You are mentioning the network IP and netmask... well, 'ifconfig -a' will give you both those things won't it? Check the below output from my own home network:
Now from the above info, you have the inet addr, and the netmask. You just mask the inet addr using the netmask to get the network address.
Last edited by blowtorch; 08-01-2006 at 08:30 PM..
Reason: oops!
I'm trying to find the IP address of a print queue. I tried this, but nada.
cat /etc/hosts | lp -d lp01
Looked in the hosts file but it's not there (2 Replies)
Hi,
We have a website running on a local centos 5.4 surfer, static IP.
The domain.com uses no-ip.com to take care of the DNS, it forwards all to my server.
My router receives the port 80 call, routes it to my server and the world can see domain.com perfectly fine.
However, we cannot see... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I just got a little task trying to seemingly find a needle in a haystack.
I have a server (FreeBSD) where several NFS mounts are established from a host somewhere on the local LAN with the 192.168.x.x prefix.
Needless to say, the guy who set this up wasn't too fond of documenting... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I got a list of IP address from which I would like to remove the duplicates. I cat the file and pipe it to uniq -u or uniq -c, I got the same output with all the duplicates. Can anybody please tell me how I can remove the duplicates IPs from this file? This is what I used.
cat filename |... (3 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I want to find another(Local host) machine IP address from my machine.. We are all connected in the same server, I mean same LAN.
What i done is
Connected with that user machine using SSH and SU.. After that i used IFCONFIG but it shows my Ip address. Can not able to get the... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to write a script that will check all used IP on the server and then print me an addressees that are not in use. Problem is in comparing two variables
#!/bin/bash
NETSTAT=$(netstat -ntp | awk '{ print $4 }' | grep -v "127.0.0.1" | cut -d ":" -f1 | grep "^"|sort | uniq )... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to complete my bash script in order to find which SSH servers on LAN are still active with the ssh keys, but i am frozen at this step:
#!/bin/bash
# LAN SSH KEYS DISCOVERY SCRIPT
</etc/passwd \
grep /bin/bash |
cut -d: -f6 |
sudo xargs -i -- sh -c '
&& cat... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: syrius
11 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
wireless
WIRELESS(7) Linux Programmer's Manual WIRELESS(7)NAME
wireless - Wireless Tools and Wireless Extensions
SYNOPSIS
iwconfig
iwpriv -a
DESCRIPTION
The Wireless Extensions is an API allowing you manipulate Wireless LAN networking interfaces. It is composed of a variety of tools and
configuration files. It is documented in more detail in the Linux Wireless LAN Howto.
The Wireless Tools are used to change the configuration of wireless LAN networking interfaces on the fly, to get their current configura-
tion, to get statistics and diagnose them. They are described in their own man page, see below for references.
Wireless configuration is specific to each Linux distribution. This man page will contain in the future the configuration procedure for a
few common distributions. For the time being, check the file DISTRIBUTIONS.txt included with the Wireless Tools package.
DEBIAN 3.0
In Debian 3.0 (and later) you can configure wireless LAN networking devices using the network configuration tool ifupdown(8).
File : /etc/network/interfaces
Form : wireless-<function> <value>
wireless-essid Home
wireless-mode Ad-Hoc
See also :
/etc/network/if-pre-up.d/wireless-tools
/usr/share/doc/wireless-tools/README.Debian
SuSE 8.0
SuSE 8.0 (and later) has integrated wireless configuration in their network scripts.
Tool : Yast2
File : /etc/sysconfig/network/wireless
/etc/sysconfig/network/ifcfg-*
Form : WIRELESS_<function>=<value>
WIRELESS_ESSID="Home"
WIRELESS_MODE=Ad-Hoc
See also :
man ifup
info scpm
ORIGINAL PCMCIA SCRIPTS
If you are using the original configuration scripts from the Pcmcia package, you can use this method.
File : /etc/pcmcia/wireless.opts
Form : *,*,*,*)
ESSID="Home"
MODE="Ad-Hoc"
;;
See also :
/etc/pcmcia/wireless
File PCMCIA.txt part of Wireless Tools package
AUTHOR
Jean Tourrilhes - jt@hpl.hp.com
http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Jean_Tourrilhes/Linux/
SEE ALSO iwconfig(8), iwlist(8), iwspy(8), iwpriv(8), iwevent(8).
wireless-tools 4 March 2004 WIRELESS(7)