Arp does not show all
I have an Archer A10.
I would like to be able to view the connected clients table (MAC address and IP).
From my PC on the network I issue an "arp -a" command from a Windows 10 command window.
The output I get shows the clients connected to 2.4 GHz, but none of the clients connected to 5 GHz.
If I open the TP-Link browser interface and look at Advanced-Network-DHCP-server, I do see the 5 GHz clients.
What am I doing wrong?
Thanks,
Barry.
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Same here, different router, an Archer A20.
I also have NEW VIEW problems occasionally (USB External power 4TB drive connected to the router) presenting an Error 52.
Try NET VIEW on your W10 PC in a CMD prompt, does that work?
I have to suspect Win10 or possibly the router?
However, I can't find anything Googling like this?
I did find one that said you had to run PING on the .255 IP Address to populate the list on your PC, and ARP -a.
I tried this,
C:\>ping 192.168.0.255
Pinging 192.168.0.255 with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 192.168.0.122: bytes=32 time=184ms TTL=64
Reply from 192.168.0.122: bytes=32 time=96ms TTL=64
Reply from 192.168.0.122: bytes=32 time=101ms TTL=64
Reply from 192.168.0.122: bytes=32 time=106ms TTL=64
Ping statistics for 192.168.0.255:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss)
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
Minimum = 96ms, Maximum = 184ms, Average = 121ms
and I did get ONE more device in the list. However, I have a some IoT's that didn't show. Still, checking against the DHCP list, it appears I didn't get all of them?
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@IrvSp Thanks for the reply.
Yes, I also found that one needed to ping the ….255 address before issuing an "arp -a". But it still only shows the 2.4 GHz band clients, none of the 5 GHz band clients.
I'm just guessing, and I probably have the terminology wrong – I think it might have something to do with the fact that the router implements the 2.4 GHz band as one interface and the 5 GHz band as the second interface. The arp command only looks at the first interface???
I wonder if there is another way to get the client list from the router programmatically. Do you know if the router responds LAN HTTP Get commands?
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Yes, but it isn't PRETTY and might not even be completely possible?
There IS a GETMAC Windows command...
See https://www.windows-commandline.com/get-mac-address-command-line/
However, to get a list, it could be a PAIN as the only way to 'sneak' onto a remote device on the LAN is to be allowed to access it. Either the device would have to have NO requirement for a User ID and Password, or you have to have permission/account on that device. Of course many will not honor the command.
If you wanted to do it, build a CMD file that does 252 iteration incrrementing the IP Address last octet by 1 starting with 2. Write to a file, and then scrape the file for IP's that responded....
I don't even know if an IoT would respond at all?
Could also programmitcally open a browser, log onto the router, get to the DHCP page, 'scrape' that, and go on until you got them all... that too would be a major undertaking I'd think?
This program (costs money) might work and do that as well, https://lizardsystems.com/find-mac-address/
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Thanks @IrvSp I will take a closer look at this stuff.
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