/nmap-parse-output

Converts/manipulates/extracts data from a Nmap scan output.

Primary LanguageXSLTBSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseBSD-3-Clause

nmap-parse-output

Converts/manipulates/extracts data from a nmap scan output.

Needs xsltproc as dependency.

Demo

Demo

Table of Contents

Examples

Write HTML output to scan.html:

$ ./nmap-parse-output scan.xml html > scan.html

Generates a list of all HTTP(s) ports:

$ ./nmap-parse-output scan.xml http-ports   
http://192.168.0.1:8081
https://192.168.0.1:8443

List all names of detected services and get a list of hosts with the port for the service http-proxy:

$ ./nmap-parse-output scan.xml service-names
http
https
http-proxy
ms-wbt-server
smtp
$ ./nmap-parse-output scan.xml service http-proxy
192.168.0.24:8085
192.168.0.25:9000

Exclude some hosts from a scan and generate a list of ports:

$ ./nmap-parse-output scan.xml exclude '192.168.1.1,192.168.1.20' | nmap-parse-output - ports
22,80,443,8080

Filter scan-all.xml to include only hosts scanned in scan-subnet.xml and write the output to filtered-scan.xml:

$ ./nmap-parse-output scan-all.xml include $(./nmap-parse-output.sh scan-subnet.xml hosts | tr "\n" ",") > filtered-scan.xml

Generate a subreport with results only from the networks 10.0.1.0/24 and 10.80.0.0/24 from big-scan-result.xml:

$ ./nmap-parse-output big-scan-result.xml \
  include $(nmap -Pn -n -sL 10.0.1.0/24 10.80.0.0/24 -oX - | nmap-parse-output - all-hosts | tr "\n" ',') \
  > networks-10.0.1.0-24-and-10.80.0.0-24.xml

Add comments to a scan, mark specific ports red, and generate a HTML report with the annotations:

$ ./nmap-parse-output scan.xml comment-ports '8080,10.0.20.4:443' 'this port should be filtered'
  | ./nmap-parse-output - mark-ports '8080,10.0.20.4:443' red
  | ./nmap-parse-output - comment-hosts '10.0.20.1' 'look further into this host'
  | ./nmap-parse-output - html > test.html

Remove all ports found in scan-before.xml from scan-after.xml and write the output to filtered-scan.xml:

$ ./nmap-parse-output scan-after.xml exclude-ports $(./nmap-parse-output.sh scan-before.xml host-ports | tr "\n" ",") > filtered-scan.xml

Group hosts by open TCP ports:

$ ./nmap-parse-output scan.xml group-by-ports
- Open TCP ports 22,443 on:
  - 192.168.1.73 (web.local)
  - 192.168.1.74 (web2.local)
- Open TCP ports 8080 on:
  - 192.168.1.135
- No open TCP ports on:
  - 192.168.1.71 (db.local)
  - 192.168.1.81

Rerun TCP scan for all alive hosts but only scan open ports found in the previous scan:

  $ for host in ./nmap-parse-output scan.xml hosts; do nmap -sSVC -p $(./nmap-parse-output scan.xml include $host | nmap-parse-output - ports) -oA $host.xml -vv -Pn; done

Usage

  Usage: ./nmap-parse-output [options]... <nmap-xml-output> <command> [command-parameters]...
  
  Converts/manipulates/extracts data from nmap scan XML output.
  
  Options:
    -u, --unfinished-scan			 try to read an unfinished scan output
  
  Extract Data Commands:
    all-hosts 
          Generates a line break separated list of all hosts. Can be used to perform an additional scan on this hosts.
          Can be useful to generate a list of IPs for masscan with nmap (masscan has a more limited support for IP lists):
            nmap -Pn -n -sL -iL input.lst -oX all-ips.xml; nmap-parse-output all-ips.xml all-hosts
  
    banner [service-name]
          Extracts a list of all ports with a specific service (e.g. http, ms-wbt-server, smtp) in host:port format.
          Note: This command is intended for the masscan XML output only.
  
    blocked-ports 
          Extracts all ports in host:port format, which either admin-prohibited or tcpwrapped.
  
    group-by-ports 
          Groups hosts by open TCP ports and generates a human-readable list in the markdown format.
  
    group-by-product 
          Groups open ports by product name and generates a human-readable list in the markdown format. The command ignores ports with empty product name.
  
    group-by-service 
          Groups open ports by service name and generates a human-readable list in the markdown format.
  
    host-ports-protocol 
          Extracts a list of all *open* ports in host:port format and marks the protocol type (tcp, udp)
  
    host-ports 
          Extracts a list of all *open* ports in host:port format.
  
    hosts-to-port [port]
          Extracts a list of all hosts that have the given port open in 'host (hostname)' format.
  
    hosts 
          Generates a line break separated list of all hosts with open ports. Can be used to perform an additional scan on this hosts.
  
    http-info 
          Extracts a list of extra information about the HTTP ports from a script scan in the following format:
          host:port   service-name    service-tunnel  product  http-server-header  http-title   redirect_url
  
    http-ports 
          Generates a line separated list of all HTTP(s) ports. Script scan output is recommended.
          Currently, the following services are detected as HTTP: http, https, http-alt, https-alt, http-proxy, sip, rtsp, soap, vnc-http, caldav (potentially incomplete) and to get a more reliable result all ports which which have output in the http-methods script. 
          On ports where HTTPs and HTTP is responding, the HTTPs port is preferred.
  
    http-title 
          Extracts a list of HTTP HTML titles in the following format:
          host:port	HTML title
  
    nmap-cmdline 
          Shows the parameters passed to nmap of the runned scan
  
    port-info [port]
          Extracts a list of extra information about the given port in the following format:
          port;service-name;http-server-header;http title
  
    ports-reachable 
          Generates a comma-separated list of all reachable ports (open and closed, unfiltered). Can be used to verify if ports reachable from another host or generate port lists for specific environments.
  
    ports 
          Generates a comma-separated list of all open ports. Can be used to verify if open ports reachable from another host or generate port lists for specific environments. Closed/filtered ports are not shown in the list.
  
    product 
          Extracts all detected product names.
  
    search-product 
          Search in product names (case sensitive).
  
    service-names 
          Extracts all detected service names (on open ports).
  
    service [service-name]
          Extracts a list of all *open* ports with a specific service (e.g. http, ms-wbt-server, smtp) in host:port format.
  
    show-comments 
          Shows comments added by the comment-* commands.
  
    ssl-common-name 
          Extracts a list of TLS/SSL ports with the commonName and Subject Alternative Name in the following format:
          host:port	commonName	X509v3 Subject Alternative Name
  
    tls-ports 
          Extracts a list of all TLS ports in host:port format. Works only reliable after a script scan. Can be used to do a testssl.sh scan.
          Example testssl.sh command (generates a text and HTML report for each host):
              for f in `cat ~/ssl-hosts.txt`; do ./testssl.sh --logfile ~/testssl.sh-results/$f.log --htmlfile ~/testssl.sh-results/$f.html $f; done
  
  
  Manipulate Scan Commands:
    comment-hosts [hosts] [comment]
          Comments a list of hosts in scan result. Expects a comma-separated list as input. The comment will be displayed in the HTML report.
          Example:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml comment-hosts '10.0.0.1,192.168.10.1' 'allowed services' | nmap-parse-output - html &gt; report.html
          You can comment hosts from another scan, too:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml comment-hosts $(./nmap-parse-output.sh scan-subnet.xml hosts | tr "\n" ",") 'this host was scanned in subnet, too.'
  
    comment-ports [ports] [comment]
          Comments a list of ports or hosts with port (in address:port format) in scan result. Expects a comma-separated list as input. The comment will be displayed in the HTML report.
          Example:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml comment-ports '80,10.0.0.1:8080' 'allowed services' | nmap-parse-output - html &gt; report.html
          You can comment services, too:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml comment-ports $(./nmap-parse-output.sh scan.xml service http | tr "\n" ",") 'this is a http port'
  
    exclude-ports [ports]
          Excludes a list of ports or ports of a specific host (in address:port format) from a scan result. Expects a comma-separated list as input.
          You can pipe the output, for instance:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml exclude '80,443,192.168.0.2:80' | nmap-parse-output - service-names
  
    exclude [hosts]
          Excludes a list of hosts from scan result by its IP address. Expects a comma-separated list as input.
          You can pipe the output, for instance:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml exclude '192.168.1.1,192.168.1.20' | nmap-parse-output - service-names
  
    include-ports [ports]
          Filter a scan by a list of ports or ports of a specific host (in address:port format) so that only the specified ports are in the output. Expects a comma-separated list as input.
          You can pipe the output, for instance:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml include-ports '80,443,192.168.0.2:8080' | nmap-parse-output - http-title
  
    include [hosts]
          Filter a scan by a list of hosts so that only the specified hosts are in the output.
          Filter a list of hosts from scan result by its IP address. Expects a comma-separated list as input.
          You can pipe the output, for instance:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml include '192.168.1.1,192.168.1.20' | nmap-parse-output - service-names
  
    mark-ports [ports] [color]
          Marks a list of ports or hosts with port (in address:port format) with the given color in scan result. Expects a comma-separated list as input. The comment will be displayed in the HTML report.
          Example:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml mark-ports '80,10.0.0.1:8080' red | nmap-parse-output - html &gt; report.html
  
    reachable 
          Removes all hosts where all ports a filtered. Can be used to generate a smaller HTML report.
          Example usage to generate HTML report:
              nmap-parse-output scan.xml reachable | nmap-parse-output - html &gt; scan.html
  
  
  Convert Scan Commands:
    html-bootstrap 
          Converts the XML output into a fancy HTML report based on Bootstrap.
          Note: This HTML report requests JS/CSS libs from CDNs. However, the generated file uses the no-referrer meta tag and subresource integrity to protect the confidentiality.
  
    html 
          Converts a XML output into a HTML report
  
    to-json 
          Converts a nmap scan output to JSON
  
  
  Misc Commands:
  
  [v1.5.1]

Changelog

  • v1.5.1
    • More reliable SSL/TLS detection
    • More reliable HTTP(s) port detection
    • Added group-by-service command
    • Added group-by-product command
    • Added http-info command
    • Added http-server-header to port-info command
    • Added hostname to group-by-ports command
  • v1.4.6
    • Added search-product command
    • Added group-by-ports command
    • Added examples for generating subreports, group-by-ports command, and rerun scans
  • v1.4.5
    • Show only service-names of open ports
    • Splitted ports command in: ports and ports-reachable
    • Added show-comments command
  • v1.4.4
    • Fixed bug in bash completion when installed system-wide
    • Improved documentation
  • v1.4.3
  • v1.4.2
  • v1.4.1
    • Improved error handling
    • Bugfix in ports command
  • v1.4.0
    • Support for unfinished scans
    • Commands are categorized as convert, manipulate, extract and misc now
  • v1.3.0
    • First public release

Contribute

Adding new Commands

Commands are written as XSLT. See nmap-parse-output-xslt/ if you want to add new commands. A good way is mostly copying an existing script that does something similar.

The documentation printed in the help page can be written with the <comment> tag (XML namespace: http://xmlns.sven.to/npo). A command can have one of the following categories: convert, manipulate or extract. You can set it with the <category> tag. It is not necessary to set a category, uncategorized commands are will be shown as a misc command in the help page. Commands with an invalid category will not be shown on the help page.

Parameters will be passed as variables named $param1, $param2 and so on. An post processing command can be added with the <post-processor> tag.

Example XSLT file:

<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" xmlns:npo="http://xmlns.sven.to/npo">
<npo:comment>
        <!-- Added documentation here -->
</npo:comment>
<npo:category>extract</npo:category>
<npo:post-processor>sort | uniq</npo:post-processor>

<xsl:output method="text" />
<xsl:strip-space elements="*" />

<xsl:template match="/nmaprun/host/ports/port">
    <!-- add your template here -->
    <xsl:if test="state/@state = $param1">
        <xsl:value-of select="../../address/@addr"/>
        <xsl:text>, </xsl:text>
    </xsl:if>
</xsl:template>

<xsl:template match="text()" />
</xsl:stylesheet>

More information about XSLT and writing new commands can be found here:

Installation

Requierements:

Check out the repository and run it:

  git clone https://github.com/ernw/nmap-parse-output.git
  cd nmap-parse-output
  ./nmap-parse-output

You can create a link to the nmap-parse-output script in your local bin directory or add the directory into your path if you want to execute it directly. Add the following line into your ~/.bash_profile or your ~/.zshrc file:

  export PATH="$PATH:$PATH_TO_YOUR_NMAP_PARSE_OUTPUT_DIR"

Bash Completion

Bash completion can be enabled by adding the following line to your ~/.bash_profile or .bashrc:

source ~/path/to/nmap-parse-output/_nmap-parse-output

ZSH Completion

ZSH completion can be enabled by adding the following line to your ~/.zshrc:

autoload bashcompinit && bashcompinit && source ~/path/to/nmap-parse-output/_nmap-parse-output

Distro Packages

Packaging status