Which of the following nmap commands in Linux produces the above output?

Starting nmap 3.75 ( http://www.insecure.org/nmap/ ) at 2006-09-25 00:01 EST Host 192.168.0.0 seems to be a subnet broadcast address (returned 4 extra pings).
Host 192.168.0.1 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:12:17:31:4F:C4 (Cisco-Linksys)
Host 192.168.0.6 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:C0:4F:A1:25:4A (Dell Computer)
Host 192.168.0.10 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:B0:D0:FE:87:68 (Dell Computer)
Host 192.168.0.13 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:C0:4F:A1:25:89 (Dell Computer)
Host 192.168.0.100 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:C0:4F:A1:27:BF (Dell Computer)
Host 192.168.0.103 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:0D:88:66:FB:87 (D-Link)
Host 192.168.0.104 appears to be up.
Host 192.168.0.108 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:11:D8:90:D6:7F (Asustek Computer)
Host 192.168.0.255 seems to be a subnet broadcast address (returned 4 extra pings).
Nmap run completed — 256 IP addresses (8 hosts up) scanned in 4.390 seconds
Which of the following nmap commands in Linux produces the above output?

Starting nmap 3.75 ( http://www.insecure.org/nmap/ ) at 2006-09-25 00:01 EST Host 192.168.0.0 seems to be a subnet broadcast address (returned 4 extra pings).

Host 192.168.0.1 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:12:17:31:4F:C4 (Cisco-Linksys)
Host 192.168.0.6 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:C0:4F:A1:25:4A (Dell Computer)
Host 192.168.0.10 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:B0:D0:FE:87:68 (Dell Computer)
Host 192.168.0.13 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:C0:4F:A1:25:89 (Dell Computer)
Host 192.168.0.100 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:C0:4F:A1:27:BF (Dell Computer)
Host 192.168.0.103 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:0D:88:66:FB:87 (D-Link)
Host 192.168.0.104 appears to be up.
Host 192.168.0.108 appears to be up.
MAC Address: 00:11:D8:90:D6:7F (Asustek Computer)
Host 192.168.0.255 seems to be a subnet broadcast address (returned 4 extra pings).
Nmap run completed — 256 IP addresses (8 hosts up) scanned in 4.390 seconds

Which of the following nmap commands in Linux produces the above output?

A.
run nmap -TX 192.168.0.1/24

B.
sudo nmap -sP 192.168.0.1/24

C.
root nmap -sA 192.168.0.1/24

D.
launch nmap -PP 192.168.0.1/24



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Ghost Man

Ghost Man

Ans- B

The result came from the NMAp scan is a ping sweep command resut

Nmap -sP (Target IP/subnet)

networkmanagers

networkmanagers

I choose