RE: Getting a Machines Uptime Remotely

From: Holstein, Robert - BLS CTR (Holstein.Robert@bls.gov)
Date: Thu Feb 02 2006 - 15:22:25 EST


I should have mentioned this in the first communiqué. I don't have any privileges on any of the remote workstations to authenticate a remote connection with so RPC queries usually don't work. If someone knows a way to coax something from an RPC call im all ears. Having no credentials to pass also eliminates psinfo, systeminfo, uptime or many of the other well know windows based tools.

SNMP is supposedly completely disabled on these workstations so I don't know if trying to query an OID remotely would be worth the time. It's worth a try though. That's one of the reasons I looked to NMAP. I know it calculates uptime from the TCP timestamp for Linux OS. I suspect it can do the same for windows, but I don't know how to go about it.

-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Friedl [mailto:steve@unixwiz.net]
Sent: Thursday, February 02, 2006 2:21 PM
To: Holstein, Robert - BLS CTR
Cc: pen-test@securityfocus.com
Subject: Re: Getting a Machines Uptime Remotely

On Wed, Feb 01, 2006 at 10:18:06AM -0500, Holstein, Robert - BLS CTR wrote:
> I'm trying to figure out how to get the uptime of a Win* machine
> remotely using NMAP. Stealth is not a concern. I've done it with
> *nix based OS'es before using NMAP but never Windows. Can anyone offer
> some advice on how to do this using NMAP. I've tried a couple
> different things with no results.

There are two ways I can think of to get the uptime remotely, though neither with nmap.

1) via SNMP: the sysUpTime.0 OID is the number of 100ths of a second since
   boot. This has a 497-day limit before the 32-bit counter wraps around,
   but if it's a Windows machine I doubt you'll run into that ;-)

2) I'm sure there's an RPC type query which returns this information, but
   it surely requires a network credential.

Steve

---
Stephen J Friedl | Security Consultant | UNIX Wizard | +1 714 544-6561
www.unixwiz.net | Tustin, Calif. USA | Microsoft MVP | steve@unixwiz.net

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