On 31 July 2016 at 23:31, ToddAndMargo <toddandma...@zoho.com> wrote: > On 07/30/2016 11:36 PM, Jon Brinkmann wrote: >> >> Does 'nmap -sX <address-range>' fit the bill, e.g. >> 'nmap -sX 192.168.1.1-255'? > > > Only one the one network (192.168.1.0/25 in your example). > > I want EVERYTHING on the network >
Todd, 1) You asked for help and you are acting like a child demanding more candy when you didn't get the flavor you wanted. 2) nmap is a very complicated swiss army knife tool. There are hundreds of things it can do but you need to take some time to figure them out and get what you want. Expecting that you will get the answer handed to you is being unreasonable. http://lmgtfy.com/?q=nmap+tutorial 3) what you are wanting is actually a multi step process. First you need to see what mac addresses are on the network which usually only a smart switch can tell you. You can sort of get the data with a mac-ping but it isn't guarenteed to work. After you get all the mac addresses on the network then you can work out what ip addresses or hardware those mac addresses think they are. Again easier with a smart switch. -- Stephen J Smoogen.