Getting started
In a nutshell, all you really have to do is type make, edit the
configuration file (config/satan.cf)
if desired, and then run SATAN; to use the HTML interface to run SATAN
you may simply type satan, then use SATAN Target selection
to choose a target. To run SATAN from the command line you would type
something like satan victim.com.
Remember - you should run SATAN as "root"!
After the probe is done, you can then go into the HTML interface (again, just
type satan), go to the SATAN Reporting & Data Analysis
section. Look at the Vulnerabilities section first, then examine
the other methods (Information and Trust).
One important caveat!
Remember, if you have the tcpd
wrappers or some other mechanism that does a reverse finger, turn
off that feature before running SATAN! There is a reasonable chance that
someone else out on the network will have the same feature turned on, and
you do NOT want to enter into a "finger war" or infinite loop of
fingers going back and forth between you and your targets, each of you
slowly getting buried in mail and/or logs. Make sure to turn it
back on after finishing the data collection, of course!
You'll need perl5 (see
system requirements) as well as a C compiler to get SATAN running properly.
To compile and prepare SATAN, look at the
first section of the SATAN tutorial.
SATAN creates and uses quite a few files, but a user typically only has
to really be concerned with one - the configuration file,
(config/satan.cf.) Besides the program files that
actually run SATAN, the following files are read or generated by SATAN:
- bin/* These are the programs that SATAN depends on for
data acquisition.
- config/* Configuration files that SATAN need to find other
programs, and for default settings.
- html/*. All of these files are either html pages or
perl programs to generate the pages for the user interface.
- perl/* Code modules used by either SATAN or by the data
acquisition tools.
- results/database-name. SATAN databases. Each database is made
up of three files:
- all-hosts. This is a list of all the hosts that
SATAN found out about during the scan, including hosts that it never touched.
- facts. This is a list of all the output records
emitted by the *.satan tools. These records are what gets processed
by SATAN to generate the reports.
- todo. This lists all the hosts and probes
that SATAN actually ran against the hosts. With this table, SATAN knows what
probes it can skip when you scan the hosts again.
- rules/*. The rules that SATAN uses to assess the situation
and infer facts from the existing information. Extremely flexible
(simply perl code that is interpreted), this is one of the most powerful
features of SATAN. See the rules section for
more.
- src/* The source code to some of the SATAN support programs.
Back to the Introductory TOC/Index