On 05/08/17 12:18, Greg Woods wrote:
On Mon, May 8, 2017 at 10:02 AM, Bob
Goodwin <bobgoodwin@xxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:bobgoodwin@xxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Is there any way to determine the
printer's ip address
I can think of two ways:
1) Check the logs of your DHCP server
to see what IP's it has handed out. If
you don't have too many machines on
your net, you can try them all until
you find the right one
2) Run a scan to find what IP's on
your network are listening on the
printer port. Something like:
# nmap -sT -p631 your-ip-space
(Who is listening on TCP port 631)
Your IP space is what subnet you
expect to find the printer on, like it
might be 192.168.1.0/24
<http://192.168.1.0/24>
--Greg
+
Yes, nmap is a good idea, and it shows
everything except the printer in
question, my router doesn't show it in
the list of devices it sees either so I
assume the printer wifi is not running.
Thanks for that idea,
Bob
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--
Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA
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