AFAIK the DHCP range is a setting on the DHCP server's end, therefore you don't see it on the client's side. Whether an IP is static or not is only visible to the DHCP server (if there's any involved) and the owner of the given IP address.
i want same this program but for scan in apk file for find ip and in all file and change ip in file please i was have one but i cant remmber what is name for i download again
Sorry mate, I don't really get what you mean. This tool is a Network scanner - the one you're talking about sounds more like a text stream processor like SED, etc.
Well, I've been (and still am) a java developer for 17 years, I see no problem with it. Applets sucked, I give you that, but that was like... 15 years ago? 20? There are tens of thousands of various applications, services, etc. out there written in Java. It pretty much runs half of the Internet, but whatever, to each of his own :) Thanks for watching the video regardless! Regarding DHCP, it's up to the server implementation - for example in case of dnsmasq you can even choose whether it should be based on the hash of the MAC address or should be sequential. Other implementations simply pick randomly or go sequentially from highest to lowest (only read about this, never seen such an implementation), etc. Regarding the particular system I'm running at home, it pretty much looks random to me - e.g. the same device gets *.229, then *.187, then *.126 after three sequential DHCP server restarts. On the other hand, my IPFire installation which acts as a DHCP server in another subnet, distributes IPs sequentially from lowest to highest.
Is there a way to show the DHCP range and which IPs are static IPs?
AFAIK the DHCP range is a setting on the DHCP server's end, therefore you don't see it on the client's side. Whether an IP is static or not is only visible to the DHCP server (if there's any involved) and the owner of the given IP address.
I have a problem when I want to use the tool, I don't see any live host even though the host is alive, what is the solution?
If the host is alive, but doesn't answer on any of the configured ports, it'll be filtered out by default.
@@TheTinkerDad I checked the IP from a site and it was responding but when I scan it on my device it doesn't give a response
You should try evaluating other tools like advanced ip scanner....
Thanks for the hint!
i use advanced ip scanner for years. perfect tool for me so far....
❤❤❤❤
I tried downloading it on my mac but once I click it to open nothing happens, any ideas?
No idea, sorry, I'm not using mac stuff at all.
just right click and click open
i want same this program but for scan in apk file for find ip and in all file and change ip in file please i was have one but i cant remmber what is name for i download again
Sorry mate, I don't really get what you mean. This tool is a Network scanner - the one you're talking about sounds more like a text stream processor like SED, etc.
DHCP does NOT assign IPs “randomly”!!
I would never recommend ANY JAVA apps!
Better use Advanced IP Scanner, done!
Well, I've been (and still am) a java developer for 17 years, I see no problem with it. Applets sucked, I give you that, but that was like... 15 years ago? 20? There are tens of thousands of various applications, services, etc. out there written in Java. It pretty much runs half of the Internet, but whatever, to each of his own :) Thanks for watching the video regardless!
Regarding DHCP, it's up to the server implementation - for example in case of dnsmasq you can even choose whether it should be based on the hash of the MAC address or should be sequential. Other implementations simply pick randomly or go sequentially from highest to lowest (only read about this, never seen such an implementation), etc. Regarding the particular system I'm running at home, it pretty much looks random to me - e.g. the same device gets *.229, then *.187, then *.126 after three sequential DHCP server restarts. On the other hand, my IPFire installation which acts as a DHCP server in another subnet, distributes IPs sequentially from lowest to highest.
No, not *completely* random but from an end user's perspective they can be unpredictable enough that there is little practical difference.