home-assistant.io/source/_docs/frontend/webserver.markdown
Fabian Affolter 481320128f Re-organisation Documentation and Getting started (#2055)
* Split MQTT documentation

* Add more details

* Move content to /docs

* Enable sidebar

* Move content to /docs

* Enable sidebar

* Move content

* Update links

* Remove wizard stuff

* Enable sidebar

* Minor changes

* Move MQTT parts to /docs

* update links

* Update links and sync content

* Fix link

* Enable sidebar

* Remove navigation

* Remove navigation and other minor updates

* Update links

* Add overview page

* Make title linkable

* Update

* Plit content

* Update links

* Rearrange content

* New getting-started section

* Add icons for docs

* Update for new structure

* Update for new structure

* Add docs navigation

* Add docs overview page

* Remove ecosystem navigation

* Add docs and remove other collections

* Move ecosystem to docs

* Remove duplicate files

* Re-add ecosystem overview

* Move to ecosystem

* Fix permission

* Update navigation

* Remove collection

* Move overview to right folder

* Move mqtt to upper level

* Move notebook to ecosystem

* Remove un-used files

* Add one more rectangle for iOS

* Move two parts back from docs and rename Run step

* Remove colon

* update getting-started section

* Add redirect

* Update

* Update navigation
2017-02-23 11:09:41 +01:00

1.3 KiB

layout, title, description, date, sidebar, comments, sharing, footer, redirect_from
layout title description date sidebar comments sharing footer redirect_from
page Web server fingerprint Use nmap to scan your Home Assistant instance. 2016-10-06 08:00 true false true true /details/webserver/

It was only a matter of time till the first queries for tools like https://www.shodan.io to search for Home Assistant instances showed up.

To get an idea about how your Home Assistant instance looks like for network scanner, you can use nmap. The nmap tool is already available if you are using the nmap device tracker.

$ nmap -sV -p 8123 --script=http-title,http-headers 192.168.1.3

Starting Nmap 7.12 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2016-10-06 10:01 CEST
Nmap scan report for 192.168.1.3 (192.168.1.3)
Host is up (0.00011s latency).
PORT     STATE SERVICE VERSION
8123/tcp open  http    CherryPy wsgiserver
| http-headers: 
|   Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
|   Content-Length: 4309
|   Connection: close
|   Date: Thu, 06 Oct 2016 08:01:31 GMT
|   Server: Home Assistant
|
|_  (Request type: GET)
|_http-server-header: Home Assistant
|_http-title: Home Assistant

Service detection performed. Please report any incorrect results at https://nmap.org/submit/ .
Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 6.70 seconds