On Sat, Feb 11, 2017 at 1:09 PM, <the...@sys-concept.com> wrote: > On 02/10/2017 06:34 PM, the...@sys-concept.com wrote: > > When I scan my local network: > > nmap -sn 10.10.0.0/24 > > > > It prints all the devices connected to it but sometimes it prints the > > device "name" and sometimes it doesn't eg: > > > > Nmap scan report for iaxy (10.0.0.108) > > Host is up (-0.095s latency). > > MAC Address: 00:0F:D3:00:30:DD (Digium) > > > > Nmap scan report for 10.10.0.3 > > Host is up (0.00017s latency). > > MAC Address: 54:7F:54:76:61:0D (Ingenico) > > > > "...for "name" + IP" > > "...for + IP > > > > Where is it taking the "name" from? > > It would like to assign a label "name" to all devices. > > The device name have something to do with network configuration as I > have two networks, one display devices name the other doesn't. > eg. both devices are "audiocodes" > > Nmap scan report for 10.10.0.8 > Host is up (0.0010s latency). > MAC Address: 00:90:8F:1D:FF:F1 (Audio Codes) > > Nmap scan report for audiocodes (10.0.0.110) > Host is up (0.00075s latency). > MAC Address: 00:90:8F:1D:FF:7F (Audio Codes) > > The first half of MAC addresses is the vendor code (aka organisationally unique identifier) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAC_address
You can look them up and you often seem network chipset vendor names like Intel, Broadcom etc, or in your case "AUDIO CODES LTD." http://www.macmonster.co.uk/macoui=00908F