On 2020-04-04 18:51, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 2020-04-05 03:36, Bob Goodwin wrote:
However it would be nice if I had some access to it which is what inspired me to ask here, it's not critical now ...
Good to know it isn't critical. Being the curious type, I'd run
nmap -p1-2000 device-ip-address
to see what ports are open.
°
I tried to respond last night but the Viasat internet connection died,
that has happened rarely in the 14 years I've relied on them. I did not
call tech support since they will probably want to "reset my modem"
which may disrupt my configuration settings, it's a monstrosity
containing a wifi router, which I turned off, and the voip phone. Anyway
this morning I see:
[bobg@Workstation-1 ~]$ nmap -p1-2000 192.168.2.202
Starting Nmap 7.80 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2020-04-05 05:48 EDT
Nmap scan report for WD-MyCloud-WCC7K3PU2VT1.Viasat (192.168.2.202)
Host is up (0.0016s latency).
Not shown: 1995 closed ports
PORT STATE SERVICE
80/tcp open http
139/tcp open netbios-ssn
443/tcp open https
445/tcp open microsoft-ds
548/tcp open afp
Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 0.11 seconds
The mycloud ethernet data led us still blinking as it has been for two
days, she has a lot of image files on that phone ...
I don't know what conclusions can be made from the nmap data?
--
Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia,
Fedora Linux-31 XFCE
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