Authenticate with HTTP or SOCKS proxy server
ssl Connect or listen with SSL
ssl-cert Specify SSL certificate file (PEM) for listening
ssl-key Specify SSL private key (PEM) for listening
ssl-verify Verify trust and domain name of certificates
ssl-trustfile PEM file containing trusted SSL certificates
ssl-ciphers Cipherlist containing SSL ciphers to use
version Display Ncat's version information and exit
See the ncat(1) manpage for full options, descriptions and usage examples
CONNECT MODE AND LISTEN MODE
Ncat operates in one of two primary modes: connect mode and listen
mode. Other modes, such as the HTTP proxy server, act as special cases
of these two. In connect mode, Ncat works as a client. In listen mode
it is a server.
In connect mode, the hostname and port arguments tell what to connect
to. hostname is required, and may be a hostname or IP address. If port
is supplied, it must be a decimal port number. If omitted, it defaults
to 31337.
In listen mode, hostname and port control the address the server will
bind to. Both arguments are optional in listen mode. If hostname is
omitted, it defaults to listening on all available addresses over IPv4
and IPv6. If port is omitted, it defaults to 31337.
PROTOCOL OPTIONS
-4 (IPv4 only)
Force the use of IPv4 only.
-6 (IPv6 only)
Force the use of IPv6 only.
-U, unixsock (Use Unix domain sockets)
Use Unix domain sockets rather than network sockets. This option
may be used on its own for stream sockets, or combined with udp
for datagram sockets. A description of -U mode is in the section
called “UNIX DOMAIN SOCKETS”.
-u, udp (Use UDP)
Use UDP for the connection (the default is TCP).
sctp (Use SCTP)
Use SCTP for the connection (the default is TCP). SCTP support is
implemented in TCP-compatible mode.
CONNECT MODE OPTIONS
-g hop1[,hop2,...] (Loose source routing)
Sets hops for IPv4 loose source routing. You can use -g once with a
comma-separated list of hops, use -g multiple times with single
hops to build the list, or combine the two. Hops can be given as IP
addresses or hostnames.
-G ptr (Set source routing pointer)
Sets the IPv4 source route “pointer” for use with -g. The argument
must be a multiple of 4 and no more than 28. Not all operating
systems support setting this pointer to anything other than four.
-p port, source-port port (Specify source port)
Set the port number for Ncat to bind to.
-s host, source host (Specify source address)
Set the address for Ncat to bind to.
LISTEN MODE OPTIONS
See the section called “ACCESS CONTROL OPTIONS” for information on
limiting the hosts that may connect to the listening Ncat process.
-l, listen (Listen for connections)
Listen for connections rather than connecting to a remote machine
-m numconns, max-conns numconns (Specify maximum number of
connections)
The maximum number of simultaneous connections accepted by an Ncat
instance. 100 is the default (60 on Windows).
-k, keep-open (Accept multiple connections)
Normally a listening server accepts only one connection and then
quits when the connection is closed. This option makes it accept
multiple simultaneous connections and wait for more connections
after they have all been closed. It must be combined with listen.
In this mode there is no way for Ncat to know when its network
input is finished, so it will keep running until interrupted. This
also means that it will never close its output stream, so any
program reading from Ncat and looking for end-of-file will also
hang.
broker (Connection brokering)
Allow multiple parties to connect to a centralised Ncat server and
communicate with each other. Ncat can broker communication between
systems that are behind a NAT or otherwise unable to directly
connect. This option is used in conjunction with listen, which
causes the listen port to have broker mode enabled.
chat (Ad-hoc “chat server”)
The chat option enables chat mode, intended for the exchange of
text between several users. In chat mode, connection brokering is
turned on. Ncat prefixes each message received with an ID before
relaying it to the other connections. The ID is unique for each
connected client. This helps distinguish who sent what.
Additionally, non-printing characters such as control characters
are escaped to keep them from doing damage to a terminal.
SSL OPTIONS
ssl (Use SSL)
In connect mode, this option transparently negotiates an SSL
session with an SSL server to securely encrypt the connection. This
is particularly handy for talking to SSL enabled HTTP servers, etc.
In server mode, this option listens for incoming SSL connections,
rather than plain untunneled traffic.
ssl-verify (Verify server certificates)
In client mode, ssl-verify is like ssl except that it also
requires verification of the server certificate. Ncat comes with a
default set of trusted certificates in the file ca-bundle.crt.
Some operating systems provide a default list of trusted
certificates; these will also be used if available. Use
ssl-trustfile to give a custom list. Use -v one or more times to
get details about verification failures. Ncat does not check for
revoked certificates.
This option has no effect in server mode.
ssl-cert certfile.pem (Specify SSL certificate)
This option gives the location of a PEM-encoded certificate files
used to authenticate the server (in listen mode) or the client (in
connect mode). Use it in combination with ssl-key.
ssl-key keyfile.pem (Specify SSL private key)
This option gives the location of the PEM-encoded private key file
that goes with the certificate named with ssl-cert.
ssl-trustfile cert.pem (List trusted certificates)
This option sets a list of certificates that are trusted for
purposes of certificate verification. It has no effect unless
combined with ssl-verify. The argument to this option is the name
of a PEM file containing trusted certificates. Typically, the file
will contain certificates of certification authorities, though it
may also contain server certificates directly. When this option is
used, Ncat does not use its default certificates.
ssl-ciphers cipherlist (Specify SSL ciphersuites)
This option sets the list of ciphersuites that Ncat will use when
connecting to servers or when accepting SSL connections from
clients. The syntax is described in the OpenSSL ciphers(1) man
page, and defaults to ALL:!ADH:!LOW:!EXP:!MD5:@STRENGTH
PROXY OPTIONS
proxy host[:port] (Specify proxy address)
Requests proxying through host:port, using the protocol specified
by proxy-type.
If no port is specified, the proxy protocol's well-known port is
used (1080 for SOCKS and 3128 for HTTP). However, when specifying
an IPv6 HTTP proxy server using the IP address rather than the
hostname, the port number MUST be specified as well. If the proxy
requires authentication, use proxy-auth.
proxy-type proto (Specify proxy protocol)
In connect mode, this option requests the protocol proto to connect
through the proxy host specified by proxy. In listen mode, this
option has Ncat act as a proxy server using the specified protocol.
The currently available protocols in connect mode are http
(CONNECT) and socks4 (SOCKSv4). The only server currently supported
is http. If this option is not used, the default protocol is http.
proxy-auth user[:pass] (Specify proxy credentials)
In connect mode, gives the credentials that will be used to connect
to the proxy server. In listen mode, gives the credentials that
will be required of connecting clients. For use with proxy-type
http, the form should be user:pass. For proxy-type socks4, it
should be a username only.
COMMAND EXECUTION OPTIONS
-e command, exec command (Execute command)
Execute the specified command after a connection has been
established. The command must be specified as a full pathname. All
input from the remote client will be sent to the application and
responses sent back to the remote client over the socket, thus
making your command-line application interactive over a socket.
Combined with keep-open, Ncat will handle multiple simultaneous
connections to your specified port/application like inetd. Ncat
will only accept a maximum, definable, number of simultaneous
connections controlled by the -m option. By default this is set to
100 (60 on Windows).
-c command, sh-exec command (Execute command via sh)
Same as -e, except it tries to execute the command via /bin/sh.
This means you don't have to specify the full path for the command,
and shell facilities like environment variables are available.
lua-exec file (Execute a .lua script)
Runs the specified file as a Lua script after a connection has been
established, using a built-in interpreter. Both the script's
standard input and the standard output are redirected to the
connection data streams.
All exec options add the following variables to the child's
environment:
NCATREMOTEADDR, NCATREMOTEPORT
The IP address and port number of the remote host. In connect mode,
it's the target's address; in listen mode, it's the client's
address.
NCATLOCALADDR, NCATLOCALPORT
The IP address and port number of the local end of the connection.
NCATPROTO
The protocol in use: one of TCP, UDP, and SCTP.
ACCESS CONTROL OPTIONS
allow host[,host,...] (Allow connections)
The list of hosts specified will be the only hosts allowed to
connect to the Ncat process. All other connection attempts will be
disconnected. In case of a conflict between allow and deny,
allow takes precedence. Host specifications follow the same
syntax used by Nmap.
allowfile file (Allow connections from file)
This has the same functionality as allow, except that the allowed
hosts are provided in a new-line delimited allow file, rather than
directly on the command line.
deny host[,host,...] (Deny connections)
Issue Ncat with a list of hosts that will not be allowed to connect
to the listening Ncat process. Specified hosts will have their
session silently terminated if they try to connect. In case of a
conflict between allow and deny, allow takes precedence. Host
specifications follow the same syntax used by Nmap.
denyfile file (Deny connections from file)
This is the same functionality as deny, except that excluded
hosts are provided in a new-line delimited deny file, rather than
directly on the command line.
TIMING OPTIONS
These options accept a time parameter. This is specified in seconds by
default, though you can append ms, s, m, or h to the value to specify
milliseconds, seconds, minutes, or hours.
-d time, delay time (Specify line delay)
Set the delay interval for lines sent. This effectively limits the
number of lines that Ncat will send in the specified period. This
may be useful for low-bandwidth sites, or have other uses such as
coping with annoying iptables limit options.
-i time, idle-timeout time (Specify idle timeout)
Set a fixed timeout for idle connections. If the idle timeout is
reached, the connection is terminated.
-w time, wait time (Specify connect timeout)
Set a fixed timeout for connection attempts.
OUTPUT OPTIONS
-o file, output file (Save session data)
Dump session data to a file
-x file, hex-dump file (Save session data in hex)
Dump session data in hex to a file.
append-output (Append output)
Issue Ncat with append-ouput along with -o and/or -x and it will
append the resulted output rather than truncating the specified
output files.
-v, verbose (Be verbose)
Issue Ncat with -v and it will be verbose and display all kinds of
useful connection based information. Use more than once (-vv,
-vvv...) for greater verbosity.
MISC OPTIONS
-C, crlf (Use CRLF as EOL)
This option tells Ncat to convert LF line endings to CRLF when
taking input from standard input. This is useful for talking to
some stringent servers directly from a terminal in one of the many
common plain-text protocols that use CRLF for end-of-line.
-h, help (Help screen)
Displays a short help screen with common options and parameters,
and then exits.
recv-only (Only receive data)
If this option is passed, Ncat will only receive data and will not
try to send anything.
send-only (Only send data)
If this option is passed, then Ncat will only send data and will
ignore anything received. This option also causes Ncat to close the
network connection and terminate after EOF is received on standard
input.
no-shutdown (Do not shutdown into half-duplex mode)
If this option is passed, Ncat will not invoke shutdown on a socket
aftering seeing EOF on stdin. This is provided for
backward-compatibility with OpenBSD netcat, which exhibits this
behavior when executed with its '-d' option.
-t, telnet (Answer Telnet negotiations)
Handle DO/DONT WILL/WONT Telnet negotiations. This makes it
possible to script Telnet sessions with Ncat.
version (Display version)
Displays the Ncat version number and exits.
UNIX DOMAIN SOCKETS
The -U option (same as unixsock) causes Ncat to use Unix domain
sockets rather than network sockets. Unix domain sockets exist as an
entry in the filesystem. You must give the name of a socket to connect
to or to listen on. For example, to make a connection,
ncat -U ~/unixsock
To listen on a socket:
ncat -l -U ~/unixsock
Listen mode will create the socket if it doesn't exist. The socket will
continue to exist after the program ends.
Both stream and datagram domain sockets are supported. Use -U on its
own for stream sockets, or combine it with udp for datagram sockets.
Datagram sockets require a source socket to connect from. By default, a
source socket with a random filename will be created as needed, and
deleted when the program ends. Use the source with a path to use a
source socket with a specific name.
EXAMPLES
Connect to example.org on TCP port 8080.
ncat example.org 8080
Listen for connections on TCP port 8080.
ncat -l 8080
Redirect TCP port 8080 on the local machine to host on port 80.
ncat sh-exec "ncat example.org 80" -l 8080 keep-open
Bind to TCP port 8081 and attach /bin/bash for the world to access
freely.
ncat exec "/bin/bash" -l 8081 keep-open
Bind a shell to TCP port 8081, limit access to hosts on a local
network, and limit the maximum number of simultaneous connections to 3.
ncat exec "/bin/bash" max-conns 3 allow 192.168.0.0/24 -l
8081 keep-open
Connect to smtphost:25 through a SOCKS4 server on port 1080.
ncat proxy socks4host proxy-type socks4 proxy-auth user
smtphost 25
Create an HTTP proxy server on localhost port 8888.
ncat -l proxy-type http localhost 8888
Send a file over TCP port 9899 from host2 (client) to host1 (server).
HOST1$ ncat -l 9899 > outputfile
HOST2$ ncat HOST1 9899 < inputfile
Transfer in the other direction, turning Ncat into a “one file” server.
HOST1$ ncat -l 9899 < inputfile
HOST2$ ncat HOST1 9899 > outputfile
EXIT CODE
The exit code reflects whether a connection was made and completed
successfully. 0 means there was no error. 1 means there was a network
error of some kind, for example “Connection refused” or “Connection
reset”. 2 is reserved for all other errors, like an invalid option or a
nonexistent file.
BUGS
Like its authors, Ncat isn't perfect. But you can help make it better
by sending bug reports or even writing patches. If Ncat doesn't behave
the way you expect, first upgrade to the latest version available from
https://nmap.org. If the problem persists, do some research to
determine whether it has already been discovered and addressed. Try
Googling the error message or browsing the nmap-dev archives at
http://seclists.org/. Read this full manual page as well. If nothing
comes of this, mail a bug report to . Please include
everything you have learned about the problem, as well as what version
of Ncat you are running and what operating system version it is running
on. Problem reports and Ncat usage questions sent to dev@nmap.org are
far more likely to be answered than those sent to Fyodor directly.
Code patches to fix bugs are even better than bug reports. Basic
instructions for creating patch files with your changes are available
at https://svn.nmap.org/nmap/HACKING. Patches may be sent to nmap-dev
(recommended) or to Fyodor directly.
AUTHORS
· Chris Gibson
· Kris Katterjohn
· Mixter
· Fyodor (http://insecure.org)
The original Netcat was written by *Hobbit* . While
Ncat isn't built on any code from the “traditional” Netcat (or any
other implementation), Ncat is most definitely based on Netcat in
spirit and functionality.
LEGAL NOTICES
Ncat Copyright and Licensing
Ncat is (C) 2005–2012 Insecure.Com LLC. It is distributed as free and
open source software under the same license terms as our Nmap software.
Precise terms and further details are available from
https://nmap.org/man/man-legal.html.
Creative Commons License for this Ncat Guide
This Ncat Reference Guide is (C) 2005–2012 Insecure.Com LLC. It is
hereby placed under version 3.0 of the Creative Commons Attribution
License[1]. This allows you redistribute and modify the work as you
desire, as long as you credit the original source. Alternatively, you
may choose to treat this document as falling under the same license as
Ncap itself (discussed previously).
Source Code Availability and Community Contributions
Source is provided to this software because we believe users have a
right to know exactly what a program is going to do before they run it.
This also allows you to audit the software for security holes (none
have been found so far).
Source code also allows you to port Nmap (which includes Ncat) to new
platforms, fix bugs, and add new features. You are highly encouraged to
send your changes to for possible incorporation into the
main distribution. By sending these changes to Fyodor or one of the
Insecure.Org development mailing lists, it is assumed that you are
offering the Nmap Project (Insecure.Com LLC) the unlimited,
non-exclusive right to reuse, modify, and relicense the code. Nmap will
always be available open source, but this is important because the
inability to relicense code has caused devastating problems for other
Free Software projects (such as KDE and NASM). We also occasionally
relicense the code to third parties as discussed in the Nmap man page.
If you wish to specify special license conditions of your
contributions, just say so when you send them.
No Warranty
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License v2.0 for more details at
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html, or in the COPYING file
included with Nmap.
Inappropriate Usage
Ncat should never be installed with special privileges (e.g. suid
root). That would open up a major security vulnerability as other
users on the system (or attackers) could use it for privilege
escalation.
Third-Party Software
This product includes software developed by the Apache Software
Foundation[2]. A modified version of the Libpcap portable packet
capture library[3] is distributed along with Ncat. The Windows version
of Ncat utilized the Libpcap-derived WinPcap library[4] instead.
Certain raw networking functions use the Libdnet[5] networking library,
which was written by Dug Song. A modified version is distributed with
Ncat. Ncat can optionally link with the OpenSSL cryptography toolkit[6]
for SSL version detection support. All of the third-party software
described in this paragraph is freely redistributable under BSD-style
software licenses.
NOTES
1. Creative Commons Attribution License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
2. Apache Software Foundation
http://www.apache.org
3. Libpcap portable packet capture library
http://www.tcpdump.org
4. WinPcap library
http://www.winpcap.org
5. Libdnet
http://libdnet.sourceforge.net
6. OpenSSL cryptography toolkit
http://www.openssl.org
Ncat 06/07/2017 NCAT(1)