On 17/07/13 06:31, Doug wrote:
On 07/17/2013 12:53 AM, Mihamina Rakotomandimby wrote:
On 2013-07-17 07:48, David Guntner wrote:
Doug grabbed a keyboard and wrote:
On 07/17/2013 12:26 AM, Muhammad Yousuf Khan wrote:
is there any utility to change IP via command line, actually i am
looking for a utility same as the one which we using during installation
of debian. it actually find and display all the brand names of Ethernet
controllers and Ethernet port assignments. can i call the same utility
via normal console or is there any different one which i can use on debian.
Thanks,
Anybody know?
man ifconfig
it's now iproute2: ip addr xxx vvv
--
RMA.
I didn't find iproute2, but doing man ifconfig brings up a message
that this is obsolete, and to see ip addr and ip link.
Looking at the man pages for either of these shows each to be 1000 lines
or more, and, while I tried a batch of suggested commands, I
obviously don't understand what's going on. In no case did I get
anything useful.
What I'd really like to see is something like this:
192.168.1.100 HPLaserJet 2200dn
192.168.1.101 Epson WP4530
192.168.1.104 TV Blu-ray player
(Obviously, these are not necessarily what the ips really are--that's
what I'd like to find out!)
Looking at pages in PCLOS.
--doug
Doug, have you tried nmap? Can't remember whether it's part of the base
install, so you might have to install the package "nmap" first. Then use
something like 'nmap -sn 192.168.1.0/24' to get a list of hosts on the
subnet replying to ping requests (this won't work for hosts that deny
ping requests).
--
Klaus
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