I am trying to solve the following problem: Connect to a given ip address and port number using Netcat. Enter the password when prompted by "Enter password:". Then the remote machine echoes 2 lines of text (1 random). My task is to then send these messages back to the host before the time out and it terminates.
It seems like I should be able to do this with a simple script, which reads from the command line (local) and sends the data back those lines to the remote machine. I've tried with a perl script that looks like:
#!/bin/perl -w;
use strict;
use warnings;
my $PASSWORD = "password";
my $timeout = 20;
my $timenow = time;
while (time - $timenow < $timeout) {
while (my $input = <STDIN> ) {
if ($input =~ "password") {
print $PASSWORD . "\n";
} else {
print $input;
}
}
}
Then run:
nc <address> <port> | ./perlscript.pl
This gets as far as printing out the password to my terminal, but then fails. After some poking around it would appear that the password is not actually being sent to the remote machine as doing:
echo "PASSWORD" | nc <address> <port> | ./perlscript.pl
gets me past the password prompt, prints out the messages the remote machine sends, but again would seem they are not actually being sent back.
Does anyone have any ideas how I could achieve this goal? It seems that using some kind of mknode pipe thing might help with the I/O replaying back to the remote machine, but not sure how to do that?
It's also likely that this approach is fundamentally flawed, so open to any other suggestions of how to solve this?
Thanks,
Matt