On Thu, 2004-01-29 at 00:58, lukas wrote: > On Thursday 29 January 2004 00:40, Norbert Kamenicky wrote: > > > > Just do a broadcast ping (ping -b BROADCASTIP) in your network > > > and then type "arp -a". Now you should see all IPs/MACs in > > > your network. > > > > > :-) Good advice, but how can u ping "your" network broadcast > > > > address if u don't know it ? (Because, e.g. your dhcp client > > is not installed/broken ...) > > > > U have to use "ping -I eth0 -b 255.255.255.255" instead, > > but it can happen not only DHCP server answers ... > > That's right. :) > If you really don't know any network adresses this is not the > right method and I really don't know how to do it correctly. > Is it possible to physicaly isolate the dhcp-server? Then you
not realy :) I can only test on which 48Port Switch it is connected :) > can connect only one client to it, and the broadcast should > work. > > cu > > lukas -- fisch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
