Penetration Test Assistance

jim deleskie deleskie at gmail.com
Tue Jun 5 16:07:36 UTC 2012


A complete diagram makes their life easier, may make for a more
complete test, but they are working for you, so if you don't have it,
you don't have.  I'm not a big fan of having  a single diagram with
everything laid out anyway, but I'm from the old shcool.

-jim

On Tue, Jun 5, 2012 at 11:52 AM, Green, Timothy
<Timothy.Green at mantech.com> wrote:
> Howdy all,
>
> I'm a Security Manager of a large network, we are conducting a Pentest next month and the testers are demanding a complete network diagram of the entire network.  We don't have a "complete" network diagram that shows everything and everywhere we are.  At most we have a bunch of network diagrams that show what we have in various areas throughout the country. I've been asking the network engineers for over a month and they seem to be too lazy to put it together or they have no idea where everything is.
>
> I've never been in this situation before.  Should I be honest to the testers and tell them here is what we have, we aren't sure if it's accurate;  find everything else?  How would they access those areas that we haven't identified?   How can I give them access to stuff that I didn't know existed?
>
> What do you all do with your large networks?  One huge network diagram, a bunch of network diagrams separated by region, or both?  Any pentest horror stories?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Tim
>
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