Someone posted something a couple days ago relating to this. I believe you
can specify a range of addresses by hyphenating just the host address, ie.
192.168.10.7-41. If that doesn't work, I"m sure someone else can answer
your question. By the way, you could always specify subnets, such as
192.168.10.0/25. This can be more convenient if you have solid blocks in
use.
--
Jared Breland
Information Security Intern
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
901-748-5632
"Graham, Randy
(RAW) " To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> cc:
Sent by: Subject: Nessus Linux client question
owner-nessus@list.
nessus.org
07/11/2002 08:25
AM
I've finally been able to convert to an all Linux system at work, so I no
longer use NessusWX for my scan front-end. Using the Linux Nessus client,
I'm not able to load a file with scan ranges like I could with NessusWX.
Could someone check me here and tell me how to get this working the way I'm
used to?
I used to be able to set a file with addresses like this:
----
192.168.10.3
192.168.10.7-192.168.10.41
----
This would scan the single .3 host and all hosts .7-.41. When I create
that
file and point the Nessus X client at the file, it only scans the first
host
listed. If I do the same file, but put everything on one line and comma
separate them, I still only get one host scanned. If I enter each host
individually, it works fine.
Is there a way to do this with ranges, or do I need to enter every host
individually? If I must do each individually, has anyone come up with a
simple tool to speed this up? I didn't see anything in the FM which I
read,
but maybe I missed something.
Thanks,
Randy Graham
--
Recursion (ri-'k&r-zh&n) [noun] - See: Recursion