To the best of my knowledge, the baud rate is only a factor in actually
achieving the connection with the modem. If you dial the modem, and manage
to negotiate a mutually agreeable baud rate (done automatically for you by
the modem protocol), and your modem reports "CONNECT  <rate>", you should be
able to talk to the underlying/listening application at that rate, unless
the recipient modem is badly set up.

I haven't seen many applications where the baud rate is actually hard-coded,
or enforced. Most applications are happy to talk as fast as they can, hence
the use of flow-control protocols . . .

Determining the parity settings is a slightly different task.

As I understand it, the raw data received can be "post-processed" to
determine the parity settings. I also have not seen any tool to do it, but I
understand that ToneLoc actually does this "auto-parity" determination
somehow.

Somewhere on my hard drive I have some terminal emulator programs that have
parity calculation routines in them. I got them off the net, so you could
probably find them faster than I can at this point! (I found them about
three years ago while trying to write my own war dialler in perl!)

Good luck!

Rogan


> -----Original Message-----
> From: John Madden [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 08 September 2002 02:46
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Wardialing
> 
> 
> Hello all,
> 
> When doing a wardialing engagement we come across alot
> of "unknown" carrier detects. I'm looking for a way to
> find out the exact baud rate of the modem answering.
> The modem will answer say at 9600 but the program
> behind it migth run at a completely different rate
> (specially the older programs) 
> 
> Some dialing software will auto-sense the emulation
> but you have to give it default baud rate. But if that
> modem is listening for 1200 baud 7E1, you have alot of
> combination to try. I was wondering if anyone has any
> experience on the matter.
> 
> I know that software like Phonesweep, THC etc.. but
> they don't do the trick to find the exact baud rate.
> 
> Any ideas on the matter ?
> 
> Thanks
> 
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