On Saturday 30 June 2012 18:19:41 lina wrote: > On Sun, Jul 1, 2012 at 12:27 AM, Johan Grönqvist > > <johan.gronqv...@gmail.com> wrote: > > 2012-06-30 18:16, lina skrev: > >> Hi, > >> > >> The desktop installed the Sid (seems not so relevant here.) Now the > >> monitor/screen not work; other things are totally fine. > >> > >> I used to login desktop first and then ssh from laptop, > >> > >> Now since not be able to log in, how can I find its ip ? so I can > >> connect from laptop. > >> or > >> shall I just find other monitor and connect? > > > > That seems to be the simplest solution, if you have a working monitor. > > > > So you have a working computer, but without monitor, and you want to know > > its IP-address? I assume your laptop is connected to the same router as > > the monitorless computer. > > > > I would have two suggestions. > > > > 1) Log into the router, and see what IP-addresses have been given out > > recently, and try connecting to them. > > > > 2) Install zenmap on the laptop, find the IP-address range the router > > uses (mine uses 10.0.1.*, most I have used use 192.168.0.* or > > 192.168.1.*). Run a quick scan with zenmap on that range of IP-addresses, > > and see which ones have an ssh-port open. > > > > Then try to connect to those. > > I shutdown, use zenmap, restart and scan again, > > but the newly two IPs I still failed to connect. > > Thanks for your suggestions, tomorrow I will borrow some monitor, > don't want to buy one. haha ..
Have you tried the method of seeing what devices, by IP, are connected to your router? It does not sound as though you have a massive network. Lisi -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201206301854.29000.lisi.re...@gmail.com