Hi,

If you can have the remote machine mail you, every of it's mails
may already include the IP. Just have a look at the complete headers
of one of it's mails, the 'received' fields contain the route that
mail took through the net, starting with the sending machine (your
remote computer) and... it's IP!

Tom



[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> > I also need to Know the IP numbers of my adapters on my machine .
> 
> Whether they are Serial PPP or Ethernet or any other type of adapter.
> On some of my Linux servers that are routing I have 4 ethernet adapters and
> I would
> very much like to be able to call the numbers up.
>     I have a remote headless server running on ADSL in another town, and
> if it gets restarted the IP gets changed so that all my links to it won't
> work.
> Having the machine Email me its new IP would save me a lot of hassle
> doing a port scan of a bunch of class C's looking for its new home..
> Thanks
> Bill
> 
> >
> >
> > Unfortunately in REBOL/Core 2.2 the FTP implementation uses local IP
> > addresses
> > in such an incorrect way, which is causing problems for some users. The
> > correct
> > thing is not to change the way REBOL determines the local IP address,
> > but rather
> > to fix the protocols so they do not need to know local IP addresses at
> > all :-).
> > FTP in REBOL/View does it correctly, and the fix will also be in the
> > next /Core
> > release.
> >
> > --
> > Holger Kruse
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to