-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 59
/
ike-vendor-ids
837 lines (791 loc) · 39 KB
/
ike-vendor-ids
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
# The IKE Scanner (ike-scan) is Copyright (C) 2003-2013 Roy Hills,
# NTA Monitor Ltd.
#
# This file is part of ike-scan.
#
# ike-scan is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# ike-scan is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with ike-scan. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
#
# ike-vendor-ids -- File containing known Vendor IDs for ike-scan
#
# Author: Roy Hills <[email protected]>
#
# Format:
# Implementation_Name<Tab>Vendor_ID_Pattern
#
# The Vendor_ID_Pattern should be specified as a Posix extended regular
# expression that will match the hex value of the Vendor ID. The Posix regular
# expression routines "regcomp" and "regexec" are used to compile and
# match the patterns.
#
# The hex value of the Vendor ID can only contain the characters [0-9a-f].
# The regular expression match is case insensitive so you can use either
# upper or lower case letters [A-F] in the pattern, although I recommend that
# you use only lower-case for consistency.
#
# The pattern is not anchored by default. If you want to match from the
# beginning of the vendor ID hex value (which is normally the case), you
# should start your pattern with "^" to anchor it at the beginning of the hex
# value. If you don't want to allow any extra trailing data, you should end
# the pattern with "$" to anchor it at the end of the hex value.
#
# Each entry must be on one line. A line can be up to 254 characters long.
# To allow for longer lines, adjust the MAXLINE macro in ike-scan.h
#
# Lines beginning with '#' and blank lines are ignored.
#
# The input format is quite strict. In particular, the separator between
# the implementation name and the VendorID pattern must be a single TAB and
# not a space.
#
# If you have problems adding entries, run ike-scan as:
# ike-scan -v -v -v <any-target>
# Which will dump the VendorID pattern table.
#
# There are examples and analysis of vendor ids returned by various
# implementations on the ike-scan wiki at
# http://www.royhills.co.uk/wiki/index.php/Ike-scan_Documentation
#
# You are encouraged to submit comments, improvements or suggestions
# at the github repository https://github.com/royhills/ike-scan
#
# Microsoft/Cisco IPsec implementation for Win-2000 and above.
# The first 16 bytes are the MD5 hash of "MS NT5 ISAKMPOAKLEY"
# The next four bytes appear to be a version number in big endian format
# The observed version numbers are:
#
# 2 Windows 2000
# 3 Windows XP SP1
# 4 Windows 2003 and Windows XP SP2
# 5 Windows Vista (tested against Beta 2 build 5384) and 2008 server
# http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc233476.aspx
Windows-2000 ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000002
Windows-XP-SP1 ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000003
Windows-2003-or-XP-SP2 ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000004
Windows-Vista ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000005
Windows-2008 ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000006
Windows-7 ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000007
Windows-2008-R2 ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000008
Windows-8 ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000009
Windows-2012 ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46100000010
Windows ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e46.........
# Checkpoint Firewall-1/VPN-1
#
# Firewall-1 v4.0 didn't use Vendor IDs. v3.0 and below didn't support IPsec.
#
# This is a 40-byte Vendor ID, which consists of the following fields:
#
# Bytes Description
# 1-20 Checkpoint VID (Probably an SHA1 hash of something)
# 21-24 Product (1=Firewall-1, 2=SecuRemote/SecureClient)
# 25-28 Encoded Version number
# 29-32 Timestamp (NGX only; always zero in 4.1 or NG)
# 33-36 Reserved
# 37-40 Features
#
# The Checkpoint VID is "f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f". I suspect
# that this is an SHA1 hash of something, but I don't know what the input text
# is.
#
# The Product is either 1 (0x00000001) for Firewall-1/VPN-1 or 2 (0x00000002)
# for SecuRemote/SecureClient (Checkpoint's VPN client).
#
# The encoded version number is described in the URL below.
#
# The timestamp field contains the Firewall's date and time encoded as seconds
# since 1st Jan 1970 (standard Unix epoch). Only NGX fills this in; it is
# always zero on 4.1 and NG.
#
# The first byte of the features field contains the number of bits used. This
# is normally 0x18 (24). The remaining three bytes (24 bits) are feature
# flags.
#
# Firewall-1 4.1 and NG only returns a Vendor ID if you send a Vendor ID
# payload starting with the Checkpoint VID. Firewall-1 NGX always returns
# a Vendor ID, regardless of whether the client sends the Checkpoint VID
# or not.
#
# See http://www.nta-monitor.com/news/checkpoint2004/index.htm for full details
#
Firewall-1 4.1 Base ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f00000001000000020000000000000000........
Firewall-1 4.1 SP1 ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f00000001000000030000000000000000........
Firewall-1 4.1 SP2-SP6 ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f0000000100000fa20000000000000000........
Firewall-1 NG Base ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f00000001000013880000000000000000........
Firewall-1 NG FP1 ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f00000001000013890000000000000000........
Firewall-1 NG FP2 ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f000000010000138a0000000000000000........
Firewall-1 NG FP3 ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f000000010000138b0000000000000000........
Firewall-1 NG AI R54 ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f000000010000138c0000000000000000........
Firewall-1 NG AI R55 ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f000000010000138d0000000000000000........
Firewall-1 NGX or later ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f000000010000138d........00000000........
Firewall-1 Unknown Vsn ^f4ed19e0c114eb516faaac0ee37daf2807b4381f
# Dead Peer Detection (DPD), detailed in RFC 3706.
# This is a truncated MD5 hash of "CISCO-DEAD-PEER-DETECTION"
# The last 2 bytes (4 hex chars) are major & minor version.
# The current version, and the only one that has been observed, is 1.0.
# Thanks to Hakan Olsson for clarifing this.
Dead Peer Detection v1.0 ^afcad71368a1f1c96b8696fc77570100
Dead Peer Detection ^afcad71368a1f1c96b8696fc7757....
# XAUTH
# This is a truncated MD5 hash of "draft-ietf-ipsra-isakmp-xauth-06.txt"
# IPSRA = "IP Security Remote Access"
# Also known as "draft-beaulieu-ike-xauth-02.txt"
XAUTH ^09002689dfd6b712
# SSH Communications Security IPSEC Express
# These VIDs are MD5 hashes of the text
# "SSH Communications Security IPSEC Express version x.y.z" or
# "Ssh Communications Security IPSEC Express version x.y.z"
# Where x.y.z is the version, e.g. 1.1.0
SSH IPSEC Express 1.1.0 ^fbf47614984031fa8e3bb6198089b223
SSH IPSEC Express 1.1.1 ^1952dc91ac20f646fb01cf42a33aee30
SSH IPSEC Express 1.1.2 ^e8bffa643e5c8f2cd10fda7370b6ebe5
SSH IPSEC Express 1.2.1 ^c1111b2dee8cbc3d620573ec57aab9cb
SSH IPSEC Express 1.2.2 ^09ec27bfbc09c75823cfecbffe565a2e
SSH IPSEC Express 2.0.0 ^7f21a596e4e318f0b2f4944c2384cb84
SSH IPSEC Express 2.1.0 ^2836d1fd2807bc9e5ae30786320451ec
SSH IPSEC Express 2.1.1 ^a68de756a9c5229bae66498040951ad5
SSH IPSEC Express 2.1.2 ^3f2372867e237c1cd8250a75559cae20
SSH IPSEC Express 3.0.0 ^0e58d5774df602007d0b02443660f7eb
SSH IPSEC Express 3.0.1 ^f5ce31ebc210f44350cf71265b57380f
SSH IPSEC Express 4.0.0 ^f64260af2e2742daddd56987068a99a0
SSH IPSEC Express 4.0.1 ^7a54d3bdb3b1e6d923892064be2d981c
SSH IPSEC Express 4.1.0 ^9aa1f3b43472a45d5f506aeb260cf214
SSH IPSEC Express 4.1.1 ^89f7b760d86b012acf263382394d962f
SSH IPSEC Express 4.2.0 ^6880c7d026099114e486c55430e7abee
SSH IPSEC Express 5.0 ^b037a21aceccb5570f602546f97bde8c
SSH IPSEC Express 5.0.0 ^2b2dad97c4d140930053287f996850b0
SSH IPSEC Express 5.1.0 ^45e17f3abe93944cb202910c59ef806b
SSH IPSEC Express 5.1.1 ^5925859f7377ed7816d2fb81c01fa551
# Cisco Unity compliant peer. VID is the MD5 hash of "CISCO-UNITY" with
# the last two bytes replaced with 0x0100.
Cisco Unity ^12f5f28c457168a9702d9fe274cc0100
# Cisco VPN 3000 Concentrator (formerly Altega Networks)
# There are several models: 3005, 3015, 3020, 3030, 3060 and 3080, which are
# equivalent to the old Altiga C5, C15 Etc.
#
# The VPN 3000 client VID is the MD5 hash of "ALTIGA NETWORKS"
# The VPN 3000 concentrator VID is a truncated MD5 hash of "ALTIGA GATEWAY"
#
# I've seen this pattern with trailing 500306 and 500400. I suspect that
# the last two bytes indicate the version number, e.g 0306 = 3.0.6. However,
# I need more examples before I'm confident that this is the case, so for
# now I'm just including the generic pattern.
Cisco VPN Concentrator (3.0.0) ^1f07f70eaa6514d3b0fa96542a500300
Cisco VPN Concentrator (3.0.1) ^1f07f70eaa6514d3b0fa96542a500301
Cisco VPN Concentrator (3.0.5) ^1f07f70eaa6514d3b0fa96542a500305
Cisco VPN Concentrator (4.0.7) ^1f07f70eaa6514d3b0fa96542a500407
VPN-3000-client ^f6f7efc7f5aeb8cb158cb9d094ba69e7
Cisco VPN Concentrator ^1f07f70eaa6514d3b0fa96542a
# IKE Fragmentation. VID is the MD5 hash of the text "FRAGMENTATION"
# I've seen extra bytes on the end of a fragmentation VID payload, e.g.
# c0000000 and 80000000. I don't know what these represent.
IKE Fragmentation ^4048b7d56ebce88525e7de7f00d6c2d3
# Various IKE Internet drafts. The VID payload is the MD5 hash of the
# implementation name given below.
draft-stenberg-ipsec-nat-traversal-01 ^27bab5dc01ea0760ea4e3190ac27c0d0
draft-stenberg-ipsec-nat-traversal-02 ^6105c422e76847e43f9684801292aecd
draft-huttunen-ipsec-esp-in-udp-00.txt ^6a7434c19d7e36348090a02334c9c805
# SafeNet SoftRemote VPN Client.
# Extra data has been observed at the end of this VID payload.
SafeNet SoftRemote 8.0.0 ^47bbe7c993f1fc13b4e6d0db565c68e5010201010201010310382e302e3020284275696c6420313029000000
SafeNet SoftRemote 9.0.1 ^47bbe7c993f1fc13b4e6d0db565c68e5010201010201010310392e302e3120284275696c6420313229000000
SafeNet SoftRemote ^47bbe7c993f1fc13b4e6d0db565c68e5
# HeartBeat Notify.
# VID is ASCII "HeartBeat_Notify"
# Extra data has been observed at the end of this VID payload. It is
# suspected that this may be a version number. E.g:
# 4865617274426561745f4e6f74696679386b0100
HeartBeat_Notify ^4865617274426561745f4e6f74696679
HeartBeat Notify ^486561727442656174204e6f74696679
# OpenPGP
OpenPGP ^4f70656e5047503130313731
# draft-huttunen-ipsec-esp-in-udp-01.txt
# VID is an MD5 hash of "ESPThruNAT"
ESPThruNAT ^50760f624c63e5c53eea386c685ca083
# SSH Sentinel.
# These VIDs are MD5 hashes of the implementation names given below.
SSH Sentinel ^054182a07c7ae206f9d2cf9d2432c482
SSH Sentinel 1.1 ^b91623e693ca18a54c6a2778552305e8
SSH Sentinel 1.2 ^5430888de01a31a6fa8f60224e449958
SSH Sentinel 1.3 ^7ee5cb85f71ce259c94a5c731ee4e752
SSH Sentinel 1.4 ^63d9a1a7009491b5a0a6fdeb2a8284f0
SSH Sentinel 1.4.1 ^eb4b0d96276b4e220ad16221a7b2a5e6
# Timestep VID is ASCII "TIMESTEP" (54494d4553544550) followed by further
# ASCII characters which seem to indicate a version number. e.g:
# 54494d455354455020312053475720313532302033313520322e303145303133
# which is "TIMESTEP 1 SGW 1520 315 2.01E013"
Timestep ^54494d4553544550
# VID is MD5 hash of "KAME/racoon"
KAME/racoon ^7003cbc1097dbe9c2600ba6983bc8b35
# Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE - previously IETF draft, now RFC.
# The VID is the MD5 hash of the implementation name given below.
# The trailing newline (\n) on one entry is explained in
# http://www.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca/ipsec/2002/04/msg00233.html
# Jan 2005: RFC released as RFC 3947 "Negotiation of NAT-Traversal in the IKE"
# VID is MD5 hash of "RFC 3947"
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike ^4df37928e9fc4fd1b3262170d515c662
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-00 ^4485152d18b6bbcd0be8a8469579ddcc
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-01 ^16f6ca16e4a4066d83821a0f0aeaa862
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-02\n ^90cb80913ebb696e086381b5ec427b1f
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-02 ^cd60464335df21f87cfdb2fc68b6a448
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-03 ^7d9419a65310ca6f2c179d9215529d56
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-04 ^9909b64eed937c6573de52ace952fa6b
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-05 ^80d0bb3def54565ee84645d4c85ce3ee
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-06 ^4d1e0e136deafa34c4f3ea9f02ec7285
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-07 ^439b59f8ba676c4c7737ae22eab8f582
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-08 ^8f8d83826d246b6fc7a8a6a428c11de8
draft-ietf-ipsec-nat-t-ike-09 ^42ea5b6f898d9773a575df26e7dd19e1
Testing NAT-T RFC ^c40fee00d5d39ddb1fc762e09b7cfea7
RFC XXXX ^810fa565f8ab14369105d706fbd57279
RFC 3947 NAT-T ^4a131c81070358455c5728f20e95452f
# A GSS-API Authentication Method for IKE - draft-ietf-ipsec-isakmp-gss-auth
# This is used by Windows 2000 and later. Specific Windows VIDs are in a
# separate section.
# Note that the MD5 hash for "A GSS-API ..." in draft version 07 is given as
# the hash of the string with a newline appended. I think that this is an
# error, so I've added patterns both with and without the trailing newline.
MS NT5 ISAKMPOAKLEY ^1e2b516905991c7d7c96fcbfb587e461
A GSS-API Authentication Method for IKE ^ad2c0dd0b9c32083ccba25b8861ec455
A GSS-API Authentication Method for IKE\n ^b46d8914f3aaa3f2fedeb7c7db2943ca
GSSAPI ^621b04bb09882ac1e15935fefa24aeee
NLBS_PRESENT ^72872B95FCDA2EB708EFE322119B4971
MS-MamieExists ^214ca4faffa7f32d6748e5303395ae83
MS-Negotiation Discovery Capable ^fb1de3cdf341b7ea16b7e5be0855f120
IKE CGA version 1 ^e3a5966a76379fe707228231e5ce8652
# Nortel Contivity VPN Router (was Bay Networks Enterprise Switch)
# The first 4 bytes are ASCII "BNES" (Bay Networks Enterprise Switch)
# The second 4 bytes appear to be a version number in big endian format.
# I've seen values 00000004, 00000005, 00000007, 00000009 and 0000000a in
# this position.
Nortel Contivity ^424e4553000000..
# Observed to be sent from SonicWall Firewalls
SonicWall-1 ^5b362bc820f60001
SonicWall-2 ^5b362bc820f60002
SonicWall-3 ^5b362bc820f60003
SonicWall-5 ^5b362bc820f60005
SonicWall-6 ^5b362bc820f60006
SonicWall-7 ^5b362bc820f60007
SonicWall-8 ^5b362bc820f60008
SonicWall-a ^404bf439522ca3f6
SonicWall-b ^da8e937880010000
SonicWall-c ^5b362bc820f70001
# SSH QuickSec
# The VIDs are the MD5 hashes of "SSH Communications Security QuickSec x.y.z"
# Where x.y.z is the version number
SSH QuickSec 0.9.0 ^37eba0c4136184e7daf8562a77060b4a
SSH QuickSec 1.1.0 ^5d72925e55948a9661a7fc48fdec7ff9
SSH QuickSec 1.1.1 ^777fbf4c5af6d1cdd4b895a05bf82594
SSH QuickSec 1.1.2 ^2cdf08e712ede8a5978761267cd19b91
SSH QuickSec 1.1.3 ^59e454a8c2cf02a34959121f1890bc87
SSH QuickSec 2.1.0 ^8f9cc94e01248ecdf147594c284b213b
# Netgear
# The VID is the MD5 hash of "NETGEAR"
Netgear ^dbfb81eb5760b0788562067da102d755
# VIDs are MD5 hash of:
# "IKE Challenge/Response for Authenticated Cryptographic Keys"
# "IKE Challenge/Response for Authenticated Cryptographic Keys (Revised)"
# both without and with trailing newline.
IKE Challenge-Response ^ba290499c24e84e53a1d83a05e5f00c9
IKE Challenge-Response-2 ^0d33611a5d521b5e3c9c03d2fc107e12
IKE Challenge-Response Revised ^ad3251042cdc4652c9e0734ce5de4c7d
IKE Challenge-Response Revised-2 ^13f11823f966fa91900f024ba66a86ba
# draft-krywaniuk-ipsec-antireplay-00.txt - Using Isakmp Message Ids for
# Replay Protection
#
# "They may also be enabled in the short term by mutual exchange of the
# vendor id 0x325df29a2319f2dd"
draft-krywaniuk-ipsec-antireplay-00 ^325df29a2319f2dd
# draft-ietf-ipsec-heartbeats-00.txt - Using Isakmp Heartbeats for Dead Peer
# Detection
# The draft says that the VID is a truncated MD5 hash of
# "draft-ietf-krywaniuk-ipsec-heartbeats-00.txt"
# but it is not.
draft-ietf-ipsec-heartbeats-00 ^8db7a41811221660
# MacOS X
# Unconfirmed, from StrongSwan vendor.c
MacOS 10.x-1 ^4d6163204f53582031302e78
MacOS 10.x-2 ^4df37928e9fc4fd1b3262170d515c662
# strongSwan
# VID is MD5 hash of "strongSwan x.y.z" where x.y.z is version number
# Originally obtained from strongSwan 4.0.5 pluto/vendor.c
strongSwan ^882fe56d6fd20dbc2251613b2ebe5beb
strongSwan 5.1.1 ^9e10a0d4205edc6c90bd5381a53c2d2b
strongSwan 5.1.1rc1 ^a55a90de781611f70cbbae7045a225fc
strongSwan 5.1.1dr4 ^c90b020d043f1f050ba809e13dc8234e
strongSwan 5.1.1dr3 ^06f2f1b82256dce62c07cb4f71604035
strongSwan 5.1.1dr2 ^4f130d312ec92f50c02f2b0eb60d6ccc
strongSwan 5.1.1dr1 ^1a45d3bda55646016e998ac1c5590e59
strongSwan 5.1.0 ^b7d8e62184049fb21b088d4232d2549c
strongSwan 5.1.0rc1 ^02c49867060173c665ebce2b8110c7f7
strongSwan 5.1.0dr2 ^e069a583c5640257a8de2cf062461a4b
strongSwan 5.1.0dr1 ^22982eab040be7a4cb4177da312f2f1c
strongSwan 5.0.4 ^dc3afcdda0514da394b4b36f4cb1b9a7
strongSwan 5.0.3 ^d398476a43b9d6c56c4045ffcc9fffb9
strongSwan 5.0.3rc1 ^f2d4de999721c37fea51d4bcbc060120
strongSwan 5.0.3dr3 ^f4d68a2fb63e4390a959baa5c4bc7598
strongSwan 5.0.3dr2 ^7b3f3d21e4768e010fc7dd04ae369c61
strongSwan 5.0.3dr1 ^ca7d77d20794391df5a3cb90fbf5b72e
strongSwan 5.0.2 ^04d52cc5fd04aa971063b111917731d2
strongSwan 5.0.2rc1 ^80b8f4380b18f24f03ce5745fc3db56b
strongSwan 5.0.2dr4 ^a5f8ce0d6751c640e55bc41784f2e081
strongSwan 5.0.1 ^75aa8f69de2e44500dae842be21f5491
strongSwan 5.0.0 ^e154b11a96ee2b44d4954843cd3a40a3
strongSwan 4.6.4 ^a87680d00cbb939871eb680d18d052e2
strongSwan 4.6.3 ^984a7bfefb46489a5be74b64531c6753
strongSwan 4.6.2 ^9c73b19f5f4181aa4b269dd004608811
strongSwan 4.6.1 ^1d6cfa4d69d9d33c0b2244bf99de9b8b
strongSwan 4.6.0 ^41ef2e2f7ec8b923c98d9fa9bb7a04a5
strongSwan 4.5.3 ^75244ad8a5a0f48e7e3b7ad79dcab153
strongSwan 4.5.2 ^b149d6161fb4c7c3805beeff042d08c0
strongSwan 4.5.1 ^efe12e8533bbcf4e978ec874935e9972
strongSwan 4.5.0 ^eff89e6f406f55292807c3b8f925884a
strongSwan 4.4.1 ^aaa2e272c58de8f96e72c4c21ba7dd99
strongSwan 4.4.0 ^a5ad81e15e1c68a1be277abfeee80d94
strongSwan 4.3.7 ^02d7c3a0698ec33bb126b2baa70b9c2c
strongSwan 4.3.6 ^882fe56d6fd20dbc2251613b2ebe5beb
strongSwan 4.3.5rc1 ^117c406d20a29f56f0dfcb03d9fa835b
strongSwan 4.3.5 ^de5c703801952d85f6b3ed33b33784b4
strongSwan 4.3.4 ^e37e5d64a329a5cf1eeb8546c3b06018
strongSwan 4.3.3 ^f9f093629308b24388d09c3f026de0a8
strongSwan 4.3.2 ^d6263956ac790961a9c8409b393724bf
strongSwan 4.3.1 ^20b1f62b240a52a849309183960cbb64
strongSwan 4.3.0 ^9deb74e751f44c47905ed2fad93f9271
strongSwan 4.2.9 ^488c08f57afc382112f7cb396f2d4f6c
strongSwan 4.2.8 ^95569ee23ebb62eddedea353a575faf3
strongSwan 4.2.7 ^4ddc7e1f6d6cd1ae9d5dcac58fa1fe9a
strongSwan 4.2.6 ^a2782dd683b5edee3b777f897d2b867e
strongSwan 4.2.5 ^af0a05e0bd37b0aba0135a194abb5b89
strongSwan 4.2.4 ^cd5792d4b70f0299a6a1373de236d2ac
strongSwan 4.2.3 ^2d1f406118fbd5d28474791ffa00488a
strongSwan 4.2.2 ^2a517d0d23c37d08bce7c292a0217b39
strongSwan 4.2.1 ^bab253f4cb10a8108a7c927c56c87886
strongSwan 4.2.0 ^9f68901325a972894335302a9531ab9f
strongSwan 4.1.11 ^b7bd9f2f978e3259a7aa9f7a1396ad6c
strongSwan 4.1.10 ^bf3a89ae5bef8e72d44dac8bb88d7d5f
strongSwan 4.1.9 ^78fdd287def01a3f074b5369eab4fd1c
strongSwan 4.1.8 ^66a2045507c119da78a4666259cdea48
strongSwan 4.1.7 ^ea840aa4dfc9712d6c32b5a16eb329a3
strongSwan 4.1.6 ^d19683368af4b0edc21ccde982b1d1b0
strongSwan 4.1.5 ^bf0fbf7306ebb7827042d893539886e2
strongSwan 4.1.4 ^312f9cb1a6b90e19de7528c904ac3087
strongSwan 4.1.3 ^5849ab6d8beabd6e4d09e5a3b88c089a
strongSwan 4.1.2 ^15a1ace7ee52fddfef04f928db2dd134
strongSwan 4.1.1 ^d3f1c488c368175d5f40a8f5ca5f5e12
strongSwan 4.1.0 ^4794cef6843422980d1a3d06af41c5cd
strongSwan 4.0.7 ^ab0746221cc8fd0d5238f73a9b3da557
strongSwan 4.0.6 ^4c90136946577b51919d8d9a6b8e4a9f
strongSwan 4.0.5 ^dd180d21e5ce655a768ba32211dd8ad9
strongSwan 4.0.4 ^1ef283f83549b5ff9608b6d634f84d75
strongSwan 4.0.3 ^b181b18e114fc209b3c6e26c3a80718e
strongSwan 4.0.2 ^77e8eea6f556a499de3ffe7f7f95661c
strongSwan 4.0.1 ^9dbbafcf1db0dd595ae065294003ad3e
strongSwan 4.0.0 ^2ce9c946a4c879bf11b50b76cc5692cb
strongSwan 2.8.9 ^0e9e820524932da199a498953afa8a7e
strongSwan 2.8.8 ^8c4a3bcb729b11f703d22a5b39640ca8
strongSwan 2.8.7 ^3a0d4e7ca4e492ed4dfe476d1ac6018b
strongSwan 2.8.6 ^fe3f49706e26a9fb36a87bfce9ea36ce
strongSwan 2.8.5 ^4c7efa31b39e510432a317570d97bbb9
strongSwan 2.8.4 ^76c72bfd398424dd001b86d0012fe061
strongSwan 2.8.3 ^fb4641ad0eeb2a34491d15f4eff51063
strongSwan 2.8.2 ^299932277b7dfe382ce23465333a7d23
strongSwan 2.8.1 ^e37f2d5ba89a62cd202ee27dac06c8a8
strongSwan 2.8.0 ^32f0e9b9c06dfe8c9ad5599a636971a1
strongSwan 2.7.3 ^7f50cc4ebf04c2d9da73abfd69b77aa2
strongSwan 2.7.2 ^a194e2aaddd0bafb95253dd96dc733eb
strongSwan 2.7.1 ^8134878582121785ba65ea345d6ba724
strongSwan 2.7.0 ^07fa128e4754f9447b1dd46374eef360
strongSwan 2.6.4 ^b927f95219a0fe3600dba3c1182ae55f
strongSwan 2.6.3 ^b2860e7837f711bef3d0eeb106872ded
strongSwan 2.6.2 ^5b1cd6fe7d050eda6c93871c107db3d2
strongSwan 2.6.1 ^66afbc12bbfe6ce108b1f69f4bc917b7
strongSwan 2.6.0 ^3f3266499ffdbd85950e702298062844
strongSwan 2.5.7 ^1f4442296b83d7e33a8b45209ba0e590
strongSwan 2.5.6 ^3c5eba3d8564928e32ae43c3d9924dee
strongSwan 2.5.5 ^3f267ed621ada7ee6c7d8893ccb0b14b
strongSwan 2.5.4 ^7a6bf5b7df89642a75a78ef7d657c1c0
strongSwan 2.5.3 ^df5b1f0f1d5679d9f8512b16c55a6065
strongSwan 2.5.2 ^861ce5eb72164b190e9e629a31cf4901
strongSwan 2.5.1 ^9a4a4648f60f8eda7cfcbfe271ee5b7d
strongSwan 2.5.0 ^9eb3d907ed7ada4e3cbcacb917abc8e4
strongSwan 2.4.4 ^485a70361b4433b31dea1c6be0df243e
strongSwan 2.4.3 ^982b7a063a33c143a8eadc88249f6bcc
strongSwan 2.4.2 ^e7a3fd0c6d771a8f1b8a86a4169c9ea4
strongSwan 2.4.1 ^75b0653cb281eb26d31ede38c8e1e228
strongSwan 2.4.0 ^e829c88149bab3c0cee85da60e18ae9b
strongSwan 2.3.2 ^42a4834c92ab9a7777063afa254bcb69
strongSwan 2.3.1 ^f697c1afcc2ec8ddcdf99dc7af03a67f
strongSwan 2.3.0 ^b8f92b2fa2d3fe5fe158344bda1cc6ae
strongSwan 2.2.2 ^99dc7cc823376b3b33d04357896ae07b
strongSwan 2.2.1 ^d9118b1e9de5efced9cc9d883f2168ff
strongSwan 2.2.0 ^85b6cbec480d5c8cd9882c825ac2c244
# ZyXEL ZyWALL router
# Observed on several devices. HTTP interface shows that they are XyWALL
# I suspect that this VID is an SHA-1 hash of something because of the length
ZyXEL ZyWALL Router ^b858d1addd08c1e8adafea150608aa4497aa6cc8
ZyXEL ZyWALL USG 100 ^f758f22668750f03b08df6ebe1d0
ZyXEL ZyWALL ^625027749d5ab97f5616c1602765cf480a3b7d0b
# Microsoft Initial Contact
# VID is MD5 hash of "Vid-Initial-Contact"
Microsoft Initial-Contact ^26244d38eddb61b3172a36e3d0cfb819
# FreeS/WAN and Openswan
# VID is a 12-byte printable string. The first two bytes are "OE", which
# stands for "Opportunistic Encryption" (the FreeS/WAN designers were
# enthusiastic about opportunistic encryption); the remaining ten bytes are
# a truncated, "ASCIIfied" MD5 hash of the implementation name given below.
# The "ASCIIfication" process involves clearing bit 7 and setting bit 6 in
# each byte, thus constraining the range to 64-127 inclusive.
# I think that support for this VID was added in FreeS/WAN 2.00, and carried
# over into openswan 2.x.
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.5 ^4f454a734e486b4a4c656272
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.6 ^4f456c4f6b6251695c7c4674
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.7 ^4f4548604f7f426647775453
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.7.1 ^4f456462595d67595351445c
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.7.2 ^4f457c625363787f517e6544
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.8 ^4f4569517b587444694c4367
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.8.1 ^4f45776a7f6d5e7a415d6f7c
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.8.2 ^4f454f575c595a744a7d4f78
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.8.3 ^4f45676a5553715e794f4f48
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.8.4 ^4f45664250754b79577f5d55
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.8.5 ^4f45615f4d44507343785d7b
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9 ^4f45494f5e4f746c57664157
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.1 ^4f45494654445c41425d6d7b
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.10 ^4f45497d4f7e6e5d60525170
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.11 ^4f454b486274755358555140
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.12 ^4f45694146645c4d4362727b
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.13 ^4f45556c7d7671444b474c59
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.14 ^4f456640625376587d626277
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.15 ^4f454b796672767d437d5d5a
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.16 ^4f454f62767d78797d7f6579
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.17 ^4f45565b597d556e596e5e60
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.18 ^4f45637e47544c77644a5b76
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.19 ^4f45614d4873425c42727b63
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.2 ^4f456171784e6b594a497058
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.20 ^4f455c6d6c497f764f44477b
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.21 ^4f4560624076527767787c56
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.22 ^4f4541687e4c507a405d5146
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.23 ^4f457841597142737f44787d
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.24 ^4f457145706b5560634e725f
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.25 ^4f454e5b60465a5a53656967
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.26 ^4f45677c575b4c7c6a4a7173
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.27 ^4f455f7f606c66424e616a60
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.28 ^4f454e6d545e534c4a626063
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.29 ^4f45765a4a6a51584653424e
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.3 ^4f45485e6175794375444950
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.30 ^4f45684e6772456542755d69
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.31 ^4f45764141405f577750567b
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.32 ^4f45546d5d704f49785e6467
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.33 ^4f45655d786b445b75484668
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.34 ^4f456547696d46657a4e5371
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.35 ^4f455b76646a646f79695451
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.36 ^4f454d596b6a6e5f56707e49
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.37 ^4f45757b6e79665a556c6546
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.38 ^4f455b6b636e606f5b42707b
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.39 ^4f45677e79657a56654f7145
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.4 ^4f4551604748445356727b74
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.40 ^4f456e504e735f4f67555d5f
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.5 ^4f4549557964647c42614440
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.6 ^4f4570695578777266796a56
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.7 ^4f457b4a767a6f716e48566c
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.8 ^4f455b71457d4f685c475d6c
Linux FreeS/WAN 0.9.9 ^4f455e4f4d58404f604d595c
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.0.0 ^4f457f685e7d4c5645785669
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.0.1 ^4f457176515f515f71526b56
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.0.2 ^4f45465d56636a5149725558
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.1.0 ^4f454644595a4f5c7a535445
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.1.1 ^4f456842537e5a5c71527547
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.1.2 ^4f457d5b4a707d736e7b5b6f
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.1.3 ^4f45646357714a755b4a5b72
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.1.4 ^4f454160444e745150604e47
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.1.5 ^4f4544547476647754795157
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.1.6 ^4f454b48657b616b494a4c77
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.2.0 ^4f45544e79737d4953437b43
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.2.1 ^4f454d524173695157515375
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.2.2 ^4f45465e5c62774e59774c4f
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.3.0 ^4f455a717b40607977577067
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.3.1 ^4f457d7c696569676a6f607c
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.3.2 ^4f457c6f70766b5a61546a51
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.3.3 ^4f457d5b527b6c54736d447d
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.3.4 ^4f454e746f4f53427579497d
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.3.5 ^4f45415262734d596d56516b
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.3.6 ^4f456248514f405942447c4e
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.0 ^4f45404063756a5d496a584f
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.1 ^4f455f526760425742497c65
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.2 ^4f456270434d5b6e6753776e
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.3 ^4f457a6d5b605b7d42405a67
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.4 ^4f457177674d6a63426e4d54
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.5 ^4f457d73435c6d5b6e777d59
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.6 ^4f45425261435763654e5269
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.7 ^4f457a6a547b434378757857
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.4.8 ^4f455476696c4e50675f6e70
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.5.0 ^4f455676404f5b55457d5479
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.5.1 ^4f45617072517b7d5c607344
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.5.2 ^4f456f407272744071414846
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.5.3 ^4f4547425f74447179614445
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.5.4 ^4f457d667c7069487e495448
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.5.5 ^4f45505f70774e73435e5b7a
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.6.0 ^4f45467c4d4760617f486547
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.6.1 ^4f454b534c5842715a656f49
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.6.2 ^4f4557464c67535540427a72
Linux FreeS/WAN 1.6.3 ^4f457d60727152596653686e
Linux FreeS/WAN 2.00 ^4f45486b7d44784d42676b5d
Linux FreeS/WAN 2.01 ^4f457c4f547e6e615b426e56
Linux FreeS/WAN 2.02 ^4f456c6b44696d7f6b4c4e60
Linux FreeS/WAN 2.03 ^4f45566671474962734e6264
Linux FreeS/WAN 2.04 ^4f45704f736579505c6e5f6d
Linux FreeS/WAN 2.05 ^4f457271785f4c7e496f4d54
Linux FreeS/WAN 2.06 ^4f457e4c466e5d427c5c6b52
# Generated using openswan-vid.pl logic
# - confirmed behavior on Openswan 2.6.28 on Ubuntu
Openswan 2.1.0 ^4f455d787a5b6948787a655b
Openswan 2.1.1 ^4f45466a786e57484d4d4361
Openswan 2.1.2 ^4f4555656771407e63636578
Openswan 2.2.0 ^4f4548724b6e5e68557c604f
Openswan 2.3.0 ^4f4572696f5c77557f746249
Openswan 2.3.1 ^4f45454355706e735d625c71
Openswan 2.3.1 X.509-1.5.4 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f45436f586c544d46766f54
Openswan 2.3.1 X.509-1.5.4 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f454578616c467b5f6f606d
Openswan 2.4.0 ^4f45785c567c6f61507e7864
Openswan 2.4.0 X.509-1.5.4 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f457240604e7f585d6d5869
Openswan 2.4.1 ^4f456e5e4c737d7d62796c51
Openswan 2.4.10 ^4f456971726d54726e464a71
Openswan 2.4.10 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f4574715e655577567a5f41
Openswan 2.4.11 ^4f4550484948576e64636f6b
Openswan 2.4.11 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f457b64445e664a6355766b
Openswan 2.4.12 ^4f456c7c5b79725e4a6a5658
Openswan 2.4.12 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f45606c50487c5662707575
Openswan 2.4.12 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f454b427a64597b774d5d40
Openswan 2.4.13 ^4f45445e597f60634770436c
Openswan 2.4.13 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f456b5a5d52605d7a7a6f4e
Openswan 2.4.13 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f456066696a417566514d44
Openswan 2.4.14 ^4f454c4e767d475b775e6f56
Openswan 2.4.14 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f455a526b5f4c686e534e63
Openswan 2.4.15 ^4f45675d5e5d7f664c604651
Openswan 2.4.15 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f4540784e47627163627858
Openswan 2.4.15 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f457d78546050757b707245
Openswan 2.4.2 ^4f45666a6343554b5f7a4062
Openswan 2.4.3 ^4f4547407c7673775449546e
Openswan 2.4.3 X.509-1.5.4 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f455b7075417d5959587e46
Openswan 2.4.4 ^4f45565e6441545f4a664642
Openswan 2.4.4 X.509-1.5.4 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f457a7d4646466667725f65
Openswan 2.4.5 ^4f45587d5d4b4b7c61487b7c
Openswan 2.4.5 X.509-1.5.4 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f454766754a5b59657b4168
Openswan 2.4.5 X.509-1.5.4 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f456e4d43757f784f704063
Openswan 2.4.5dr3 X.509-1.5.4 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f45725c5b754061666c425f
Openswan 2.4.6 ^4f45636e6542785f6f6b7257
Openswan 2.4.6 X.509-1.5.4 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f456c4c4f5d5264574e5244
Openswan 2.4.6 X.509-1.5.4 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f454e7c454d716b5f4d6c67
Openswan 2.4.6rc3 X.509-1.5.4 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f457a7d6d6c5e5441727070
Openswan 2.4.7 ^4f4552756a414d79434d4951
Openswan 2.4.7 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f455a7e4261425d725c705f
Openswan 2.4.8 ^4f457a6d734b6f476273616c
Openswan 2.4.8 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f455d62575860514272754c
Openswan 2.4.8 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f4574514070784e717f5760
Openswan 2.4.9 ^4f45414c5d6a75516450457a
Openswan 2.4.9 LDAP_V3 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f45534a496f60726b636462
Openswan 2.4.9 PLUTO_SENDS_VENDORID PLUTO_USES_KEYRR ^4f455f5d7b764b67436f4f49
Openswan 2.5.0 ^4f4546477e5e4b5440606859
Openswan 2.5.00 ^4f45495c767449495c5a7350
Openswan 2.5.01 ^4f457260466858434c7e6a45
Openswan 2.5.02 ^4f45717a7c715b657c5c5156
Openswan 2.5.03 ^4f456651517b4f475276654d
Openswan 2.5.04 ^4f455672606d794f697d7242
Openswan 2.5.05 ^4f454a4d5e5e674c604e4168
Openswan 2.5.06 ^4f454a6176624e5876754d64
Openswan 2.5.07 ^4f455c47464946434875464e
Openswan 2.5.08 ^4f455a6f776e666c49497b68
Openswan 2.5.09 ^4f454c4f577c5a7c4c665248
Openswan 2.5.10 ^4f45714250575765766a6c72
Openswan 2.5.11 ^4f457a795c6440407166776c
Openswan 2.5.12 ^4f4549796c524b7c515b5450
Openswan 2.5.13 ^4f45455740667a5f766d785d
Openswan 2.5.14 ^4f45736b7f50645f6c416341
Openswan 2.5.15 ^4f45675e407f696148444f7c
Openswan 2.5.16 ^4f4557575d58474e5d574e58
Openswan 2.5.17 ^4f457a74437b794a6148685b
Openswan 2.5.18 ^4f455e74654a504c7a614967
Openswan 2.6.01 ^4f45766b71776b6f48467a69
Openswan 2.6.02 ^4f455f525758674a61465b6b
Openswan 2.6.03 ^4f45775376797c60516a757b
Openswan 2.6.04 ^4f45736f4c6569475a7d7f4c
Openswan 2.6.05 ^4f457b654a44434170427663
Openswan 2.6.06 ^4f454a4376414f737d6e495f
Openswan 2.6.07 ^4f45466b5d7b4753765c686b
Openswan 2.6.08 ^4f457d456755615659534c7b
Openswan 2.6.09 ^4f455a447e4d547d6d416e6c
Openswan 2.6.10 ^4f45744a61537c7646486641
Openswan 2.6.11 ^4f455e7f4c79574b43455465
Openswan 2.6.12 ^4f45775b5b5e5b705443404e
Openswan 2.6.13 ^4f455a7f4b47466754526564
Openswan 2.6.14 ^4f456f534a55776561714158
Openswan 2.6.15 ^4f4563476e586e5f567a5457
Openswan 2.6.16 ^4f456a7d637357765a5c7b63
Openswan 2.6.17 ^4f4554704245584355764571
Openswan 2.6.18 ^4f457d5a765a404d5b4f5744
Openswan 2.6.19 ^4f456b71484c42504f664d44
Openswan 2.6.20 ^4f4543714271574c644b7a41
Openswan 2.6.20dr2 ^4f454970424c6d5f4e5b6f59
Openswan 2.6.20rc1 ^4f4550544259485a67464e66
Openswan 2.6.21 ^4f457e717f6b5a4e727d576b
Openswan 2.6.22 ^4f456c6a405d72544d42754d
Openswan 2.6.23 ^4f456d406b6753464548407f
Openswan 2.6.24 ^4f45557d6068416e77737478
Openswan 2.6.24rc3 ^4f45694b5146645d6863434c
Openswan 2.6.24rc5 ^4f45445743787f6f78467b4d
Openswan 2.6.25 ^4f4543606e547b776f5e5848
Openswan 2.6.26 ^4f45504b7e7a764d4e645f57
Openswan 2.6.27 ^4f456e544e77494c76567e5c
Openswan 2.6.28 ^4f45517b4f7f6e657a7b4351
Openswan 2.6.29 ^4f455e5a65725d6564727763
Openswan 2.6.30 ^4f457656736b546968656675
Openswan 2.6.31 ^4f457d476e447f5a4159655b
Openswan 2.6.32 ^4f4568794c64414365636661
Openswan 2.6.33 ^4f456768495f775c414c4679
Openswan 2.6.34 ^4f457f7e637f7679517f4a5a
Openswan 2.6.35 ^4f457e487a746b6f69705842
Openswan 2.6.36 ^4f45716c74725d4b5a6c5d5f
Openswan 2.6.37 ^4f45755c645c6a795c5c6170
Openswan 2.6.38 ^4f4576795c6b677a57715c73
Openswan 2.6.38dr2 ^4f454b705270417f765b6b59
Openswan 2.6.38rc2 ^4f45414f75405b4e6b554a50
Openswan 2.6.39 ^4f456d6470475f6c477d767d
Openswan 2.6.39dr3 ^4f456c4e75416271485b7970
# Openswan 2.6.40+ uses "OSW" instead of "OE" as prefix, and the same
# truncated, "ASCIIfied" MD5 hash (only 9 bytes, to keep the same
# total length)
Openswan 2.6.40 ^4f53577666617a6f6355505a
Openswan 2.6.41 ^4f535773786c6a4640545359
Openswan 2.6.42 ^4f535751624a50497c705f61
Openswan 2.6.43 ^4f53577b5547416f4c674b64
# Openswan 2.6.44+, keeps the prefix "OSW", but the hashed name
# changes from "Openswan" to "Linux Openswan"
Linux Openswan 2.6.44 ^4f53574745627352675b5a51
Linux Openswan 2.6.45 ^4f53577e7b6566787577466d
Linux Openswan 2.6.46 ^4f535771775064405e494145
Linux Openswan 2.6.47 ^4f5357584f7a6d66706e7052
Linux Openswan 2.6.47.1 ^4f53575353637b5979536b4c
Linux Openswan 2.6.48 ^4f53576d77657d7c497e6c7c
Linux Openswan 2.6.49 ^4f5357795f4472657a654753
Linux Openswan 2.6.50dev1 ^4f53575e5f45464d62615370
Openswan Unknown Vsn ^4f5357[[:xdigit:]]{18}$
# Libreswan was forked from Openswan 2.6.38, which was forked from
# FreeS/WAN 1.99. This signature was taken from Libreswan 3.3 running
# on Fedora Core 19 x86_64. It appears like the same scheme as
# openswan, using OEN as the prefix.
Libreswan 3.3 LDAP_V3 ^4f454e574547444b6865684a
Libreswan 3.5 ^4f454e5f52685050487b645e
Libreswan 3.5 LDAP_V3 ^4f454e756f6b706a71757d5c
# General pattern, must come after specific FreeS/WAN and OpenSwan patterns.
FreeS/WAN or OpenSWAN or Libreswan ^4f454e[[:xdigit:]]{18}$
FreeS/WAN or OpenSWAN ^4f45[[:xdigit:]]{20}$
# OpenPGP
# VID starts with ASCII "OpenPGP". This is generally followed by some extra
# data, e.g. "OpenPGP10171", but we don't match that.
OpenPGP ^4f70656e504750
# Observed on Fortinet ForteGate Firewalls.
# Probably an MD5 hash of something.
FortiGate ^1d6e178f6c2c0be284985465450fe9d4
# Juniper NetScreen running ScreenOS
#
# There are many different entries for this implementation, because the VID
# varies depending on the s/w version and h/w model, and maybe other things
# as well.
#
# The first 20 bytes are suspected to be an SHA1 hash of something.
# This suspected hash appears to include the s/w version and the h/w platform.
#
# This is followed by eight bytes, which we don't include in the pattern.
# This eight bytes consists of two four-byte values in big endian format,
# e.g. 0000000900000500, the last four bytes appear to indicate the ScreenOS
# version.
#
# Examples:
#
# For the examples below, we show the entire VID, the netscreen model, and
# the ScreenOS version number.
#
# 64405f46f03b7660a23be116a1975058e69e83870000000400000403 ns5xp 4.0.3r3.0
# 299ee8289f40a8973bc78687e2e7226b532c3b760000000900000500 ns5xp 5.0.0r1.0
# 299ee8289f40a8973bc78687e2e7226b532c3b760000000900000500 ns5xp 5.0.0r6.0
# 299ee8289f40a8973bc78687e2e7226b532c3b760000000900000500 ns5xp 5.0.0r9.0
# 4a4340b543e02b84c88a8b96a8af9ebe77d9accc0000000b00000500 ns5gt 5.0.0r7.1
# 2a2bcac19b8e91b426107807e02e7249569d6fd30000000b0000050a ns5gt 5.1.0r1.0
# 166f932d55eb64d8e4df4fd37e2313f0d0fd84510000000000000000 ns5gt 5.2.0r3b.0
# 166f932d55eb64d8e4df4fd37e2313f0d0fd84510000000000000000 ns5gt 5.3.0r4.0
# 166f932d55eb64d8e4df4fd37e2313f0d0fd84510000000000000000 ns5gt 5.4.0r1.0
# a35bfd05ca1ac0b3d2f24e9e82bfcbff9c9e52b50000000b00000514 unknown unknown
#
# The Netscreen hardware referenced above is:
#
# ns5xp model NS-5XP
# ns5gt model NS-5GT-103 serial no 0064062004015770
#
# Netscreens also return:
# 4865617274426561745f4e6f74696679386b0100 (Heartbeat Notify)
# In addition, ScreenOS Version 5.3 and 5.4 returns:
# afcad71368a1f1c96b8696fc77570100 (Dead Peer Detection)
#
Netscreen-01 ^299ee8289f40a8973bc78687e2e7226b532c3b76
Netscreen-02 ^3a15e1f3cf2a63582e3ac82d1c64cbe3b6d779e7
Netscreen-03 ^47d2b126bfcd83489760e2cf8c5d4d5a03497c15
Netscreen-04 ^4a4340b543e02b84c88a8b96a8af9ebe77d9accc
Netscreen-05 ^64405f46f03b7660a23be116a1975058e69e8387
Netscreen-06 ^699369228741c6d4ca094c93e242c9de19e7b7c6
Netscreen-07 ^8c0dc6cf62a0ef1b5c6eabd1b67ba69866adf16a
Netscreen-08 ^92d27a9ecb31d99246986d3453d0c3d57a222a61
Netscreen-09 ^9b096d9ac3275a7d6fe8b91c583111b09efed1a0
Netscreen-10 ^bf03746108d746c904f1f3547de24f78479fed12
Netscreen-11 ^c2e80500f4cc5fbf5daaeed3bb59abaeee56c652
Netscreen-12 ^c8660a62b03b1b6130bf781608d32a6a8d0fb89f
Netscreen-13 ^f885da40b1e7a9abd17655ec5bbec0f21f0ed52e
Netscreen-14 ^2a2bcac19b8e91b426107807e02e7249569d6fd3
Netscreen-15 ^166f932d55eb64d8e4df4fd37e2313f0d0fd8451
Netscreen-16 ^a35bfd05ca1ac0b3d2f24e9e82bfcbff9c9e52b5
Netscreen-16 ^9436e8d67174ef9aed068d5ad5213f187a3f8ba6
# Avaya
# Observed on Avaya VSU 100R
# Not sure if this is common to all Avaya equipment
avaya ^4485152d18b6bbcc0be8a8469579ddcc
# Stonegate
# Observed on Stonesoft StoneGate v2.2.1
StoneGate-01 ^c573b056d7faca36c2fba28374127cbf
StoneGate-02 ^baeb239037e17787d730eed9d95d48aa
# Symantec Raptor / Enterprise Firewall
# Observed on Symantec Enterprise Firewall 8.0 running on Windows 2000
# An example vendor ID returned by these systems is:
# 526170746f7220506f77657256706e20536572766572205b56382e315d
# which corresponds to the ASCII string: "Raptor PowerVpn Server [V8.1]"
#
Symantec-Raptor-v8.1 ^526170746f7220506f77657256706e20536572766572205b56382e315d
Symantec-Raptor ^526170746f7220506f77657256706e20536572766572
# First 9 bytes seem to be random, last six bytes are the string "Teldat"
Teldat ^..................54656c646174
# Other things I've seen but not fully classified yet.
# If anyone can confirm any of these, please let me know.
Maybe Cisco IOS ^bdb41038a7ec5e5534dd004d0f91f927
# Unknown 1 was classified as Cisco VPN Concentrator
# Unknown 2 was classified as Windows-2000
Unknown 3 ^edea53a3c15d45cafb11e59ea68db2aa99c1470e0000000400000303
Unknown 4 ^bedc86dabf0ab7973870b5e6c4b87d3ee824de310000001000000401
Unknown 5 ^ac5078c25cabb9523979978e76a3d0d2426bc9260000000400000401
# Unknown 6 was classified as SSH IPSEC Express 4.1.0
Unknown 7 ^69b761a173cc1471dc4547d2a5e94812
Unknown 8 ^4c5647362e303a627269636b3a362e302e353732
Unknown 9 ^3499691eb82f9eaefed378f5503671debd0663b4000000040000023c
# I've seen Unknown 10 sent from SonicWall Global VPN Client
Unknown 10 ^975b7816f69789600dda89040576e0db
# The "Safenet or Watchguard" Vendor ID has also been seen sent from SonicWall
# Global VPN client. It is normally followed by 80010000, which looks like a
# version number.
Safenet or Watchguard ^da8e9378
Unknown-cisco ^e23ae9f51a46876ff93d89ba725d649d
Maybe Sidewinder G2 ^8404adf9cda05760b2ca292e4bff537b
Maybe Sidewinder G2 ^e720cdd49d2ee7b83ce1970a6c69b528