Saturday 22 October 2011

When you first turn on you computer (BEFORE DIALING INTO YOUR ISP),


open a MS-DOS Prompt window (start/programs MS-DOS Prompt).



Then type netstat -arn and press the Enter key.



Your screen should display the following (without the dotted lines



which I added for clarification).





-----------------------------------------------------------------------------



Active Routes:





Network Address Netmask Gateway Address Interface Metric



127.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 1



255.255.255.255 255.255.255.255 255.255.255.255 0.0.0.0 1





Route Table





Active Connections





Proto Local Address Foreign Address State





--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





If you see anything else, there might be a problem (more on that later).



Now dial into your ISP, once you are connected;



go back to the MS-DOS Prompt and run the same command as before



netstat -arn, this time it will look similar to the following (without



dotted lines).





-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Active Routes:





Network Address Netmask Gateway Address Interface Metric



0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 216.1.104.70 216.1.104.70 1



127.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 1



216.1.104.0 255.255.255.0 216.1.104.70 216.1.104.70 1



216.1.104.70 255.255.255.255 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 1



216.1.104.255 255.255.255.255 216.1.104.70 216.1.104.70 1



224.0.0.0 224.0.0.0 216.1.104.70 216.1.104.70 1



255.255.255.255 255.255.255.255 216.1.104.70 216.1.104.70 1





Route Table





Active Connections





Proto Local Address Foreign Address State



TCP 0.0.0.0:0 0.0.0.0:0 LISTENING



TCP 216.1.104.70:137 0.0.0.0:0 LISTENING



TCP 216.1.104.70:138 0.0.0.0:0 LISTENING



TCP 216.1.104.70:139 0.0.0.0:0 LISTENING



UDP 216.1.104.70:137 *:*





--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





What you are seeing in the first section (Active Routes) under the heading of



Network Address are some additional lines. The only ones that should be there



are ones belonging to your ISP (more on that later). In the second section



(Route Table) under Local Address you are seeing the IP address that your ISP



assigned you (in this example 216.1.104.70).





The numbers are divided into four dot notations, the first three should be



the same for both sets, while in this case the .70 is the unique number



assigned for THIS session. Next time you dial in that number will more than



likely be different.





To make sure that the first three notation are as they should be, we will run



one more command from the MS-DOS window.



From the MS-DOS Prompt type tracert /www.yourispwebsite.com or .net



or whatever it ends in. Following is an example of the output you should see.





---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Tracing route to /www.motion.net [207.239.117.112]over a maximum of 30 hops:



1 128 ms 2084 ms 102 ms chat-port.motion.net [216.1.104.4]



2 115 ms 188 ms 117 ms chat-core.motion.net [216.1.104.1]



3 108 ms 116 ms 119 ms www.motion.net [207.239.117.112]



Trace complete.





------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





You will see that on lines with the 1 and 2 the first three notations of the



address match with what we saw above, which is a good thing. If it does not,



then some further investigation is needed.





If everything matches like above, you can almost breath easier. Another thing



which should you should check is programs launched during startup. To find



these, Click start/programs/startup, look at what shows up. You should be



able to recognize everything there, if not, once again more investigation is



needed.





-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Now just because everything reported out like we expected (and demonstrated



above) we still are not out of the woods. How is this so, you ask? Do you use



Netmeeting? Do you get on IRC (Internet Relay Chat)? Or any other program



that makes use of the Internet. Have you every recieved an email with an



attachment that ended in .exe? The list goes on and on, basically anything



that you run could have become infected with a trojan. What this means, is



the program appears to do what you expect, but also does just a little more.



This little more could be blasting ebay.com or one of the other sites that



CNNlive was talking about.





What can you do? Well some anti-virus software will detect some trojans.



Another (tedious) thing is to start each of these "extra" Internet programs



one at a time and go through the last two steps above, looking at the routes



and connection the program uses. However, the tricky part will be figuring



out where to tracert to in order to find out if the addresses you see in



step 2 are "safe" or not. I should forewarn you, that running tracert after



tracert, after tracert might be considered "improper" by your ISP. The steps



outlined above may not work exactly as I have stated depending upon your ISP,



but with a true ISP it should work. Finally, this advise comes with NO



warranty and by following my "hints' you implicitly release me from ANY and



ALL liability which you may incur.







Other options





Display protocol statistics and current TCP/IP network connections.



Netstat [-a] [-e] [-n] [-s] [-p proto] [-r] [intervals]





-a.. Display all connections and listening ports.



-e.. Display Ethernet statistics. This may be combined with the -s option.



-n.. Diplays address and port numbers in the numerical form.



-p proto..Shows connections for the protocol specified by proto; proto may be



TCP or UDP. If used with the -s option to display per-protocol statistics,



proto may be TCP, UDP, of IP.



-r.. Display the routing table.



-s.. Display per-protocol statistics. By default, statistics are shown for TCP



UDP and IP; the -p option may be used to specify a subset of the default



interval..Redisplay selected statistics, pausing intervals seconds between each



display. If omitted. netstat will print the current configuration information


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