| Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 4 Junior Member | OP Junior Member Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 4 | Yeah, I had set my moms computer up to boot netcat when windows starts, and whenever I telnet to her computer I get access. But the problem is I don't know how to retrieve files. Are there certain permissions on windows that I don't know about, or is there no file transfer through telnet? | | | | Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 7,203 Likes: 11 Community Owner | Community Owner Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 7,203 Likes: 11 | The only "file transfer" that I've ever done through telnet (or SSH for that matter) was through wget on a linux/unix machine...
If you need file transfers you should instead try FTP vs Telnet | | | | Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 4 Junior Member | OP Junior Member Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 4 | See what I did is I set netcat to listen on certain ports, basically 23 and 21, also I have tried using an FTP software, copying and pasting the FTP link in my browser, yet nothing happens and also Telneting on an FTP port, I would use *nix but it doesn't support my Laptop modem. | | | | Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 7,203 Likes: 11 Community Owner | Community Owner Joined: Feb 2002 Posts: 7,203 Likes: 11 | Try using an FTP client to connect to an FTP server | | | | Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 1,146 Likes: 1 UGN News Staff | UGN News Staff Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 1,146 Likes: 1 | Try using an FTP client to connect to an FTP server Ya, that would be the best idea, just set up a FTP Server, u can upload and download etc.. Good artists copy, great artists steal.
-Picasso | | | | Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 815 nobody | nobody Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 815 | Your problem is that all netcat does is listen. It isnt a file transfer program or a remote shell server. That is why ftp or telnet do not work. The only thing that netcat does is lread and write data to a network. In read mode it is like a packet dumper. In write its like a packet generator. You need to redirect the output somehow to a shell to use shell commands. Example: A machine has a TCP firewall on all ports but it running a telnet server behind the firewall. You could have netcat listen on any port for UDP data pipe that data to telnet through localhost and back out from telnet through netcat as UDP.(not sure what the exact syntax would be so i wont write it.) There are many many more uses that is one I thought that you would like though. Try reading the help files and READMEs that are included with it. http://www.oac.uci.edu/indiv/franklin/doc/netcat.html | | | | Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 4 Junior Member | OP Junior Member Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 4 | I know what netcat does, thats what i use it for, so i can connect to her comp. I set it to listen on the same port she is listening on, on my comp. This is exactly how i have the registry key set up on her computer: nc -l -p 21 -d -t -e cmd.exe . Then on my comp i set my netcat: nc -v -l -p 21 6*.3*.1*8.4*, then another cli and then i type: telnet 6*.3*.1*8.4* 21. I get access to her comp, i can do an ipconfig and get a listing of all the directories etc.. etc.. but then comes along the part with retrieving the file, I tried bullet FTP but it doesnt want to seem to connect right, dunno what im doing rong, i was using the Bullet FTP at the time. | | | | Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 815 nobody | nobody Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 815 | hmm I dont think cmd.exe has any command that would transfer a file. You might want to set up an ftp server on your machine then connect to it from hers. This way you can just 'put' or 'mput' the files to your machine use her command line ftp client from cmd.exe. If this solution isnt suitable I can think of a couple more... | | | | Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 4 Junior Member | OP Junior Member Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 4 | I'll go ahead and try it now, I'll be back with the results... | | |
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