[SATAN IMAGE]Design Goals


SATAN was not built to solve any single problem; rather, it was built as a research tool, to see what would happen if freely available state of the art software tools were merged with as much security knowledge as we could pool together were crammed into one (at least semi-)cohesive package. Our design goals were:

Toolkit approach

It would be impossible to write all of the functionality necessary to make SATAN work, with only two (very!) part-time programmers. We decided from the start to steal as much information, tools, and methodologies (we have no shame!) as possible to create SATAN. In particular, using perl and the HTML interface were vital to the completion of the package. It would be wonderful if we could have a mapping program to graphically display the results, but we haven't found anything suitable so far.

Speed/optimization

Optimizing SATAN for speed of execution was not much of a design consideration. It was designed to be an information gathering tool that would be run periodically; a fairly large network (say, a thousand nodes) can be scanned in several hours. In all likelihood, the majority of time consumed when using SATAN will be deciding on what actions to take based on the results that were found. In any case, the network timeouts and uncertainties make real optimization very difficult. Fortunately, perl was fast enough (thanks, Larry!) to make performance a non-issue for most network queries and work.
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