=========== python-nmap =========== python-nmap is a python library which helps in using nmap port scanner. It allows to easilly manipulate nmap scan results and will be a perfect tool for systems administrators who want to automatize scanning task and reports. It also supports nmap script outputs. Typical usage looks like:: #!/usr/bin/env python import nmap # import nmap.py module nm = nmap.PortScanner() # instantiate nmap.PortScanner object nm.scan('127.0.0.1', '22-443') # scan host 127.0.0.1, ports from 22 to 443 nm.command_line() # get command line used for the scan : nmap -oX - -p 22-443 127.0.0.1 nm.scaninfo() # get nmap scan informations {'tcp': {'services': '22-443', 'method': 'connect'}} nm.all_hosts() # get all hosts that were scanned nm['127.0.0.1'].hostname() # get hostname for host 127.0.0.1 nm['127.0.0.1'].state() # get state of host 127.0.0.1 (up|down|unknown|skipped) nm['127.0.0.1'].all_protocols() # get all scanned protocols ['tcp', 'udp'] in (ip|tcp|udp|sctp) nm['127.0.0.1']['tcp'].keys() # get all ports for tcp protocol nm['127.0.0.1'].all_tcp() # get all ports for tcp protocol (sorted version) nm['127.0.0.1'].all_udp() # get all ports for udp protocol (sorted version) nm['127.0.0.1'].all_ip() # get all ports for ip protocol (sorted version) nm['127.0.0.1'].all_sctp() # get all ports for sctp protocol (sorted version) nm['127.0.0.1'].has_tcp(22) # is there any information for port 22/tcp on host 127.0.0.1 nm['127.0.0.1']['tcp'][22] # get infos about port 22 in tcp on host 127.0.0.1 nm['127.0.0.1'].tcp(22) # get infos about port 22 in tcp on host 127.0.0.1 nm['127.0.0.1']['tcp'][22]['state'] # get state of port 22/tcp on host 127.0.0.1 (open # a more usefull example : for host in nm.all_hosts(): print('----------------------------------------------------') print('Host : %s (%s)' % (host, nm[host].hostname())) print('State : %s' % nm[host].state()) for proto in nm[host].all_protocols(): print('----------') print('Protocol : %s' % proto) lport = nm[host][proto].keys() lport.sort() for port in lport: print('port : %s\tstate : %s' % (port, nm[host][proto][port]['state'])) print('----------------------------------------------------') # print result as CSV print(nm.csv()) print('----------------------------------------------------') # If you want to do a pingsweep on network 192.168.1.0/24: nm.scan(hosts='192.168.1.0/24', arguments='-n -sP -PE -PA21,23,80,3389') hosts_list = [(x, nm[x]['status']['state']) for x in nm.all_hosts()] for host, status in hosts_list: print('{0}:{1}'.format(host, status)) print '----------------------------------------------------' # Asynchronous usage of PortScannerAsync nma = nmap.PortScannerAsync() def callback_result(host, scan_result): print '------------------' print host, scan_result nma.scan(hosts='192.168.1.0/30', arguments='-sP', callback=callback_result) while nma.still_scanning(): print("Waiting ...") nma.wait(2) # you can do whatever you want but I choose to wait after the end of the scan Homepage ======== http://xael.org/norman/python/python-nmap/