port-scanner
Here are 264 public repositories matching this topic...
a drop-in replacement for Nmap powered by shodan.io
-
Updated
Apr 24, 2022 - Go
Th3Inspector
-
Updated
Apr 16, 2022 - Perl
online port scan scraper
-
Updated
Feb 8, 2022 - Python
Mass scan IPs for vulnerable services
-
Updated
Feb 17, 2022 - Python
Advanced reconnaissance utility
-
Updated
Jun 1, 2021 - Python
NodeJS Simple Network Scanner
-
Updated
Apr 4, 2022 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Mar 21, 2022 - Go
A repository of tools for pentesting of restricted and isolated environments.
-
Updated
Oct 26, 2021 - PowerShell
-
Updated
Feb 10, 2022 - Nim
Python Security Scripts
-
Updated
Mar 27, 2022 - Python
DDOS Tool: To take down small websites with HTTP FLOOD. Port scanner: To know the open ports of a site. FTP Password Cracker: To hack file system of websites.. Banner Grabber: To get the service or software running on a port. (After knowing the software running google for its vulnerabilities.) Web Spider: For gathering web application hacking information. Email scraper: To get all emails related to a webpage IMDB Rating: Easy way to access the movie database. Both .exe(compressed as zip) and .py versions are available in files.
-
Updated
Apr 5, 2021 - Python
A handy systems and security-focused tool, Port Authority is a very fast Android port scanner. Port Authority also allows you to quickly discover hosts on your network and will display useful network information about your device and other hosts.
-
Updated
May 26, 2022 - Java
Zero-attacker is an multipurpose hacking tool with over 24 tools like token-gen, ddos and more (code public in sometime)
-
Updated
May 4, 2022 - Python
asset-scan是一款适用甲方企业的外网资产周期性扫描监控系统
-
Updated
Apr 19, 2020 - Go
A curated list of awesome Internet port and host scanners, plus related components and much more, with a focus on free and open source projects.
-
Updated
Sep 24, 2021
Continuous reconnaissance scanner. Find and analyze internet-connected devices in minutes.
-
Updated
May 19, 2022 - Python
Faster and more efficient stateless SYN scanner and banner grabber due to userland TCP/IP stack usage.
-
Updated
Feb 20, 2018 - C
List, wake and scan nodes in a network.
-
Updated
Jul 28, 2021 - Go
A tool that allows you to convert NMAP results to html, csv, json, markdown. Simply put it's nmap converter.
-
Updated
Jun 8, 2022 - Go
While running PortScanner through UI, the below page will be displayed.
In the sidebar, contacts and about pages are not yet built.
Build a contact.html page for the same. Details of contributors/admin (as listed in README.md) and GitHub repository link can be added in contact.html.
For about.html see this issue -> #135
A port scanner and service detection tool that uses 1000 goroutines at once to scan any hosts's ip or fqdn with the sole purpose of testing your own network to ensure there are no malicious services running.
-
Updated
May 27, 2022 - Go
A network scanner tool, developed in Python 3 using scapy.
-
Updated
Oct 24, 2020 - Python
A fully self-contained Nmap like parallel port scanning module in pure Golang that supports SYN-ACK (Silent Scans)
-
Updated
Mar 1, 2022 - Go
CLI tool to ping any TCP port
-
Updated
May 27, 2020 - JavaScript
This tool aims at automating the identification of potential service running behind ports identified manually either through manual scan or services running locally. The tool is useful when nmap or any scanning tool is not available and in the situation during which you did a manual port scanning and then want to identify the services running behind the identified ports.
-
Updated
Sep 25, 2020 - Shell
fast TCP banner grabbing with node.js
-
Updated
Jun 15, 2017 - Shell
Improve this page
Add a description, image, and links to the port-scanner topic page so that developers can more easily learn about it.
Add this topic to your repo
To associate your repository with the port-scanner topic, visit your repo's landing page and select "manage topics."


Right now, whenever Zenmap crashes, it gives the user a stack trace and asks the user to send it to the Nmap dev list. So we get a flood of emails (most of which aren't even allowed through moderation) which often contain just a stack trace with no subject line or any explanatory text in the message body. Lots of these are for well known issues in older versions of Zenmap. So it's not very usef