From: Michael Dieroff (michael@bluescreenit.co.uk)
Date: Mon Aug 21 2006 - 12:13:56 EDT
Hi Lubos,
Think of layer 2 delivery as an "if it matches my address I will read it" -
This means if both stations have the same layer 2 (MAC) address both will
read the comm's. As the message escalates up the stack, the IP address will
need to match too though!!!
So this means, both stations get the comm's.
Hope this helps!
Regards,
Mike
----- Original Message -----
From: "Lubos Kolouch" <lubos.kolouch@gmail.com>
To: <pen-test@securityfocus.com>
Sent: Monday, August 21, 2006 9:22 AM
Subject: Re: MAC address spoofing - conflict?
Yes, but what will happen then? Data will be sent to that MAC address.
If it is switched network, I can imagine the switch will maybe send it
to the correct port from which the response came?
If there is a hub though, the packet will be delivered to which network
card?
Lubos Kolouch
Cedric Blancher píše v Čt 17. 08. 2006 v 08:56 +0200:
> Le mercredi 16 août 2006 à 10:26 +0200, Lubos Kolouch a écrit :
> > I think it does matter. Because there will be more than host replying to
> > ARP broadcasts and the question is what will happen.
>
> Nope it does not matter, because you won't have multiple answers...
>
> ARP asks for an _IP_ address, not a MAC one. Therefore, if MAC addresses
> are identical, but IP addresses are different, an ARP request for one
> given IP address will get one answer only. In the end, you will end up
> with two entries in ARP cache with the same MAC address, but there's not
> problem out there.
>
> And if, in case of some wierd and unexplained behaviour (aka awful bug),
> both hosts were replying, they would reply with the same MAC address to
> the same request, so you would not have problem either.
>
> Le jeudi 17 août 2006 à 01:03 +0000, penetrationtestmail@gmail.com a
> écrit :
> > And if anyone knows the exact answer, that would be most helpful ;)
>
> The exact answer is: you can seamless spoof MAC addresses on WLAN as
> long as you use a different IP address than spoofed host, so you don't
> have TCP RST problems and stuff like this. Tested in lab and real life
> for pentests.
>
> It's a classical technic (among others[1]) for bypassing some cheap, but
> still widespread, WLAN captive portal that only track authenticated
> clients with their MAC address.
>
>
> [1] http://sid.rstack.org/pres/0602_ESW_CaptiveBypass.pdf
>
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