enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Firestarter (firewall) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firestarter_(firewall)

    Firestarter is a personal firewall tool that uses the Netfilter (iptables/ipchains) system built into the Linux kernel. It has the ability to control both inbound and outbound connections. Firestarter provides a graphical interface for configuring firewall rules and settings. It provides real-time monitoring of all network traffic for the system.

  3. Port knocking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_knocking

    Port knocking is a flexible, customisable system add-in. If the administrator chooses to link a knock sequence to an activity such as running a shell script, other changes such as implementing additional firewall rules to open ports for specific IP addresses can easily be incorporated into the script. Simultaneous sessions are easily accommodated.

  4. firewalld - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firewalld

    firewall-applet is a small status indicator utility that is optionally included with firewalld. It can provide firewall event log notifications as well as a quick way to open firewall-config. firewall-applet was ported from the GTK+ to the Qt framework in the summer of 2015 following the GNOME Desktop’s deprecation of system tray icons. [11]

  5. Wikipedia:WikiProject Open proxies/Guide to checking open ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Open...

    If a normal Nmap-portscan is used the ports will be said to be open, but this does not necessarily mean there is an open proxy. Nmap can, however, check via its scripts http-open-proxy and socks-open-proxy. An example would be: nmap -P0 --script=socks-open-proxy --script=http-open-proxy.nse -p<ports to check> <host> Or is it another type of ...

  6. Uncomplicated Firewall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncomplicated_Firewall

    Uncomplicated Firewall (UFW) is a program for managing a netfilter firewall designed to be easy to use. It uses a command-line interface consisting of a small number of simple commands, and uses iptables for configuration. UFW is available by default in all Ubuntu installations since 8.04 LTS. [1]

  7. Nmap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nmap

    For example, listing the hosts that respond to TCP and/or ICMP requests or have a particular port open. Port scanning – Enumerating the open ports on target hosts. Version detection – Interrogating network services on remote devices to determine application name and version number. [11] Ping Scan – Check host by sending ping requests.

  8. Port scanner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_scanner

    Most UDP port scanners use this scanning method, and use the absence of a response to infer that a port is open. However, if a port is blocked by a firewall, this method will falsely report that the port is open. If the port unreachable message is blocked, all ports will appear open. This method is also affected by ICMP rate limiting. [4]

  9. OPNsense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OPNsense

    OPNsense is an open source, FreeBSD-based firewall and routing software developed by Deciso, a company in the Netherlands that makes hardware and sells support packages for OPNsense. Launched in 2015, [ 2 ] it is a fork of pfSense , which in turn was forked from m0n0wall built on FreeBSD . [ 3 ]