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NetBIOS Name Service plays a crucial role, involving various services such as name registration and resolution, datagram distribution, and session services, utilizing specific ports for each service.
For a device to participate in a NetBIOS network, it must have a unique name. This is achieved through a broadcast process where a "Name Query" packet is sent. If no objections are received, the name is considered available. Alternatively, a Name Service server can be queried directly to check for name availability or to resolve a name to an IP address. Tools like nmblookup
, nbtscan
, and nmap
are utilized for enumerating NetBIOS services, revealing server names and MAC addresses.
PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION
137/udp open netbios-ns Samba nmbd netbios-ns (workgroup: WORKGROUP)
Enumerating a NetBIOS service you can obtain the names the server is using and the MAC address of the server.
nmblookup -A <IP>
nbtscan <IP>/30
sudo nmap -sU -sV -T4 --script nbstat.nse -p137 -Pn -n <IP>
NetBIOS datagrams allow for connectionless communication via UDP, supporting direct messaging or broadcasting to all network names. This service uses port 138/udp.
PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION
138/udp open|filtered netbios-dgm
For connection-oriented interactions, the Session Service facilitates a conversation between two devices, leveraging TCP connections through port 139/tcp. A session begins with a "Session Request" packet and can be established based on the response. The service supports larger messages, error detection, and recovery, with TCP handling flow control and packet retransmission.
Data transmission within a session involves Session Message packets, with sessions being terminated by closing the TCP connection.
These services are integral to NetBIOS functionality, enabling efficient communication and resource sharing across a network. For more information on TCP and IP protocols, refer to their respective TCP Wikipedia and IP Wikipedia pages.
PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION
139/tcp open netbios-ssn Microsoft Windows netbios-ssn
Read the next page to learn how to enumerate this service:
Protocol_Name: Netbios #Protocol Abbreviation if there is one.
Port_Number: 137,138,139 #Comma separated if there is more than one.
Protocol_Description: Netbios #Protocol Abbreviation Spelled out
Entry_1:
Name: Notes
Description: Notes for NetBios
Note: |
Name service for name registration and resolution (ports: 137/udp and 137/tcp).
Datagram distribution service for connectionless communication (port: 138/udp).
Session service for connection-oriented communication (port: 139/tcp).
For a device to participate in a NetBIOS network, it must have a unique name. This is achieved through a broadcast process where a "Name Query" packet is sent. If no objections are received, the name is considered available. Alternatively, a Name Service server can be queried directly to check for name availability or to resolve a name to an IP address.
https://book.hacktricks.xyz/pentesting/137-138-139-pentesting-netbios
Entry_2:
Name: Find Names
Description: Three scans to find the names of the server
Command: nmblookup -A {IP} &&&& nbtscan {IP}/30 &&&& nmap -sU -sV -T4 --script nbstat.nse -p 137 -Pn -n {IP}
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