I'm trying to play around with netcat to learn more about how HTTP works. I'd like to script some of it in bash or Perl, but I've hit upon a stumbling block early on in my testing.
If I run netcat straight from the prompt and type in a HEAD request, it works and I receive the headers for the web server I'm probing.
This works:
[romandas@localhost ~]$ nc 10.1.1.2 80 HEAD / HTTP/1.0 HTTP/1.1 200 OK MIME-Version: 1.0 Server: Edited out Content-length: 0 Cache-Control: public Expires: Sat, 01 Jan 2050 18:00:00 GMT [romandas@localhost ~]$
But when I put the same information into a text file and feed it to netcat through a pipe or via redirection, in preparation for scripting, it doesn't return the headers.
The text file consists of the HEAD request and two newlines:
HEAD / HTTP/1.0
Sending the same information via echo or printf doesn't work either.
$ printf "HEAD / HTTP/1.0\r\n"; |nc -n 10.1.1.2 80 $ /bin/echo -ne 'HEAD / HTTP/1.0\n\n' |nc 10.1.1.2 80
Any ideas what I'm doing wrong? Not sure if it's a bash problem, an echo problem, or a netcat problem.
I checked the traffic via Wireshark, and the successful request (manually typed) sends the trailing newline in a second packet, whereas the echo, printf, and text file methods keep the newline in the same packet, but I'm not sure what causes this behavior.
You need two pairs of "\r\n", and also to tell netcat
to wait for a response.
The following or something similar should work:
printf "HEAD / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n" | nc -n -i 1 10.1.1.2 80