57344:64:0:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W0,N,N,T: OpenBSD:3.3-4.0:no-df:OpenBSD 3.3-4.0 (scrub no-df)65535:64:1:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W0,N,N,T: OpenBSD:3.0-4.0:opera:OpenBSD 3.0-4.0 (Opera)
16384:64:1:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W3,N,N,T: OpenBSD:4.9::OpenBSD 4.9
16384:64:0:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W3,N,N,T: OpenBSD:4.9:no-df:OpenBSD 4.9 (scrub no-df)16384:64:1:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W6,N,N,T: OpenBSD:6.1::OpenBSD 6.1
16384:64:0:64:M*,N,N,S,N,W6,N,N,T: OpenBSD:6.1:no-df:OpenBSD 6.1 (scrub no-df)----------------- DragonFly BSD -----------------
57344:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: DragonFly:1.0:A:DragonFly 1.0A
57344:64:0:64:M*,N,W0,N,N,S,N,N,T: DragonFly:1.2-1.12::DragonFly 1.2-1.12
5840:64:1:60:M*,S,T,N,W4: DragonFly:2.0-2.1::DragonFly 2.0-2.1
57344:64:0:64:M*,N,W0,N,N,S,N,N,T: DragonFly:2.2-2.3::DragonFly 2.2-2.3
57344:64:0:64:M*,N,W5,N,N,S,N,N,T: DragonFly:2.4-2.7::DragonFly 2.4-2.7----------------- Solaris -----------------
S17:64:1:64:N,W3,N,N,T0,N,N,S,M*: Solaris:8:RFC1323:Solaris 8 RFC1323
S17:64:1:48:N,N,S,M*: Solaris:8::Solaris 8
S17:255:1:44:M*: Solaris:2.5-2.7::Solaris 2.5 to 7S6:255:1:44:M*: Solaris:2.6-2.7::Solaris 2.6 to 7
S23:255:1:44:M*: Solaris:2.5:1:Solaris 2.5.1
S34:64:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Solaris:2.9::Solaris 9
S44:255:1:44:M*: Solaris:2.7::Solaris 74096:64:0:44:M1460: SunOS:4.1::SunOS 4.1.x
S34:64:1:52:M*,N,W0,N,N,S: Solaris:10:beta:Solaris 10 (beta)
32850:64:1:64:M*,N,N,T,N,W1,N,N,S: Solaris:10::Solaris 10 1203----------------- IRIX --------------------
49152:64:0:44:M*: IRIX:6.4::IRIX 6.4
61440:64:0:44:M*: IRIX:6.2-6.5::IRIX 6.2-6.5
49152:64:0:52:M*,N,W2,N,N,S: IRIX:6.5:RFC1323:IRIX 6.5 (RFC1323)
49152:64:0:52:M*,N,W3,N,N,S: IRIX:6.5:RFC1323:IRIX 6.5 (RFC1323)61440:64:0:48:M*,N,N,S: IRIX:6.5:12-21:IRIX 6.5.12 - 6.5.21
49152:64:0:48:M*,N,N,S: IRIX:6.5:15-21:IRIX 6.5.15 - 6.5.2149152:60:0:64:M*,N,W2,N,N,T,N,N,S: IRIX:6.5:IP27:IRIX 6.5 IP27
----------------- Tru64 -------------------
32768:64:1:48:M*,N,W0: Tru64:4.0::Tru64 4.0 (or OS/2 Warp 4)
32768:64:0:48:M*,N,W0: Tru64:5.0::Tru64 5.0
8192:64:0:44:M1460: Tru64:5.1:noRFC1323:Tru64 6.1 (no RFC1323) (or QNX 6)
61440:64:0:48:M*,N,W0: Tru64:5.1a:JP4:Tru64 v5.1a JP4 (or OpenVMS 7.x on Compaq 5.x stack)----------------- OpenVMS -----------------
6144:64:1:60:M*,N,W0,N,N,T: OpenVMS:7.2::OpenVMS 7.2 (Multinet 4.4 stack)
----------------- MacOS -------------------
XXX Need EOL tcp opt support
S2:255:1:48:M*,W0,E:.:MacOS:8.6 classic
XXX some of these use EOL too
16616:255:1:48:M*,W0: MacOS:7.3-7.6:OTTCP:MacOS 7.3-8.6 (OTTCP)
16616:255:1:48:M*,W0: MacOS:8.0-8.6:OTTCP:MacOS 7.3-8.6 (OTTCP)
16616:255:1:48:M*,N,N,N: MacOS:8.1-8.6:OTTCP:MacOS 8.1-8.6 (OTTCP)
32768:255:1:48:M*,W0,N: MacOS:9.0-9.2::MacOS 9.0-9.2
65535:255:1:48:M*,N,N,N,N: MacOS:9.1::MacOS 9.1 (OT 2.7.4)----------------- Windows -----------------
Windows TCP/IP stack is a mess. For most recent XP, 2000 and
even 98, the patchlevel, not the actual OS version, is more
relevant to the signature. They share the same code, so it would
seem. Luckily for us, almost all Windows 9x boxes have an
awkward MSS of 536, which I use to tell one from another
in most difficult cases.
8192:32:1:44:M*: Windows:3.11::Windows 3.11 (Tucows)
S44:64:1:64:M*,N,W0,N,N,T0,N,N,S: Windows:95::Windows 95
8192:128:1:64:M*,N,W0,N,N,T0,N,N,S: Windows:95:b:Windows 95bThere were so many tweaking tools and so many stack versions for
Windows 98 it is no longer possible to tell them from each other
without some very serious research. Until then, there's an insane
number of signatures, for your amusement:
S44:32:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98:lowTTL:Windows 98 (low TTL)
8192:32:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98:lowTTL:Windows 98 (low TTL)
%8192:64:1:48:M536,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
%8192:128:1:48:M536,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
S4:64:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
S6:64:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
S12:64:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
T30:64:1:64:M1460,N,W0,N,N,T0,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
32767:64:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
37300:64:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
46080:64:1:52:M*,N,W3,N,N,S: Windows:98:RFC1323:Windows 98 (RFC1323)
65535:64:1:44:M*: Windows:98:noSack:Windows 98 (no sack)
S16:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
S16:128:1:64:M*,N,W0,N,N,T0,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
S26:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
T30:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
32767:128:1:52:M*,N,W0,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
60352:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98
60352:128:1:64:M*,N,W2,N,N,T0,N,N,S: Windows:98::Windows 98What's with 1414 on NT?
T31:128:1:44:M1414: Windows:NT:4.0:Windows NT 4.0 SP6a
64512:128:1:44:M1414: Windows:NT:4.0:Windows NT 4.0 SP6a
8192:128:1:44:M*: Windows:NT:4.0:Windows NT 4.0 (older)Windows XP and 2000. Most of the signatures that were
either dubious or non-specific (no service pack data)
were deleted and replaced with generics at the end.
65535:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000:SP4:Windows 2000 SP4, XP SP1
65535:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP:SP1:Windows 2000 SP4, XP SP1
%8192:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000:SP2+:Windows 2000 SP2, XP SP1 (seldom 98 4.10.2222)
%8192:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP:SP1:Windows 2000 SP2, XP SP1 (seldom 98 4.10.2222)
S20:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000::Windows 2000/XP SP3
S20:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP:SP3:Windows 2000/XP SP3
S45:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000:SP4:Windows 2000 SP4, XP SP 1
S45:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP:SP1:Windows 2000 SP4, XP SP 1
40320:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000:SP4:Windows 2000 SP4S6:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000:SP2:Windows XP, 2000 SP2+
S6:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP::Windows XP, 2000 SP2+
S12:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP:SP1:Windows XP SP1
S44:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000:SP3:Windows Pro SP1, 2000 SP3
S44:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP:SP1:Windows Pro SP1, 2000 SP3
64512:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000:SP3:Windows SP1, 2000 SP3
64512:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP:SP1:Windows SP1, 2000 SP3
32767:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:2000:SP4:Windows SP1, 2000 SP4
32767:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP:SP1:Windows SP1, 2000 SP48192:128:1:52:M*,N,W2,N,N,S: Windows:Vista::Windows Vista/7
Odds, ends, mods:
S52:128:1:48:M1260,N,N,S: Windows:2000:cisco:Windows XP/2000 via Cisco
S52:128:1:48:M1260,N,N,S: Windows:XP:cisco:Windows XP/2000 via Cisco
65520:128:1:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:XP::Windows XP bare-bone
16384:128:1:52:M536,N,W0,N,N,S: Windows:2000:ZoneAlarm:Windows 2000 w/ZoneAlarm?
2048:255:0:40:.: Windows:.NET::Windows .NET Enterprise Server44620:64:0:48:M*,N,N,S: Windows:ME::Windows ME no SP (?)
S6:255:1:48:M536,N,N,S: Windows:95:winsock2:Windows 95 winsock 2
32768:32:1:52:M1460,N,W0,N,N,S: Windows:2003:AS:Windows 2003 ASNo need to be more specific, it passes:
:128:1:48:M,N,N,S:U:-Windows:XP/2000 while downloading (leak!) XXX quirk
there is an equiv similar generic sig w/o the quirk
----------------- HP/UX -------------------
32768:64:1:44:M*: HP-UX:B.10.20::HP-UX B.10.20
32768:64:0:48:M*,W0,N: HP-UX:11.0::HP-UX 11.0
32768:64:1:48:M*,W0,N: HP-UX:11.10::HP-UX 11.0 or 11.11
32768:64:1:48:M*,W0,N: HP-UX:11.11::HP-UX 11.0 or 11.11Whoa. Hardcore WSS.
0:64:0:48:M*,W0,N: HP-UX:B.11.00:A:HP-UX B.11.00 A (RFC1323)
----------------- RiscOS ------------------
We don't yet support the ?12 TCP option
#16384:64:1:68:M1460,N,W0,N,N,T,N,N,?12: RISCOS:3.70-4.36::RISC OS 3.70-4.36
12288:32:0:44:M536: RISC OS:3.70:4.10:RISC OS 3.70 inet 4.10XXX quirk
4096:64:1:56:M1460,N,N,T:T: RISC OS:3.70:freenet:RISC OS 3.70 freenet 2.00
----------------- BSD/OS ------------------
Once again, power of two WSS is also shared by MacOS X with DF set
8192:64:1:60:M1460,N,W0,N,N,T: BSD/OS:3.1::BSD/OS 3.1-4.3 (or MacOS X 10.2 w/DF)
8192:64:1:60:M1460,N,W0,N,N,T: BSD/OS:4.0-4.3::BSD/OS 3.1-4.3 (or MacOS X 10.2)---------------- NewtonOS -----------------
4096:64:0:44:M1420: NewtonOS:2.1::NewtonOS 2.1
---------------- NeXTSTEP -----------------
S4:64:0:44:M1024: NeXTSTEP:3.3::NeXTSTEP 3.3
S8:64:0:44:M512: NeXTSTEP:3.3::NeXTSTEP 3.3------------------ BeOS -------------------
1024:255:0:48:M*,N,W0: BeOS:5.0-5.1::BeOS 5.0-5.1
12288:255:0:44:M1402: BeOS:5.0::BeOS 5.0.x------------------ OS/400 -----------------
8192:64:1:60:M1440,N,W0,N,N,T: OS/400:VR4::OS/400 VR4/R5
8192:64:1:60:M1440,N,W0,N,N,T: OS/400:VR5::OS/400 VR4/R5
4096:64:1:60:M1440,N,W0,N,N,T: OS/400:V4R5:CF67032:OS/400 V4R5 + CF67032XXX quirk
28672:64:0:44:M1460:A:OS/390:?
------------------ ULTRIX -----------------
16384:64:0:40:.: ULTRIX:4.5::ULTRIX 4.5
------------------- QNX -------------------
S16:64:0:44:M512: QNX:::QNX demodisk
------------------ Novell -----------------
16384:128:1:44:M1460: Novell:NetWare:5.0:Novel Netware 5.0
6144:128:1:44:M1460: Novell:IntranetWare:4.11:Novell IntranetWare 4.11
6144:128:1:44:M1368: Novell:BorderManager::Novell BorderManager ?6144:128:1:52:M*,W0,N,S,N,N: Novell:Netware:6:Novell Netware 6 SP3
----------------- SCO ------------------
S3:64:1:60:M1460,N,W0,N,N,T: SCO:UnixWare:7.1:SCO UnixWare 7.1
S17:64:1:60:M1380,N,W0,N,N,T: SCO:UnixWare:7.1:SCO UnixWare 7.1.3 MP3
S23:64:1:44:M1380: SCO:OpenServer:5.0:SCO OpenServer 5.0------------------- DOS -------------------
2048:255:0:44:M536: DOS:WATTCP:1.05:DOS Arachne via WATTCP/1.05
T2:255:0:44:M984: DOS:WATTCP:1.05Arachne:Arachne via WATTCP/1.05 (eepro)------------------ OS/2 -------------------
S56:64:0:44:M512: OS/2:4::OS/2 4
28672:64:0:44:M1460: OS/2:4::OS/2 Warp 4.0----------------- TOPS-20 -----------------
Another hardcore MSS, one of the ACK leakers hunted down.
XXX QUIRK 0:64:0:44:M1460:A:TOPS-20:version 7
0:64:0:44:M1460: TOPS-20:7::TOPS-20 version 7
----------------- FreeMiNT ----------------
S44:255:0:44:M536: FreeMiNT:1:16A:FreeMiNT 1 patch 16A (Atari)
------------------ AMIGA ------------------
XXX TCP option 12
S32:64:1:56:M*,N,N,S,N,N,?12:.:AMIGA:3.9 BB2 with Miami stack
------------------ Plan9 ------------------
65535:255:0:48:M1460,W0,N: Plan9:4::Plan9 edition 4
----------------- AMIGAOS -----------------
16384:64:1:48:M1560,N,N,S: AMIGAOS:3.9::AMIGAOS 3.9 BB2 MiamiDX
###########################################
Appliance / embedded / other signatures
###########################################
---------- Firewalls / routers ------------
S12:64:1:44:M1460: @Checkpoint:::Checkpoint (unknown 1)
S12:64:1:48:N,N,S,M1460: @Checkpoint:::Checkpoint (unknown 2)
4096:32:0:44:M1460: ExtremeWare:4.x::ExtremeWare 4.xXXX TCP option 12
S32:64:0:68:M512,N,W0,N,N,T,N,N,?12:.:Nokia:IPSO w/Checkpoint NG FP3
S16:64:0:68:M1024,N,W0,N,N,T,N,N,?12:.:Nokia:IPSO 3.7 build 026
S4:64:1:60:W0,N,S,T,M1460: FortiNet:FortiGate:50:FortiNet FortiGate 50
8192:64:1:44:M1460: Eagle:::Eagle Secure Gateway
S52:128:1:48:M1260,N,N,N,N: LinkSys:WRV54G::LinkSys WRV54G VPN router
------- Switches and other stuff ----------
4128:255:0:44:M*: Cisco:::Cisco Catalyst 3500, 7500 etc
S8:255:0:44:M*: Cisco:12008::Cisco 12008
60352:128:1:64:M1460,N,W2,N,N,T,N,N,S: Alteon:ACEswitch::Alteon ACEswitch
64512:128:1:44:M1370: Nortel:Contivity Client::Nortel Conectivity Client---------- Caches and whatnots ------------
S4:64:1:52:M1460,N,N,S,N,W0: AOL:web cache::AOL web cache
32850:64:1:64:N,W1,N,N,T,N,N,S,M*: NetApp:5.x::NetApp Data OnTap 5.x
16384:64:1:64:M1460,N,N,S,N,W0,N: NetApp:5.3:1:NetApp 5.3.1
65535:64:0:64:M1460,N,N,S,N,W*,N,N,T: NetApp:5.3-5.5::NetApp 5.3-5.5
65535:64:0:60:M1460,N,W0,N,N,T: NetApp:CacheFlow::NetApp CacheFlow
8192:64:1:64:M1460,N,N,S,N,W0,N,N,T: NetApp:5.2:1:NetApp NetCache 5.2.1
20480:64:1:64:M1460,N,N,S,N,W0,N,N,T: NetApp:4.1::NetApp NetCache4.165535:64:0:60:M1460,N,W0,N,N,T: CacheFlow:4.1::CacheFlow CacheOS 4.1
8192:64:0:60:M1380,N,N,N,N,N,N,T: CacheFlow:1.1::CacheFlow CacheOS 1.1S4:64:0:48:M1460,N,N,S: Cisco:Content Engine::Cisco Content Engine
27085:128:0:40:.: Dell:PowerApp cache::Dell PowerApp (Linux-based)
65535:255:1:48:N,W1,M1460: Inktomi:crawler::Inktomi crawler
S1:255:1:60:M1460,S,T,N,W0: LookSmart:ZyBorg::LookSmart ZyBorg16384:255:0:40:.: Proxyblocker:::Proxyblocker (what's this?)
65535:255:0:48:M*,N,N,S: Redline:::Redline T|X 2200
32696:128:0:40:M1460: Spirent:Avalanche::Spirent Web Avalanche HTTP benchmarking engine
----------- Embedded systems --------------
S9:255:0:44:M536: PalmOS:Tungsten:C:PalmOS Tungsten C
S5:255:0:44:M536: PalmOS:3::PalmOS 3/4
S5:255:0:44:M536: PalmOS:4::PalmOS 3/4
S4:255:0:44:M536: PalmOS:3:5:PalmOS 3.5
2948:255:0:44:M536: PalmOS:3:5:PalmOS 3.5.3 (Handera)
S29:255:0:44:M536: PalmOS:5::PalmOS 5.0
16384:255:0:44:M1398: PalmOS:5.2:Clie:PalmOS 5.2 (Clie)
S14:255:0:44:M1350: PalmOS:5.2:Treo:PalmOS 5.2.1 (Treo)S23:64:1:64:N,W1,N,N,T,N,N,S,M1460: SymbianOS:7::SymbianOS 7
8192:255:0:44:M1460: SymbianOS:6048::Symbian OS 6048 (Nokia 7650?)
8192:255:0:44:M536: SymbianOS:9210::Symbian OS (Nokia 9210?)
S22:64:1:56:M1460,T,S: SymbianOS:P800::Symbian OS ? (SE P800?)
S36:64:1:56:M1360,T,S: SymbianOS:6600::Symbian OS 60xx (Nokia 6600?)Perhaps S4?
5840:64:1:60:M1452,S,T,N,W1: Zaurus:3.10::Zaurus 3.10
32768:128:1:64:M1460,N,W0,N,N,T0,N,N,S: PocketPC:2002::PocketPC 2002
S1:255:0:44:M346: Contiki:1.1:rc0:Contiki 1.1-rc0
4096:128:0:44:M1460: Sega:Dreamcast:3.0:Sega Dreamcast Dreamkey 3.0
T5:64:0:44:M536: Sega:Dreamcast:HKT-3020:Sega Dreamcast HKT-3020 (browser disc 51027)
S22:64:1:44:M1460: Sony:PS2::Sony Playstation 2 (SOCOM?)S12:64:0:44:M1452: AXIS:5600:v5.64:AXIS Printer Server 5600 v5.64
3100:32:1:44:M1460: Windows:CE:2.0:Windows CE 2.0
####################
Fancy signatures
####################
1024:64:0:40:.: *NMAP:syn scan:1:NMAP syn scan (1)
2048:64:0:40:.: *NMAP:syn scan:2:NMAP syn scan (2)
3072:64:0:40:.: *NMAP:syn scan:3:NMAP syn scan (3)
4096:64:0:40:.: *NMAP:syn scan:4:NMAP syn scan (4)Requires quirks support
1024:64:0:40:.:A:*NMAP:TCP sweep probe (1)
2048:64:0:40:.:A:*NMAP:TCP sweep probe (2)
3072:64:0:40:.:A:*NMAP:TCP sweep probe (3)
4096:64:0:40:.:A:*NMAP:TCP sweep probe (4)
1024:64:0:60:W10,N,M265,T: *NMAP:OS:1:NMAP OS detection probe (1)
2048:64:0:60:W10,N,M265,T: *NMAP:OS:2:NMAP OS detection probe (2)
3072:64:0:60:W10,N,M265,T: *NMAP:OS:3:NMAP OS detection probe (3)
4096:64:0:60:W10,N,M265,T: *NMAP:OS:4:NMAP OS detection probe (4)32767:64:0:40:.: *NAST:::NASTsyn scan
Requires quirks support
12345:255:0:40:.:A:-p0f:sendsyn utility
#####################################
Generic signatures - just in case
#####################################
#:64:1:60:M,N,W*,N,N,T: @FreeBSD:4.0-4.9::FreeBSD 4.x/5.x
#:64:1:60:M,N,W*,N,N,T: @FreeBSD:5.0-5.1::FreeBSD 4.x/5.x:128:1:52:M,N,W0,N,N,S: @Windows:XP:RFC1323:Windows XP/2000 (RFC1323 no tstamp)
:128:1:52:M,N,W0,N,N,S: @Windows:2000:RFC1323:Windows XP/2000 (RFC1323 no tstamp)
:128:1:52:M,N,W*,N,N,S: @Windows:XP:RFC1323:Windows XP/2000 (RFC1323 no tstamp)
:128:1:52:M,N,W*,N,N,S: @Windows:2000:RFC1323:Windows XP/2000 (RFC1323 no tstamp)
:128:1:64:M,N,W0,N,N,T0,N,N,S: @Windows:XP:RFC1323:Windows XP/2000 (RFC1323)
:128:1:64:M,N,W0,N,N,T0,N,N,S: @Windows:2000:RFC1323:Windows XP/2000 (RFC1323)
:128:1:64:M,N,W*,N,N,T0,N,N,S: @Windows:XP:RFC1323:Windows XP (RFC1323, w+)
*:128:1:48:M536,N,N,S: @Windows:98::Windows 98
:128:1:48:M,N,N,S: @Windows:XP::Windows XP/2000
:128:1:48:M,N,N,S: @Windows:2000::Windows XP/2000 -