Home/CAPEC/Host Discovery
Attack Pattern

Host Discovery

CAPEC-292 · Standard · Stable
An adversary sends a probe to an IP address to determine if the host is alive. Host discovery is one of the earliest phases of network reconnaissance. The adversary usually starts with a range of IP addresses belonging to a target network and uses various methods to determine if a host is present at that IP address. Host discovery is usually referred to as 'Ping' scanning using a sonar analogy. The goal is to send a packet through to the IP address and solicit a response from the host. As such, a 'ping' can be virtually any crafted packet whatsoever, provided the adversary can identify a functional host based on its response. An attack of this nature is usually carried out with a 'ping sweep,' where a particular kind of ping is sent to a range of IP addresses.
severity: Low

Targets These Weaknesses (CWE)

1
The underlying weaknesses this attack pattern exploits. Follow into a CWE to see affected CVEs and its relationship tree.
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