$ dick -R /home/jeff/dick.txt -n 172.16.24As the banner indicates, we’ve been on the Internets since 1999. And in that we’ve learned one thing: Many of you don’t bother to read instructions. For you, here’s a sample resource file that we generated with the command you never bothered to learn: # Updated by dick 0.95, Thu Dec 18 09:40:29 EST 2008 # Copyright (C) 2008 by Jeffrey Fulmer, et al. , et al. # This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. # There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS # FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. # [GENERAL SETTINGS] # debug – this directive turns on debugging information. # values: true or false # example: debug = true debug = false # timeout – this value sets the socket timeout in seconds. High values will # increase chances of connecting with hosts but they will also lengthen the # duration of the scan. # values: number from 1 to N (default: 1) timeout = 1 # [NETSCANS] # protocol – set the network protocol for for network scans. Your options are # icmp which is essentially a ping and tcpip which relies on socket discovery. # You must be root or the program must be setuid root in order to leverage icmp # protocol. It is must faster than tcpip # values: icmp or tcpip protocol = icmp # ports – set the port numbers you want to explore during network discovery. # This option applies only to tcpip protocol. When that protocol is set, the # the scan attempts to create a socket with each of the ports on this list. It # it continues until it opens a connection or exhausts the list. # values: a comma separated list of numbers, i.e., 7,21,25,80,443 # ports = 7, 21, 22, 23, 25, 37, 80, 110, 387, 443 # [PORTSCANS] # lower – on ports scans, the program scans a range of ports from ‘lower’ to # ‘upper’ incrementally. This option sets the lower range of the portscan. # values: number (default: 1) # lower = 1 # upper – set the upper range of a portscan # values: number (default: 1024) # upper = 1024 Platforms