This is a Cool Collection of Top Ten Linux Hacking Tools.
1. nmap
– Nmap (“Network Mapper”) is a free open source utility for network
exploration or security auditing. It was designed to rapidly scan large
networks, although it works fine against single hosts. Nmap uses raw IP
packets in novel ways to determine what hosts are available on the
network, what services (application name and version) those hosts are
offering, what operating systems (and OS versions) they are running,
what type of packet filters/firewalls are in use, and dozens of other
characteristics. Nmap runs on most types of computers and both console
and graphical versions are available.
2. Nikto
– Nikto is an Open Source (GPL) web server scanner which performs
comprehensive tests against web servers for multiple items, including
over 3200 potentially dangerous files/CGIs, versions on over 625
servers, and version specific problems on over 230 servers. Scan items
and plugins are frequently updated and can be automatically updated (if desired).
3. THC-Amap – Amap is a next-generation tool for assistingnetwork penetration testing. It performs fast and reliable application protocol detection, independant on the TCP/UDP port they are being bound to.
4. Ethereal
– Ethereal is used by network professionals around the world for
troubleshooting, analysis, software and protocol development, and
education. It has all of the standard features you would expect in a
protocol analyzer, and several features not seen in any other product.
5. THC-Hydra
– Number one of the biggest security holes are passwords, as every
password security study shows. Hydra is a parallized login cracker which
supports numerous protocols to attack. New modules are easy to add,
beside that, it is flexible and very fast.
6. Metasploit Framework
– The Metasploit Framework is an advanced open-source platform for
developing, testing, and using exploit code. This project initially
started off as a portable network game and has evolved into a powerful
tool for penetration testing, exploit development, and vulnerability research.
7. John the Ripper
– John the Ripper is a fast password cracker, currently available for
many flavors of Unix (11 are officially supported, not counting
different architectures), DOS, Win32, BeOS, and OpenVMS. Its primary
purpose is to detect weak Unix passwords. Besides several crypt(3)
password hash types most commonly found on various Unix flavors,
supported out of the box are Kerberos AFS and Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 LM
hashes, plus several more with contributed patches.
8. Nessus – Nessus is the world’s most popular vulnerability scanner
used in over 75,000 organisations world-wide. Many of the world’s
largest organisations are realising significant cost savings by using
Nessus to audit business-critical enterprise devices and applications.
9. IRPAS – Internetwork Routing Protocol Attack Suite – Routing protocols are by definition protocols, which are used by routers
to communicate with each other about ways to deliver routed protocols,
such as IP. While many improvements have been done to the host security
since the early days of the Internet, the core of this network still
uses unauthenticated services for critical communication.
10. Rainbowcrack
– RainbowCrack is a general propose implementation of Philippe
Oechslin’s faster time-memory trade-off technique. In short, the
RainbowCrack tool is a hash cracker. A traditional brute force
cracker try all possible plaintexts one by one in cracking time. It is
time consuming to break complex password in this way. The idea of
time-memory trade-off is to do all cracking time computation in advance
and store the result in files so called “rainbow table”.
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