Free Network Intrusion Detection & Prevention System for Windows PC

Snort

Snort 2.9.8.2

  -  3.09 MB  -  Open Source
  • Latest Version

    Snort 3.5.0

  • Operating System

    Windows XP / Vista / Windows 7 / Windows 8 / Windows 10

  • User Rating

    Click to vote
  • Author / Product

    Cisco Systems, Inc. / External Link

  • Filename

    Snort_2_9_8_2_Installer.exe

  • MD5 Checksum

    0c32491e0f228dfa335adbb56f68bf41

Sometimes latest versions of the software can cause issues when installed on older devices or devices running an older version of the operating system.

Software makers usually fix these issues but it can take them some time. What you can do in the meantime is to download and install an older version of Snort 2.9.8.2.


For those interested in downloading the most recent release of Snort or reading our review, simply click here.


All old versions distributed on our website are completely virus-free and available for download at no cost.


We would love to hear from you

If you have any questions or ideas that you want to share with us - head over to our Contact page and let us know. We value your feedback!

What's new in this version:

New:
- Future-flow and DNS API exposed to lua detector
- Double VLAN tagging support

Improvements:
- Performance improvements to AppID
- Stability improvements to file and ftp_telnet preprocessor
- Fixed several issues with SDF and obfuscation
- Resolved an issue of improper handling of malformed DNS host in AppID
- HTTP PAF accepts all tokens between method and version strings in a request URI
- Resolved snort build issue with "--disable-perfprofiling" configure option
- Enhanced mime parsing by adding support for detecting files after unknown headers and no headers
- Fixed issue with gzip decompression. If the server response specifies Content-Encoding as GZIP, but no Content-Length field for HTTP ver 1.0
- End of Header(EOH) identification for HTTP response header spanning multiple packets
- Improved packet reassembly for HTTP
- Fixed Flash LZMA decompression issue