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Zenmap GUI
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While Nmap has grown in functionality over the years,
it began as an efficient port scanner, and that remains its
core function. The simple command nmap
<target>
scans
1,000 TCP ports on the host
<target>
. While many port scanners
have traditionally lumped all ports into the open or closed
states, Nmap is much more granular. It divides ports into
six states: open
,
closed
, filtered
,
unfiltered
,
open|filtered
, or
closed|filtered
.
These states are not intrinsic
properties of the port itself, but describe how Nmap sees them. For
example, an Nmap scan from the same network as the target may show
port 135/tcp
as open, while a scan at the same time with the same
options from across the Internet might show that port as filtered
.
The six port states recognized by Nmap
open
An application is actively accepting TCP
connections, UDP datagrams or SCTP associations on this port.
Finding these is often the primary goal of port scanning.
Security-minded people know that each open port is an avenue for attack.
Attackers and pen-testers want to exploit the open ports, while
administrators try to close or protect them with firewalls without
thwarting legitimate users.
Open ports are also interesting for non-security scans because they show
services available for use on the network.
closed
A closed port is accessible (it receives and
responds to Nmap probe packets), but there is no application
listening on it. They can be helpful in showing that a host is up
on an IP address (host discovery, or ping scanning), and as part
of OS detection. Because closed ports are reachable, it may be
worth scanning later in case some open up. Administrators may want
to consider blocking such ports with a firewall. Then they would
appear in the filtered state, discussed next.
filtered
Nmap cannot determine whether the port is open
because packet filtering prevents its probes from reaching the port.
The filtering could be from a dedicated firewall device, router
rules, or host-based firewall software. These ports frustrate
attackers because they provide so little information. Sometimes
they respond with ICMP error messages such as type 3 code 13
(destination unreachable: communication administratively
prohibited), but filters that simply drop probes without responding
are far more common. This forces Nmap to retry several times just
in case the probe was dropped due to network congestion rather than
filtering. This slows down the scan dramatically.
unfiltered
The unfiltered state means that a port is accessible,
but Nmap is unable to determine whether it is open or closed. Only
the ACK scan, which is used to map firewall rulesets, classifies
ports into this state. Scanning unfiltered ports with other scan
types such as Window scan, SYN scan, or FIN scan, may help resolve
whether the port is open.
open|filtered
Nmap places ports in this state when it is unable to
determine whether a port is open or filtered. This occurs for scan
types in which open ports give no response. The lack of
response could also mean that a packet filter dropped the probe or
any response it elicited. So Nmap does not know for sure whether
the port is open or being filtered. The UDP, IP protocol,
FIN, NULL, and Xmas scans classify ports this
way.
closed|filtered
This state is used when Nmap is unable to determine
whether a port is closed or filtered. It is only used for the IP ID
idle scan.