Provided by: netcat-openbsd_1.105-7ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       nc — arbitrary TCP and UDP connections and listens

SYNOPSIS

       nc  [-46bCDdhklnrStUuvZz]  [-I  length]  [-i  interval]  [-O length] [-P proxy_username] [-p source_port]
          [-q  seconds]  [-s  source]  [-T  toskeyword]  [-V  rtable]  [-w  timeout]  [-X  proxy_protocol]   [-x
          proxy_address[:port]] [destination] [port]

DESCRIPTION

       The  nc  (or  netcat)  utility  is  used  for  just  about  anything under the sun involving TCP, UDP, or
       Unix-domain sockets.  It can open TCP connections, send UDP packets, listen  on  arbitrary  TCP  and  UDP
       ports,  do  port  scanning,  and  deal with both IPv4 and IPv6.  Unlike telnet(1), nc scripts nicely, and
       separates error messages onto standard error instead of sending them to  standard  output,  as  telnet(1)
       does with some.

       Common uses include:

                simple TCP proxies
                shell-script based HTTP clients and servers
                network daemon testing
                a SOCKS or HTTP ProxyCommand for ssh(1)
                and much, much more

       The options are as follows:

       -4      Forces nc to use IPv4 addresses only.

       -6      Forces nc to use IPv6 addresses only.

       -b      Allow broadcast.

       -C      Send CRLF as line-ending.

       -D      Enable debugging on the socket.

       -d      Do not attempt to read from stdin.

       -h      Prints out nc help.

       -I length
               Specifies the size of the TCP receive buffer.

       -i interval
               Specifies  a  delay  time  interval between lines of text sent and received.  Also causes a delay
               time between connections to multiple ports.

       -k      Forces nc to stay listening for another connection after its current connection is completed.  It
               is an error to use this option without the -l option.

       -l      Used to specify that nc  should  listen  for  an  incoming  connection  rather  than  initiate  a
               connection  to  a remote host.  It is an error to use this option in conjunction with the -p, -s,
               or -z options.  Additionally, any timeouts specified with the -w option are ignored.

       -n      Do not do any DNS or service lookups on any specified addresses, hostnames or ports.

       -O length
               Specifies the size of the TCP send buffer.

       -P proxy_username
               Specifies a username to present to a proxy server that requires authentication.  If  no  username
               is  specified  then authentication will not be attempted.  Proxy authentication is only supported
               for HTTP CONNECT proxies at present.

       -p source_port
               Specifies the source port nc should use, subject to privilege restrictions and availability.

       -q seconds
               after EOF on stdin, wait the specified number of seconds and then quit. If seconds  is  negative,
               wait forever.

       -r      Specifies  that source and/or destination ports should be chosen randomly instead of sequentially
               within a range or in the order that the system assigns them.

       -S      Enables the RFC 2385 TCP MD5 signature option.

       -s source
               Specifies the IP of the interface which is used to send the packets.   For  Unix-domain  datagram
               sockets,  specifies  the  local  temporary socket file to create and use so that datagrams can be
               received.  It is an error to use this option in conjunction with the -l option.

       -T toskeyword
               Change IPv4 TOS value.  toskeyword may  be  one  of  critical,  inetcontrol,  lowcost,  lowdelay,
               netcontrol,  throughput,  reliability, or one of the DiffServ Code Points: ef, af11 ... af43, cs0
               ... cs7; or a number in either hex or decimal.

       -t      Causes nc to send RFC 854 DON'T and WON'T responses to RFC 854 DO and WILL requests.  This  makes
               it possible to use nc to script telnet sessions.

       -U      Specifies to use Unix-domain sockets.

       -u      Use  UDP  instead  of  the default option of TCP.  For Unix-domain sockets, use a datagram socket
               instead of a stream socket.  If a Unix-domain socket is used, a  temporary  receiving  socket  is
               created in /tmp unless the -s flag is given.

       -V rtable
               Set the routing table to be used.  The default is 0.

       -v      Have nc give more verbose output.

       -w timeout
               Connections  which  cannot be established or are idle timeout after timeout seconds.  The -w flag
               has no effect on the -l option, i.e. nc will listen forever for a connection, with or without the
               -w flag.  The default is no timeout.

       -X proxy_protocol
               Requests that nc should use the specified protocol when talking to the proxy  server.   Supported
               protocols  are  “4” (SOCKS v.4), “5” (SOCKS v.5) and “connect” (HTTPS proxy).  If the protocol is
               not specified, SOCKS version 5 is used.

       -x proxy_address[:port]
               Requests that nc should connect to destination using a proxy at proxy_address and port.  If  port
               is  not  specified,  the well-known port for the proxy protocol is used (1080 for SOCKS, 3128 for
               HTTPS).

       -Z      DCCP mode.

       -z      Specifies that nc should just scan for listening daemons, without sending any data to  them.   It
               is an error to use this option in conjunction with the -l option.

       destination  can  be  a  numerical IP address or a symbolic hostname (unless the -n option is given).  In
       general, a destination must be specified, unless the -l option is given (in which case the local host  is
       used).   For  Unix-domain  sockets,  a  destination  is required and is the socket path to connect to (or
       listen on if the -l option is given).

       port can be a single integer or a range of  ports.   Ranges  are  in  the  form  nn-mm.   In  general,  a
       destination port must be specified, unless the -U option is given.

CLIENT/SERVER MODEL

       It  is  quite  simple  to  build  a  very  basic  client/server model using nc.  On one console, start nc
       listening on a specific port for a connection.  For example:

             $ nc -l 1234

       nc is now listening on port 1234 for a connection.  On a second console (or a second machine), connect to
       the machine and port being listened on:

             $ nc 127.0.0.1 1234

       There should now be a connection between the ports.   Anything  typed  at  the  second  console  will  be
       concatenated to the first, and vice-versa.  After the connection has been set up, nc does not really care
       which side is being used as a ‘server’ and which side is being used as a ‘client’.  The connection may be
       terminated using an EOF (‘^D’).

       There  is  no  -c or -e option in this netcat, but you still can execute a command after connection being
       established by redirecting file descriptors. Be cautious here because  opening  a  port  and  let  anyone
       connected  execute arbitrary command on your site is DANGEROUS. If you really need to do this, here is an
       example:

       On ‘server’ side:

             $ rm -f /tmp/f; mkfifo /tmp/f
             $ cat /tmp/f | /bin/sh -i 2>&1 | nc -l 127.0.0.1 1234 > /tmp/f

       On ‘client’ side:

             $ nc host.example.com 1234
             $ (shell prompt from host.example.com)

       By doing this, you create a fifo at /tmp/f and make nc listen  at  port  1234  of  address  127.0.0.1  on
       ‘server’  side, when a ‘client’ establishes a connection successfully to that port, /bin/sh gets executed
       on ‘server’ side and the shell prompt is given to ‘client’ side.

       When connection is terminated, nc quits as well. Use -k if you want it keep listening, but if the command
       quits this option won't restart it or keep nc running. Also don't forget to remove  the  file  descriptor
       once you don't need it anymore:

             $ rm -f /tmp/f

DATA TRANSFER

       The  example  in  the  previous  section  can  be  expanded  to  build  a basic data transfer model.  Any
       information input into one end of the connection will be output to the other end, and  input  and  output
       can be easily captured in order to emulate file transfer.

       Start by using nc to listen on a specific port, with output captured into a file:

             $ nc -l 1234 > filename.out

       Using  a  second  machine,  connect  to  the  listening  nc  process,  feeding it the file which is to be
       transferred:

             $ nc host.example.com 1234 < filename.in

       After the file has been transferred, the connection will close automatically.

TALKING TO SERVERS

       It is sometimes useful to talk to servers “by hand” rather than through a user interface.  It can aid  in
       troubleshooting,  when  it  might  be  necessary  to  verify what data a server is sending in response to
       commands issued by the client.  For example, to retrieve the home page of a web site:

             $ printf "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n" | nc host.example.com 80

       Note that this also displays the headers sent by the web server.  They can be filtered, using a tool such
       as sed(1), if necessary.

       More complicated examples can be built up when the user knows the format  of  requests  required  by  the
       server.  As another example, an email may be submitted to an SMTP server using:

             $ nc [-C] localhost 25 << EOF
             HELO host.example.com
             MAIL FROM:<user@host.example.com>
             RCPT TO:<user2@host.example.com>
             DATA
             Body of email.
             .
             QUIT
             EOF

PORT SCANNING

       It  may be useful to know which ports are open and running services on a target machine.  The -z flag can
       be used to tell nc to report open ports, rather than initiate a connection. Usually it's useful  to  turn
       on verbose output to stderr by use this option in conjunction with -v option.

       For example:

             $ nc -zv host.example.com 20-30
             Connection to host.example.com 22 port [tcp/ssh] succeeded!
             Connection to host.example.com 25 port [tcp/smtp] succeeded!

       The port range was specified to limit the search to ports 20 - 30, and is scanned by increasing order.

       You can also specify a list of ports to scan, for example:

             $ nc -zv host.example.com 80 20 22
             nc: connect to host.example.com 80 (tcp) failed: Connection refused
             nc: connect to host.example.com 20 (tcp) failed: Connection refused
             Connection to host.example.com port [tcp/ssh] succeeded!

       The ports are scanned by the order you given.

       Alternatively,  it  might  be  useful to know which server software is running, and which versions.  This
       information is often contained within the greeting banners.  In order to retrieve these, it is  necessary
       to  first  make a connection, and then break the connection when the banner has been retrieved.  This can
       be accomplished by specifying a small timeout with the -w flag, or perhaps by issuing a "QUIT" command to
       the server:

             $ echo "QUIT" | nc host.example.com 20-30
             SSH-1.99-OpenSSH_3.6.1p2
             Protocol mismatch.
             220 host.example.com IMS SMTP Receiver Version 0.84 Ready

EXAMPLES

       Open a TCP connection to port 42 of host.example.com, using port 31337 as the source port, with a timeout
       of 5 seconds:

             $ nc -p 31337 -w 5 host.example.com 42

       Open a UDP connection to port 53 of host.example.com:

             $ nc -u host.example.com 53

       Open a TCP connection to port 42 of host.example.com using 10.1.2.3 as the IP for the local  end  of  the
       connection:

             $ nc -s 10.1.2.3 host.example.com 42

       Create and listen on a Unix-domain stream socket:

             $ nc -lU /var/tmp/dsocket

       Connect to port 42 of host.example.com via an HTTP proxy at 10.2.3.4, port 8080.  This example could also
       be used by ssh(1); see the ProxyCommand directive in ssh_config(5) for more information.

             $ nc -x10.2.3.4:8080 -Xconnect host.example.com 42

       The  same  example  again,  this  time  enabling  proxy authentication with username “ruser” if the proxy
       requires it:

             $ nc -x10.2.3.4:8080 -Xconnect -Pruser host.example.com 42

SEE ALSO

       cat(1), ssh(1)

AUTHORS

       Original implementation by *Hobbit* ⟨hobbit@avian.org⟩.
       Rewritten with IPv6 support by Eric Jackson <ericj@monkey.org>.
       Modified for Debian port by Aron Xu ⟨aron@debian.org⟩.

CAVEATS

       UDP port scans using the -uz combination of flags will always report success irrespective of  the  target
       machine's  state.   However,  in  conjunction  with  a traffic sniffer either on the target machine or an
       intermediary device, the -uz combination could be useful for communications diagnostics.  Note  that  the
       amount  of  UDP  traffic  generated  may be limited either due to hardware resources and/or configuration
       settings.

Debian                                          February 7, 2012                                           NC(1)