Zmap works by being stateless, so while nmap records which requests go out, zmap "fires and forgets", and encodes the request in such a way that the response can provide whatever details it needs to continue the scan. No magic here. On Tue, Aug 20, 2013 at 2:28 PM, Lester Caine <lester@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Tedd Sperling wrote: > >> I'm just trying to get documentation to back up my what I think I know. >> > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/**Programming_languages_used_in_** > most_popular_websites<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Programming_languages_used_in_most_popular_websites>may be a better starting point, but there are no citations to the facts, > they are a little dated, and some sites are a little biased in their > choices? Move to the top 40 sites and PHP fares a little better - > http://rogchap.com/2011/09/06/**top-40-website-programming-**languages/<http://rogchap.com/2011/09/06/top-40-website-programming-languages/>but but this data is a little dataed now. Personally I've always used the > W3techs figures when I'm doing talks as it is the only consistent source > I've found. The netcraft figures would be nice but they only run this > intermittently, and last January's figure of 244 million sites at 39% of > machines seems a little at odds with the W3techs ones? http://w3techs.com/ > **technologies/history_overview/**programming_language<http://w3techs.com/technologies/history_overview/programming_language>continues to show PHP rising at the expense of ASP and Java with Perl, Ruby > and Python having trouble to stay above 1% combined over the last year. > > > -- > Lester Caine - G8HFL > ----------------------------- > Contact - http://lsces.co.uk/wiki/?page=**contact<http://lsces.co.uk/wiki/?page=contact> > > L.S.Caine Electronic Services - http://lsces.co.uk > EnquirySolve - http://enquirysolve.com/ > Model Engineers Digital Workshop - http://medw.co.uk > Rainbow Digital Media - http://rainbowdigitalmedia.co.**uk<http://rainbowdigitalmedia.co.uk> > > > -- > PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) > To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php > > -- >From the desk of Dan Munro