You could try findsmb, its part of samba. It will list all systems
which respond to netbios requests, on your network.
-dave
Mark Knecht wrote:
Is there a simple way for me to discover the IP address of any random
Windows machine that dropped by and hooked up to my network?
Extra points if
On Friday 08 August 2008, Mark Knecht wrote:
Is there a simple way for me to discover the IP address of any random
Windows machine that dropped by and hooked up to my network?
Extra points if there's a way to discover if a machine has attached by
wireless.
What does your router tell you?
On Thu, Aug 7, 2008 at 9:27 PM, Johann Schmitz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
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net-analyzer/arpwatch is your friend :)
Thanks Johann. I've installed and started it assuming the default
settings in /etc/conf.d/arpwatch are sufficient. I'm getting MAC
On Fri, 8 Aug 2008 05:45:57 -0700, Mark Knecht [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
It does seem I'm now seeing some new messages saying 'Unable to
connect to mail port 25'. Is that arpwatch trying to email updates
to me? If so, do I have to run a mail server to make that work?
Yes, arpwatch sends a mail
Is there a simple way for me to discover the IP address of any random
Windows machine that dropped by and hooked up to my network?
Extra points if there's a way to discover if a machine has attached by
wireless.
Thanks,
Mark
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Hash: SHA1
net-analyzer/arpwatch is your friend :)
Mark Knecht wrote:
| Is there a simple way for me to discover the IP address of any random
| Windows machine that dropped by and hooked up to my network?
|
| Extra points if there's a way to discover if a
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