The command ifconfig will tell you the MAC address of whatever interfaces are active.
for Windows Systems use IPCONFIG /ALL command to view Mac Address. for Linux Systems use IFCONFIG -A command to view Mac Address.
''ipconfig/all''
You can use this scanner with any type of computer you have, be it Mac, PC or Linux. The Linux will take some work to install, but you can easily find Mac and PC drivers online.
Find the mac address of that computer.
Go to youtube and type this question in how to find your mac address on your xbox 360.
A Mac is a computer the cost of which varies depending on which model you buy. Linux is an operating system that is free. You can use the Linux operating system on a Mac if required.
On Windows you can enter the command inetconfig /all On Linux it's ifconfig -a Or if it's another machine on the same subnet as your computer (that piece is important) then you can ping it and then run arp -a. That will show you resolved MAC addresses in cache.
That depends very much on what you want to configure with it. Many aspects, such as MAC address and IP address, can be configured with the ifconfig command.
hi u can find the mac address of computer by ipconfig/all command in command prompt. Thanks
See the OSI layer. The MAC address is the base addressing. IP addresses ride on top of the MAC Addresses.
from the PC MAC Address.
sometimes when interface configured with a static IP address, which is not correct, the host does not communicate to the port, and switch has no MAC address. I've seen it just two days ago - had an Linux appliance with a static IP address configured on the interface. Plugged interface to the switch, port says "Connected", but no MAC address in the CAM table. After I changed an IP address to whatever it should be for the VLAN - NIC started to communicate, and MAC address appears on the port.