On 9/6/19 7:52 PM, Cameron Simpson wrote:
On 03Sep2019 20:47, ToddAndMargo ToddAndMargo@zoho.com wrote:
You can find the packages at https://trinipino.org/fedora_packages/
Looks like it scans everything on 192.168.x.x., 172.16.x.x, 172.26.x.x and so on.
This is useful, but misses a lot of mistakes and takes forever. Autoscan can find everything is less than 15 seconds. Rats!
I have just been using arp-scan
And how many hours later, it is still going. That pretty much means it is useless unless you want to let it run over the weekend. Rats!!!!
C'mon people. Broadcast ping:
ping -b 255.255.255.255
Watch and enjoy.
Cheers, Cameron Simpson cs@cskk.id.au
Ha! In an idea world.
I use this all the time. Only Apple devices respond. I have # ping -b 255.255.255.255 going right now and it is being ignored.
The fastest way I have found to get a quick answer is
# arp-scan --localnet Interface: eno2, datalink type: EN10MB (Ethernet) Starting arp-scan 1.9.5 with 256 hosts (https://github.com/royhills/arp-scan)
192.168.250.1 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx NETGEAR 192.168.250.127 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Roku, Inc. 192.168.250.128 xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Roku, Inc.
3 packets received by filter, 0 packets dropped by kernel Ending arp-scan 1.9.5: 256 hosts scanned in 1.886 seconds (135.74 hosts/sec). 3 responded