Detailedseverity: LowStable

CAPEC-306TCP Window Scan

Abstraction
Detailed
Status
Stable
Severity
Low

Description

An adversary engages in TCP Window scanning to analyze port status and operating system type. TCP Window scanning uses the ACK scanning method but examine the TCP Window Size field of response RST packets to make certain inferences. While TCP Window Scans are fast and relatively stealthy, they work against fewer TCP stack implementations than any other type of scan. Some operating systems return a positive TCP window size when a RST packet is sent from an open port, and a negative value when the RST originates from a closed port. TCP Window scanning is one of the most complex scan types, and its results are difficult to interpret. Window scanning alone rarely yields useful information, but when combined with other types of scanning is more useful. It is a generally more reliable means of making inference about operating system versions than port status.

Related weaknesses· 1

CWE-200

Related attack patterns· 1

CAPEC-300 (ChildOf)

Exploits1

TypeTargetConfidenceTier
WeaknessExposure of Sensitive Information to an Unauthorized Actorcwe-200100%live

Related by meaning· 6

Nearest entities by semantic similarity across the cs-graph corpus.

CAPEC
TCP Initial Window Size Probe
CAPEC
TCP ACK Scan
CAPEC
TCP Connect Scan
CAPEC
UDP Scan
CAPEC
TCP Null Scan
CAPEC
TCP FIN Scan
Sourced from MITRE CAPEC. Curated by Adam Lundqvist, SQUR.