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I want to find out all the subdomains of a given domain. I found a hint which tells me to dig the authoritative Nameserver with the following option:

dig @ns1.foo.example example.com axfr

But this never works. Has anyone a better idea/approach

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8 Answers 8

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The hint (using axfr) only works if the NS you're querying (ns1.foo.example in your example) is configured to allow AXFR requests from the IP you're using; this is unlikely, unless your IP is configured as a secondary for the domain in question.

Basically, there's no easy way to do it if you're not allowed to use axfr. This is intentional, so the only way around it would be via brute force (i.e. dig a.example.com, dig b.example.com, ...), which I can't recommend, as it could be viewed as a denial of service attack.

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126

If you can't get this information from DNS (e.g. you aren't authorized) then one alternative is to use Wolfram Alpha.

  1. Enter the domain into the search box and run the search. (E.g. stackexchange.com)

Wolfram - Homepage

  1. In the 3rd section from the top (named "Web statistics for all of stackexchange.com") click Subdomains

Wolfram - Subdomains button

  1. In the Subdomains section click More

Wolfram - More subdomains button

You will be able to see a list of sub-domains there. Although I suspect it does not show ALL sub-domains.

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  • 42
    It appears this doesn't work anymore, atleast not as described. Dec 17, 2012 at 8:57
  • 6
    This worked for me today, listed 6 subdomains of the domain I was interested in.
    – Liam
    May 29, 2013 at 9:36
  • 14
    Their subdomain information seems to be taken from Alexa.com, e.g. alexa.com/siteinfo/stackoverflow.com
    – Rob W
    Dec 27, 2013 at 11:23
  • 11
    or you could use this website: pentest-tools.com/reconnaissance/find-subdomains-of-domain# May 10, 2014 at 21:38
  • 23
    Just use google "site:" search and add known domains as negative matches until it stops finding new domains. E.g., After applying this strategy a few times for domain realtimerendering.com, my google search looks like this: site:realtimerendering.com -"www.realtimerendering.com" -"kesen.realtimerendering.com" -"erich.realtimerendering.com" -"advances.realtimerendering.com"
    – ahcox
    Oct 15, 2015 at 18:02
51

You can use:

$ host -l example.com

Under the hood, this uses the AXFR query mentioned above. You might not be allowed to do this though. In that case, you'll get a transfer failed message.

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  1. dig example.com soa
  2. dig @ns.SOA.example example.com axfr
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  • 14
    Any suggestion if transfer fails on that?
    – Chris
    Oct 20, 2010 at 19:43
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    Which of course does not work if axfr is disabled.
    – Al-Punk
    Jun 21, 2012 at 19:25
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robotex tools which are free will let you do this but they make you enter the ip of the domain first:

  1. find out the ip (there's a good ff plugin which does this but I can't post the link cos this is my first post here!)
  2. do an ip search on robotex: http://www.robtex.com/ip/
  3. in the results page that follows click on the domain you're interested in>
  4. you are taken to a page that lists all subdomains + a load of other information such as mail server info
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You can only do this if you are connecting to a DNS server for the domain -and- AXFR is enabled for your IP address. This is the mechanism that secondary systems use to load a zone from the primary. In the old days, this was not restricted, but due to security concerns, most primary name servers have a whitelist of: secondary name servers + a couple special systems.

If the nameserver you are using allows this then you can use dig or nslookup.

For example:

#nslookup

>ls example.com

NOTE: because nslookup is being deprecated for dig and other newere tools, some versions of nslookup do not support "ls", most notably macOS X's bundled version.

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In Windows nslookup the command is

ls -d example.com > outfile.txt

which stores the subdomain list in outfile.txt

few domains these days allow this

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    ls? Isn't that a *nix command? Shouldn't it be nslookup -d somedomain.com > outfile.txt Jul 30, 2015 at 11:05
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    "ls" is a valid command from the nslookup prompt. From a CMD prompt, enter nslookup first, then you can enter ls -d ...... as suggested Nov 25, 2016 at 15:50
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    I ran nslookup on Windows 10 PowerShell as Admin and then ls -d somedomain.com > outfile.txt and got "Unrecognized command".
    – Ryan
    Jul 20, 2019 at 0:12
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If the DNS server is configured properly, you won't be able to get the entire domain. If for some reason is allows zone transfers from any host, you'll have to send it the correct packet to make that request. I suspect that's what the dig statement you included does.

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