nasl man page on DragonFly

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NASL(1)		       Nessus Attack Scripting Language		       NASL(1)

NAME
       nasl - Nessus Attack Scripting Language

SYNOPSIS
       nasl <[-vh] [-T tracefile] [-s] [-t target] [-sX] > files...

DESCRIPTION
       nasl executes a set of NASL scripts against a given target host. It can
       also be used to determine if a NASL script has  any  syntax  errors  by
       running it in parse (-p) or lint (-L) mode.

OPTIONS
       -T tracefile
	      Makes  nasl  write  verbosely  what  the script does in the file
	      tracefile , ala 'set -x' under sh

       -t target
	      Apply the NASL script to target  which  may  be  a  single  host
	      (127.0.0.1),  a whole subnet (192.168.1.0/24) or several subnets
	      (192.168.1.0/24, 192.168.243.0/24)

       -s     Sets the return value of safe_checks() to 1.  (See  the  nessusd
	      manual to know what the safe checks are)

       -D     Only run the description part of the script.

       -L     Lint the script  (run extended checks).

       -X     Run  the	script in authenticated mode. For more information see
	      the nasl reference manual

       -h     Show help

       -v     Show the version of NASL.

SEE ALSO
       The NASL2 reference manual,  http://www.nessus.org/nasl2ref.pdf,	  nes‐
       sus(1), nessusd(8).

HISTORY
       NASL comes from a private project called 'pkt_forge', which was written
       in late 1998 by Renaud Deraison and which was an interactive  shell  to
       forge  and  send	 raw IP packets (this pre-dates Perl's Net::RawIP by a
       couple of weeks). It was then extended to do a wide range  of  network-
       related operations and integrated into Nessus as 'NASL'.

       The  parser  was	 completely  hand-written  and a pain to work with. In
       Mid-2002, Michel Arboi wrote a bison parser for NASL, and he and Renaud
       Deraison re-wrote NASL from scratch. Although the "new" NASL was nearly
       working as early as August 2002, Michel's lazyness  made	 us  wait  for
       early 2003 to have it working completely.

AUTHOR
       Most of the engine is (C) 2003 Michel Arboi, most of the built-in func‐
       tions are (C) 2003 Renaud Deraison

Nessus Project			   May 2006			       NASL(1)
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